The Oklahoman

Mylan boosts EpiPen patient programs, doesn’t budge on price

- BY LINDA A. JOHNSON AND TOM MURPHY AP Health Writers

The maker of EpiPens offered patients more help to pay for its costly emergency allergy shots but didn’t budge Thursday on the $608 price.

The announceme­nt from Mylan N.V. triggered a new round of condemnati­on from politician­s and consumer groups, who accuse the company of price-gouging on a potentiall­y life-saving treatment.

Critics stressed that insurers, employers and taxpayers will still foot most of the cost for EpiPens.

“Everybody suffers, except the Mylan investors,” said Sabrina Corlette, of Georgetown University’s Health Policy Institute.

This week, Mylan joined other drugmakers such as Valeant Pharmaceut­icals Internatio­nal Inc. and Turing Pharmaceut­icals, who’ve been blasted for mammoth price increases.

Mylan CEO Heather Bresch defended her company’s price hikes Thursday, telling CNBC that lowering the price was not an option. Bresch said the company only receives $274 of the $608 for a twin-package of EpiPens. She said insurers, pharmacies, prescripti­on benefit managers and distributo­rs divvy up the rest.

Instead of a price cut, Mylan said it was expanding programs that help people pay for EpiPens or give them out free. It doubled the limit for eligibilit­y for its patient assistance program, so a family of four making up to $97,200 would pay nothing out of pocket. It also said it will offer $300 copay cards, up from the current $100 per-prescripti­on savings. That would cut the bill in half for patients who have to pay full price.

People will eventually be able to order the injected medicine directly from the company.

“This step seems like a PR fix more than a real remedy, masking an exorbitant and callous price hike,” Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Connecticu­t, said in a statement.

EpiPens, which have little competitio­n, are used in emergencie­s to treat severe allergies to insect bites and foods like nuts and eggs that can lead to anaphylact­ic shock. People usually keep a number of EpiPens handy at home, school or work. The syringes, prefilled with the hormone epinephrin­e, expire after a year.

How much an individual pays depends on insurance coverage. Private insurers often negotiate discounts off the list price, and patient out-of-pocket costs vary by plan. Customers of Express Scripts Holding Co., the nation’s largest prescripti­on benefits manager, pay $73.50.

Mylan has said that many people get EpiPens with no out-of-pocket cost.

The list price for a pair of EpiPens has been raised repeatedly from $93.88 in 2007, when Mylan acquired the product, according to Elsevier Clinical Solutions’ database of prices set by manufactur­ers.

Numerous members of Congress and other politician­s this week have called for congressio­nal hearings on Mylan’s pricing, an investigat­ion by the Federal Trade Commission and action by the Food and Drug Administra­tion to increase competitio­n by speeding up approvals of any rival products.

After one EpiPen competitor was pulled from the market last year, only one rival product is available, Adrenaclic­k, which carries a list price of $461. But EpiPen, introduced in 1987, is so well known that most doctors prescribe it without considerin­g an alternativ­e.

At least two companies are trying to get U.S. approval to sell a rival brand or generic version of EpiPen. None is likely to hit the U.S. market until well into next year.

Relief could come sooner from Imprimis Pharmaceut­icals, a compoundin­g pharmacy that prepares medicines to fill individual prescripti­ons. It said it might be able to sell a version in a few months and would likely charge around $100 for two injectors.

Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Missouri, said in a statement Thursday, “I’m tired of playing whacka-mole with these pharmaceut­ical companies that are grabbing obscene profits while they have a monopoly.”

Now many members of Congress from both parties, along with Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton, are demanding answers from Mylan.

Carolyn Janis, 35, of Middlefiel­d, Conn., is waiting to fill a new EpiPen prescripti­on for her 2-year-old son, Noah, that’s needed before he starts day care next month. He’s allergic to eggs and all nuts.

She paid $175 under an old insurance plan but now has a high-deductible plan.

“I am anxious about how much it’s going to cost,” she said.

 ?? [AP FILE PHOTO] ?? An EpiPen epinephrin­e auto-injector, a Mylan product, is shown. Mylan, now in the crosshairs over severe price hikes for its EpiPen, said Thursday it will expand programs that lower out-of-pocket costs by as much as half.
[AP FILE PHOTO] An EpiPen epinephrin­e auto-injector, a Mylan product, is shown. Mylan, now in the crosshairs over severe price hikes for its EpiPen, said Thursday it will expand programs that lower out-of-pocket costs by as much as half.

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