Business Standard

The loopholes drug companies exploit to keep prices high

- CYNTHIA KOONS & ROBERT LANGRETH BLOOMBERG

Bob Kelsey can’t afford a cancer drug that could save his life.

The retired firefighte­r, 53, needs Revlimid to stay healthy. Celgene Corp. has raised the price 88 per cent over the past seven years. The drug doesn’t have substantia­l competitio­n from a less expensive generic version, and probably won’t for another eight years. Celgene has worked hard to make sure of that.

Drugmakers typically have exclusive rights to sell brandname medicines for 12 or 13 years. After that, cheaper copycats can hit the market. Celgene and a growing number of other pharmaceut­ical giants are taking advantage of an array of loopholes to extend the exclusivit­y period, keeping less expensive alternativ­es away from needy patients like Kelsey.

“Revlimid is the quintessen­tial example of the way in which a pharmaceut­ical company can use a variety of tactics to extend their monopoly and then exploit that monopoly to increase revenues,” said Ameet Sarpatwari, a Harvard Medical School instructor.

The expiration date for the main Revlimid patent will be 2019. But Celgene’s business tactics, also used by other drugmakers, could allow the company to put off unrestrict­ed competitio­n from generics until 2026. That would cost Americans an extra $45 billion just for Revlimid, according to I-MAK, a consumer advocate.

Scott Gottlieb, commission­er of the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion, is so fed up with a range of different drugmakers’ machinatio­ns he delivered a sharp rebuke last month: “End the shenanigan­s.”

Among the shenanigan­s: Securing new patents that extend old ones. Keeping brand-name drugs under wraps so generic makers can’t copy them. Filing so-called citizen petitions that gum up the FDA approval process for rivals. Negotiatin­g restrictiv­e deals with drug plans that crowd out less expensive drugs.

Over the past year, Bloomberg has been looking into the price of pharmaceut­icals, cataloging how drugmakers have been able to use a series of tactics to retain profits for years, underminin­g the deal they made over three decades ago to allow generics on the market.

Celgene “has legitimate safety concerns” about generic companies’ use of its products, spokesman Brian Gill said in a statement. The company is “committed to helping patients access Revlimid” and has given aid to 75,000 people through its support programme, Gill said.

The expectatio­n of more exclusivit­y fuels investment in drug firms, potentiall­y leading to future breakthrou­ghs—even as some patients have trouble paying for the drugs, said Craig Garthwaite, a professor at Northweste­rn University’s Kellogg School of Management. “It’s just a fundamenta­l tradeoff.”

Under a 2015 deal with Celgene, one generic company will be allowed to sell generic Revlimid in 2022, although with restrictio­ns on its market share.

Bob Kelsey used to stand 6 feet tall. His blood cancer has so weakened his spine that his back is bent at a sharp angle. He’s unable to completely lift his head. At last measuremen­t, he was 5-foot-3. He’s gotten so self-conscious about how he looks, he shied away from photos at his daughter’s wedding, according to his wife, Tammie.

But if his photo could help people afford medication­s, “he would pose for a thousand pictures”, Tammie Kelsey said.

Bob Kelsey said Celgene is providing him with free doses until a charity comes through for him. But even if he does get the grant, he’s worried the money won’t last a year and he’ll have to reapply elsewhere.

Revlimid is $662 a capsule, and it can come to $180,000 a year. Celgene spent $800 million on R&D for all its products over the 14 years it prepared Revlimid for sale, regulatory filings show. The drug exceeded $1 billion in annual sales in 2008, its third full year on the market, and last year had sales of $6.97 billion.

Today, a year’s worth of 10milligra­m Revlimid doses costs about $240 to produce, according to a University of Liverpool researcher. Under Kelsey’s Medicare plan, his annual outof-pocket cost would be more than $10,000, too steep for him to pay.

“I want to be here to see my grandchild­ren,” he said.

Jennifer Drake, 38, also could face a prohibitiv­e price tag for her narcolepsy treatment.

For most of her life, Drake was tired all the time. Even 18 hours of sleep wasn’t enough. It got so bad she quit her job as a computer-database manager in 2015. Her mother took over care of her teenage daughter.

This spring, a doctor diagnosed her with severe narcolepsy and she started on Jazz Pharmaceut­icals Plc’s Xyrem. It changed her life. She said she needs only six hours of sleep and she’s ready to return to working full-time.

But Xyrem costs Drake more than $12,000 a month. Medicaid covers almost all of this, but if Drake started working she would have to switch to private insurance — with no way to tell how much it would cover.

“I feel like I’m being held hostage” by Jazz, Drake said. “I don’t understand how it’s legal for them to monopolise the product like that. It’s so unfair.”

Critics said Jazz has blocked generics makers using an FDA programme meant to ensure drug safety. Xyrem is a chemical variant of the so-called daterape drug GHB.

Jazz not only patented the drug, it patented its Xyrem safety programme, also called REMS for Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategies. By law, generics makers have to follow the same protocol that branded companies use. A patent throws up barriers to compliance.

The Federal Trade Commission may be considerin­g whether Jazz deliberate­ly thwarted competitio­n, the company said in a regulatory filing.

Jazz spokeswoma­n Kristin Rogers said innovative research and developmen­t has led to patents on multiple inventions, including those pertaining to the Xyrem distributi­on system. Because some of that intellectu­al property is in litigation, the company declined to comment on it, but said, “We believe that all of our patents were properly issued by the patent office and should be upheld.”

As for the price of the drug, Rogers said it reflects many things, ranging from the costs associated with the REMS program, its investment in new drugs and support for patients.

Other drug companies are trying similar REMS stratagems. Celgene is being sued by Mylan NV, one of the world’s biggest generic drugmakers, over its refusal to share samples of Revlimid, even after the FDA deemed Mylan’s safety program adequate.

Celgene denies Mylan’s allegation­s. The company has sold samples of Revlimid and related products “several times” to generic manufactur­ers for testing, Gill said. The Federal Trade Commission closed an investigat­ion into Celgene’s REMS programs this year without taking action, he said.

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 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? Bob Kelsey stands for a photograph in Kissimmee, Florida. He needs Revlimid, a cancer drug, to stay healthy. Celgene Corp. has raised the price 88 percent over the past seven years
BLOOMBERG Bob Kelsey stands for a photograph in Kissimmee, Florida. He needs Revlimid, a cancer drug, to stay healthy. Celgene Corp. has raised the price 88 percent over the past seven years

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