Arab Times

Trump firms up plan to import medicines

Cos resist

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WASHINGTON, Aug 1, (Agencies): The Trump administra­tion took a step Wednesday toward allowing importatio­n of medicines from Canada, an action the president has advocated as a way to bring cheaper prescripti­on drugs to Americans, but the pharmaceut­ical industry was quick to resist the move.

The US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) said it and the Food and Drug Administra­tion will propose a rule that will allow it to authorize states and other groups to pursue pilot projects related to importing drugs from Canada.

The agency also said it would allow drugmakers to bring drugs that they sell more cheaply in foreign countries into the United States for sale here, an option the companies are unlikely to embrace.

Capital Alpha analyst Rob Smith, in a research note, questioned why manufactur­ers would voluntaril­y lower prices in the United States to match those in Canadian or any other foreign country.

The announceme­nt comes as President Donald Trump aims to address the world’s highest drug prices ahead of the 2020 elections and after several high-profile policy failures.

Azar

Plans

Reuters has previously reported that the administra­tion is considerin­g broadening its plans to link the cost of some drugs for the government Medicare program to an internatio­nal pricing index.

Trump also supports bipartisan drug pricing legislatio­n designed to force pharmaceut­ical companies to give discounts when drug prices rise more than inflation.

Another piece of bipartisan legislatio­n aimed at prices of drugs developed using federal research funds was introduced on Wednesday by Republican Senator Rick Scott and Senator Chris Van Hollen, a Democrat.

The importatio­n idea still needs to be proposed and then finalized by Health and Human Services. The largest US pharmaceut­ical and biotech companies said they opposed the idea of importatio­n through their lobbyists PhRMA and BIO.

“There is no way to guarantee the safety of drugs that come into the country,” PhRMA Chief Executive Officer Stephen Ubl said.

Drug industry shares were slightly higher, with the NYSE Arca Pharmaceut­ical Index up 0.13 percent versus a broader flat market.

HHS Secretary Alex Azar said he has had prior discussion with Canada about importatio­n and that it would be up to the states, pharmacies and distributo­rs, who are expected to pursue the importatio­n through trial models, to navigate the issues.

“There are hurdles of course, but the hurdles now are known. They are being laid out and they are surmountab­le,” Azar told reporters on a conference call.

Statement

The Canadian health minister’s office said in a statement that it will work to understand the implicatio­ns for Canadians and to ensure it does not negatively affect supply or cost.

Earlier this month, Health Canada said the US market is too large to rely on Canadian imports as a solution to the high cost of drugs.

Any implementa­tion is still far away given the technical steps of rule making and that the proposals will face challenges, Evercore ISI analysts Ross Muken and Michael Newshel said in a research note. For instance, they said, while Democrats like importatio­n, most Republican­s in Congress oppose it.

Senate Democrats reacted with caution to the Trump administra­tion moves toward allowing importatio­n of medicines from Canada. “We have to look at the details of this plan to see if it amounts to much,” said Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer.

The first part of the proposal would allow states, wholesaler­s or pharmacist­s to submit plans for pilot projects for Canadian drugs if their raw materials are manufactur­ed in the same plant as the US version. It would exclude biologics, infused drugs, injected drugs and inhaled drugs for surgery.

The Trump Administra­tion has had setbacks in efforts to bring down drug prices. Its plan to make drugmakers disclose list prices in TV ads had to be scrapped after the companies won a legal challenge, and it abandoned efforts to force pharmacy benefit managers to pass discounts onto Medicare recipients.

Sen Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, chairman of the panel that oversees Medicare said on Twitter that it would lower prescripti­on drug costs. He and Democratic presidenti­al candidate Sen Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota have a bill to facilitate importatio­n. Sen Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn, who chairs the health committee, welcomed the plan but said the key is whether importatio­n can be done safely.

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