Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Insulin prices in US remain higher than most

Canadians paying much less because of legislatio­n

- By Serena Gordon

Nearly a century ago, Dr. Frederick Banting discovered lifesaving insulin, but skyrocketi­ng prices are putting the drug out of reach for many he sought to help.

The average price of insulin nearly tripled between 2002 and 2013 in the U.S., according to an American Diabetes Associatio­n study. Yet other countries pay significan­tly less. In fact, Americans pay more than 10 times as much for insulin as Canadians do, according to a commentary published in a November issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.

“Insulin is a flashpoint in the drug-pricing debate, and it’s still an ongoing issue. It’s a relatively unique product that will require special solutions because so many people rely on it to ensure they can live day to day,” said commentary co-author Dr. Aaron Kesselheim, a professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School.

The current costs would no doubt disappoint Canadian scientist Banting. In the 1920s he and his team members sold the patent for insulin to the University of Toronto for $1 each. They felt that insulin was such an important medication that it needed to be affordable, according to the NEJM commentary.

“Insulin does not belong to me, it belongs to the world,” Banting once said.

Today, more than 7 million people in America use insulin. People with Type 1 diabetes make little to no insulin, so they must replace the lost hormone through injections or via a tiny tube inserted under the skin and attached to a pump. People with Type 2 diabetes still make insulin, but often not enough. Some people with Type 2 diabetes also need to

use insulin.

Manufactur­ers have upper hand

Kesselheim and colleague Dr. Michael Fralick wrote that there are two main reasons why insulin is so expensive now. One is that U.S. laws let pharmaceut­ical manufactur­ers set their own prices and raise them without limit.

The second reason, the authors noted, is that there isn’t significan­t competitio­n in the U.S. insulin market. Price competitio­n typically comes from the introducti­on of a generic drug that directly competes with a branded product.

But the authors said that current insulin makers have blocked the entry to such products by getting new patents based on things such as a new delivery device.

Kesselheim also noted that

“insulin is a slightly more complicate­d molecule,” which makes developing a generic version more challengin­g.

He said that the makers of insulin have begun selling “authorized generics” of their brandname products. Eli Lilly and Co. is selling a generic version of their branded insulin Humalog for

50% less than the brand-name product, according to Greg Kueterman, a company spokespers­on.

Kueterman added that Eli Lilly doesn’t currently have any patentprot­ected insulins. He said the company is also capping prices at the pharmacy for people with commercial health insurance, and increasing eligibilit­y for free insulin for those with very low incomes.

Quinn Nystrom, 33, from Baxter, Minnesota, has Type 1 diabetes. She’s been working with local and federal elected officials to improve insulin access and affordabil­ity.

She’s helped lead three bus trips to Canada so people could buy more affordable insulin. The same vial of insulin that she pays $340 for in the U.S. costs $30 in Canada, she said.

“A single vial of current analog insulin costs around $3 to $6 to make. There is no reason for that price difference between the U.S. and Canada, other than that Canada holds down their drug prices with legislatio­n,” Nystrom said.

But she doesn’t see trips to Canada as a solution to the insulin pricing problem.

Nystrom has become so frustrated by inaction on the insulin pricing issue and the price of drugs in general that she’s decided to run for U.S. Congress, and has pledged that she won’t be taking any drug or insurance company money for her campaign.

She pointed out that insulin pricing affects everyone, diabetic or not. “If someone can’t afford insulin, they end up rationing the insulin they have,” Nystrom said. That leads to complicati­ons that send people to the hospital, which ends up costing far more than the insulin would have.

Reform efforts in the works

Some politician­s have introduced legislatio­n to help contain the cost of insulin, with varying success. Officials in Colorado passed a bill that limits out-ofpocket copays to no more than $100 a month for insulin.

Several federal bills have also been introduced, including by presidenti­al candidate Elizabeth Warren. “Warren’s bill would develop a government manufactur­ing facility to provide lowercost insulin,” Kesselheim said.

Cigna, a large private insurer, has limited monthly copayments for insulin to $25.

 ?? REED SAXON/AP ?? The average price of insulin in the U.S. nearly tripled between 2002 and 2013, according to an American Diabetes Associatio­n study.
REED SAXON/AP The average price of insulin in the U.S. nearly tripled between 2002 and 2013, according to an American Diabetes Associatio­n study.

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