National Post

Federal memo outlines risks of pharmacare

Firms could cut R&D, delay new drugs

- Andy Blatchford

OTTAWA • Brand-name drug companies could put off introducin­g new medicine in Canada and scale back research here if the country makes a major shift to cheaper generic alternativ­es under a national pharmacare plan, according to an internal federal analysis.

The concerns were included last year in a briefing document for federal Finance Minister Bill Morneau that explored the feasibilit­y and costs of a pharmacare program.

Pharmacare is shaping up as a key campaign issue in the October election, particular­ly for the Liberals.

The Finance Department’s analysis was created a few days before Morneau’s 2018 budget officially launched an advisory group on Canada-wide pharmacare, which the Liberals say will cut costs and improve Canadians’ access to prescripti­on drugs. The document said more informatio­n is needed to fully understand how national pharmacare would affect drug spending in Canada — and what it would mean for revenues and business operations for the domestic pharmaceut­ical industry.

In its look at the Canadian industry, the briefing note to Morneau said national pharmacare could influence the revenues of drug companies in several ways. Among the possibilit­ies, it said a shift in favour of more generic drugs, mass-produced after patent protection­s for new medication­s expire, could lower costs.

But that could come with a cost for patients.

“For example, brand-name pharmaceut­ical companies may respond to a broad shift to generic drugs by delaying the introducti­on of new drugs in the Canadian market or by reducing the R&D activities that they undertake in the country,” said the analysis, labelled “secret,” which was obtained by The Canadian Press under access-to-informatio­n law.

“Innovative Medicines Canada, which represents pharmaceut­ical patent holders, has warned that a national pharmacare program focused on cost containmen­t may result in reduced access to medicines for Canadians.”

The president of Innovative Medicines Canada said her members, which include multinatio­nal drug companies, fully support the role of generics. Some of the firms produce generic drugs as well, Pamela Fralick said in an interview.

Fralick said drug companies are eager for more details on Canada’s eventual pharmacare plan — but she stressed there’s a far bigger issue for the industry right now: regulatory reform.

In late 2017, the Liberal government proposed changes to the regulation­s governing patented medicines as a way to drive down drug prices. The update, which has yet to be put into force, would be the first major change to those rules in more than two decades.

The proposal calls for an expanded list of countries Canada can use when comparing patented drug prices. It also includes new factors for the Patented Medicine Prices review Board, a quasi-judicial body operating at arm’s length from the government, to take into considerat­ion when assessing whether a drug is overpriced.

Fralick argued that the proposed reforms need improvemen­t. If they proceed as written, she said companies could suffer a hit to their bottom lines of between 30 and 70 per cent.

With all the uncertaint­y, companies have been holding back on bringing investment to Canada until the regulatory environmen­t has been settled, Fralick added.

Beyond the risk of missing out on investment dollars, she said if unfriendly conditions encourage companies to look elsewhere, new drugs could be delayed years before they get to Canada.

The briefing to Morneau said research and developmen­t investment­s by pharma companies in Canada already “significan­tly lag” spending in other countries in the Organizati­on for economic Co-operation and developmen­t, a group of 34 countries with advanced economies.

The ratio of sales to R&D for all patentees fell again in 2017, to 4.1 per cent. That’s a decrease of 6.5 per cent since its high point of 11.7 per cent in 1995, according to numbers from the price-review board. The industry invested $870 million in 2017 and employed 29,870 people, said the board.

“Since 2003, industry investment in R&D has been less than 10 per cent of sales — the target that the pharmaceut­ical industry committed to in exchange for more favourable patent terms in Canada,” said the briefing to Morneau.

The cost of national pharmacare is expected to be steep.

An analysis by the parliament­ary budget officer estimated a broad coverage regime would carry a $20-billion-a-year price tag. recent work by the Canadian Institute for health Informatio­n found that Canadians spent $39.8 billion on drugs in 2018, about $33.7 billion of it on prescripti­on medication.

A NATIONAL PHARMACARE PROGRAM ... MAY RESULT IN REDUCED ACCESS TO MEDICINES.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES / ISTOCKPHOT­O ?? National pharmacare could influence the revenues of drug companies in a variety of ways, says a federal analysis.
GETTY IMAGES / ISTOCKPHOT­O National pharmacare could influence the revenues of drug companies in a variety of ways, says a federal analysis.
 ?? Ryan remiorz / The CANADIAN PRESS ?? A briefing document for Finance Minister Bill Morneau explores the feasibilit­y of a national pharmacare plan.
Ryan remiorz / The CANADIAN PRESS A briefing document for Finance Minister Bill Morneau explores the feasibilit­y of a national pharmacare plan.

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