The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Drugmakers to disclose prices for medicines

- By Linda A. Johnson

TRENTON, N.J. >> Drugmakers will start disclosing the prices for U.S. prescripti­on drugs that are advertised on TV, but the Trump administra­tion said the move announced Monday doesn’t go far enough.

The prices won’t actually be shown in the TV commercial­s. But starting next April, advertisem­ents mentioning a drug by name will include a website where the list price and other informatio­n will be posted, the industry’s largest trade group said.

The announceme­nt came hours before a speech by Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar on a new administra­tion proposal to require prices in the ads. Azar responded that the industry’s announceme­nt is a “small step in the right direction” but the government’s plan “will go further.”

Most Americans don’t pay the full price for prescripti­ons — one reason drugmakers have opposed disclosing the list prices they set, arguing that would just confuse the public. Direct-to-consumer advertisin­g has been allowed in the U.S. for the past two decades. The ads are required to list side effects but not prices.

The trade group Pharmaceut­ical Research and Manufactur­ers of America, known as PhRMA, said its 33 member companies agreed to include a link in commercial­s to their websites that will give the list price of brandname drugs, the range of likely out-of-pocket costs and any available financial assistance. The group also plans its own website, where patients could look up drugs by name and find similar informatio­n.

Its members include many of the world’s biggest drugmakers, including Pfizer, the maker of the heavily advertised nerve pain drug Lyrica, and AbbVie, which sells the drug Humira for immune system disorders like rheumatoid arthritis.

President Trump has long promised to bring down drug prices, and in May, his administra­tion released a “blueprint” with vague proposals for doing so. One thrust is to give consumers more informatio­n about drug prices, and Azar was to detail a proposed new regulation that ads include drug list prices.

Drugmakers generally can charge as much as the U.S. market will bear because the government doesn’t regulate medicine prices, unlike most other developed countries.

List prices have long been closely guarded, and prescripti­on medicines increasing­ly come with hefty price tags. For example, the monthly list price for Humira injections is $4,872, while Lyrica capsules have a monthly list price of $669. Both those prices are nearly double what they were in 2014.

Those list prices are the starting point for drugmakers’ negotiatio­ns with middlemen, such as insurance companies and prescripti­on benefit managers.

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