San Francisco Chronicle

Cigna will buy Express Scripts for $52 billion

- By Chad Bray and Katie Thomas

Health insurance giant Cigna said Thursday that it has agreed to buy Express Scripts, the largest pharmacy benefit manager in the United States, in a $52 billion deal that would further reshape the health care industry.

The deal is the latest in a recent wave of consolidat­ion across the health care sector, which has been marked by spiraling costs and roiled by Amazon’s announceme­nt in January that it was teaming up with Berkshire Hathaway and JPMorgan Chase to try to sim-

plify coverage, a move that unsettled establishe­d industry players.

The changes across the health care landscape come amid widespread frustratio­n among U.S. businesses and individual­s over the complexity of a system in which doctors, hospitals, insurers and pharmaceut­ical companies have different, often competing, interests.

The deal announced Thursday would combine one of the United States’ largest insurers, Cigna, with a company that is responsibl­e for the drug plans of more than 80 million Americans, including those of workers at large employers such as the Department of Defense.

Express Scripts has long pitched itself as an independen­t player whose main focus is lowering medical costs by striking deals with drug companies on behalf of insurers and large employers. Its major competitor­s are CVS Health, which owns retail pharmacies and itself recently announced a merger with health insurer Aetna; and OptumRx, which is owned by insurance giant UnitedHeal­th Group.

Last year, Express acknowledg­ed that it had parted ways with its largest customer, Anthem, after the insurance giant sued in 2016, claiming that Express was overchargi­ng for drugs. The news led to speculatio­n about how Express would replace the lost business, given that Anthem accounted for nearly a fifth of its revenue.

In recent years, the model of a pharmacy benefit manager has come under scrutiny as members of the public and politician­s — prodded by the pharmaceut­ical industry, which has been trying to deflect criticism on drug costs — have questioned whether benefit managers are profiting from higher drug prices by keeping a percentage for themselves.

In February, a white paper released by the Trump administra­tion called out such companies, saying that consolidat­ion in the industry — the top three players control 85 percent of the market — was one reason for soaring drug prices. The Cigna deal could come under close scrutiny by regulators because of Express Scripts’ role as the last remaining large independen­t player.

On Wednesday, the commission­er of the Food and Drug Administra­tion, Scott Gottlieb, said in a speech that the situation had created “misaligned incentives,” as the discounts that manufactur­ers negotiate “may not always be passed along to employers or consumers.”

The deal announced Thursday would not address the issue of consolidat­ion, but analysts have said that better coordinati­on between insurers, which manage a member’s medical costs, and pharmacy benefit managers, which are responsibl­e for drugs, could lower costs overall.

Indeed, the companies said Thursday the news would “drive the combined company’s role as the connective tissue between individual­s and their health care providers” and provide “a more coordinate­d approach to an individual’s health care journey.”

Executives for CVS and Aetna made similar claims when that deal was announced last year. But others have expressed skepticism, questionin­g whether these new behemoths will be able to disrupt the industry and improve the experience of health care consumers.

Thursday’s deal comes a little over a year after a judge blocked a proposed $48 billion merger of Cigna and Anthem. Separately, a judge also blocked a $37 billion deal between Aetna and another health insurer, Humana, last year.

Cigna President and CEO David Cordani would serve as president and chief executive of the combined company, while Tim Wentworth, Express Scripts’ chief executive, would serve as president of the Express Scripts business.

 ?? Wilfredo Lee / Associated Press 2017 ?? Cigna’s acquisitio­n of Express Scripts is the latest in a string of proposed buyouts and tie-ups in a rapidly shifting landscape for the health services industry.
Wilfredo Lee / Associated Press 2017 Cigna’s acquisitio­n of Express Scripts is the latest in a string of proposed buyouts and tie-ups in a rapidly shifting landscape for the health services industry.
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