Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Drug firms open price sites to keep regulators at bay

Move is reaction to rules proposed last year to air list rates

- RILEY GRIFFIN AND ANNA EDNEY BLOOMBERG NEWS

The world’s biggest pharmaceut­ical companies are revealing prices of their prescripti­on drugs on websites for the first time in a bid to stave off pressure from President Donald Trump’s administra­tion to make even more public disclosure­s.

The move by companies ranging from pharmaceut­ical company Pfizer to biotechnol­ogy pioneer Amgen comes almost a year after Trump suggested in a blueprint for lowering medical costs that the government might require drugmakers to put list prices in their TV advertisem­ents.

When federal regulators officially proposed such a requiremen­t in October, drugmakers protested. The industry’s main trade associatio­n said the rule would give patients watching TV the false impression that they’re required to pay the full price and that the ads would deter them from seeking treatment. The group also said the proposal would violate the First Amendment by compelling commercial speech.

The trade group, the Pharmaceut­ical Research and Manufactur­ers of America, countered the proposal with its own guidance urging members to redirect patients watching TV commercial­s to online pricing portals. It set a voluntary deadline of April 15.

Manufactur­ers like Pfizer and Amgen have created new digital hubs where patients can find pricing informatio­n for multiple drugs. Others, such as AbbVie Inc., Bristol-Myers Squibb Co., Sanofi and AstraZenec­a, have added list prices to product-specific websites for top-selling drugs such as Humira, Eliquis, Toujeo and Symbicort.

For consumers, the patchwork quilt of resources might not be easy to navigate and could lead to more confusion in the already byzantine world of drug pricing, according to health care cost experts.

“If your aim is transparen­cy, those prices need to be upfront and not require additional action from the patient,” said Connecture Senior Vice President Jim Yocum, who manages price-transparen­cy tools for Medicare.gov. “When you click through a website, that scale and reach is diluted down to nothing. What other industry goes to this length to obscure what the price is?”

Eli Lilly & Co. was one of the first to begin sharing prices, airing television ads touting the website lillyprici­nginfo.com in early January.

“Prescripti­on drug prices can be confusing,” states Lilly’s website, which features informatio­n on four drugs, including the breast cancer treatment Verzenio. Under private insurance, Verzenio will typically cost $50 per month, explains the site. With Medicaid, the price will range from $4 to $9. However, the uninsured can expect to pay the full list price, which comes to $11,732 per month.

“Providing the greater context on the website, where we can give list price but also expected out-of-pocket cost dependent on what kind of insurance you have, is much more meaningful to patients” than putting prices in TV ads, said Lilly spokesman Mark Taylor. The website generates thousands of hits per month, he said.

Bloomberg contacted more than 10 drugmakers about their new price-transparen­cy initiative­s. The companies said their efforts to disclose list prices and out-of-pocket costs online demonstrat­e a commitment to patients amid a high-profile, bipartisan push to tackle soaring health costs.

“It’s notable that rather than standing on the legal problems, the pharmaceut­ical companies have taken a constructi­ve approach to find ways to present pricing informatio­n to consumers in a useful way,” said Jon Bigelow, executive director of the Coalition for Healthcare Communicat­ion, whose members include advertisin­g trade groups.

But Yocum said Washington will see the websites as yet another set of hurdles keeping patients from fully understand­ing the cost of treatment. The White House and Congress will continue to press manufactur­ers to put list prices in TV ads, he predicted.

The White House’s Office of Management and Budget is currently reviewing the final rule that would require the list prices in TV commercial­s, one of the last steps before the measure is made public and can go into effect.

“We need to let the regulatory process go through,” said Pfizer spokesman Sharon Castillo. “Now the ball is in the court of the administra­tion.”

Johnathan Monroe, a spokesman for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, didn’t comment on the timing of the final rule or whether the drugmakers’ responses offered an adequate compromise.

The world’s largest maker of health-care products, Johnson & Johnson, went a step further than its peers in February to put list prices directly in TV ads, in addition to on websites, in a move that aligned the drugmaker with Trump’s blueprint.

“The data shows that consumers want simply presented informatio­n on what they can expect to pay,” said spokesman Ernie Knewitz. “It’s the right decision for us.”

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