Miami Herald

Judge strikes down rule requiring drug ads to reveal prices

- BY RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR Associated Press

A federal judge Monday blocked a major White House initiative on prescripti­on-drug costs, saying the Trump administra­tion lacked the legal authority to require drugmakers to disclose their prices in TV ads.

The narrow ruling by U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta in Washington, D.C., struck down a requiremen­t that was set to go into effect within hours, on Tuesday. Drugmakers had argued that requiring them to disclose prices amounted to coercion that would violate their free-speech rights under the Constituti­on.

But in his 27-page ruling, Mehta avoided debating the First Amendment, saying simply that the Trump administra­tion had failed to show it had legal authority under the statutes that govern federal programs, such as Medicare, to require price disclosure.

He wrote that neither the law’s “text, structure, nor context evince an intent by Congress to empower (administra­tive agencies) to issue a rule that compels drug manufactur­ers to disclose list prices.”

Mehta also said he wasn’t questionin­g the motives of the Health and Human Services Department, which issued the price-disclosure rule.

“That policy very well could be an effective tool in halting the rising cost of prescripti­on drugs,” the judge wrote. “But no matter how vexing the problem of spiraling drug costs may be, HHS cannot do more than what Congress has authorized. The responsibi­lity rests with Congress to act in the first instance.”

HHS spokeswoma­n Caitlin Oakley said the administra­tion was disappoint­ed by the ruling and “will be working with the Department of Justice on next steps related to the litigation.” The administra­tion could appeal the ruling, and it could also ask Congress to specifical­ly authorize requiring drugmakers to disclose their prices. The Senate and the House are working on a package of bills that aim to reduce healthcare costs, and drug prices are one of lawmakers’ biggest targets.

The lawsuit was brought by three major manufactur­ers, Merck, Eli Lilly, and Amgen. HHS Secretary Alex Azar was once a top executive of Indianapol­is-based Eli Lilly.

AARP Vice President Nancy LeaMond also called the ruling a disappoint­ment. “Today’s ruling is a step backward in the battle against skyrocketi­ng drug prices,” she said in a statement. “Americans should be trusted to evaluate drug price informatio­n and discuss any concerns with their health care providers.”

Mehta was nominated to the federal bench by former President Barack Obama.

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