San Antonio Express-News

Drug industry fights discounts

Lobbying efforts focusing on cutting back on Medicare benefit for seniors

- By Cynthia Koons and Ben Brody

Pharma giants have been quick to tout their efforts to help the Trump administra­tion rein in runaway drug prices, but behind the scenes the industry has been lobbying furiously to roll back recently mandated medicine discounts for U.S. seniors.

Drug companies are focusing lobbying efforts to use a possible lame-duck session of Congress to peel back a legislativ­e loss they suffered earlier this year, according to people familiar with the efforts. On the line for the drug industry is $1.9 billion next year, according to one estimate. Critics say the effort by the industry has the potential to increase costs for some of the most vulnerable and medically fragile Americans: seniors on Medicare.

Medicare covers most drug costs until a patient and their plan spend $3,750. Then, coverage drops off and doesn’t pick up again until a patient’s total out-of-pocket

costs, including what drug companies pay in discounts, hit $5,000. That gap between coverage is the doughnut hole.

Almost 30 percent of seniors fell into the hole in 2014, according to data from the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission, and more are being affected as costs rise for drugs to treat conditions like diabetes, arthritis and cancer.

To make the doughnut hole less onerous, drugmakers had been required to give a 50 percent discount on their products once seniors hit the spending threshold. A legislativ­e change in February backed by both parties increased the industry discount to 70 percent.

That extra discount is what drugmakers want to roll back, claiming that it goes too far and that the drug industry is taking too much of the expense. The lame duck session — in between the midterm elections Tuesday when Democrats took the House, but before they would actually be seated and take over in January — may be pharma’s best, last chance.

Drugmakers are up against Democrats, who oppose rolling back the larger discounts, but may also struggle with the Trump administra­tion, which has made lowering drug costs for consumers a policy priority.

In response, the industry has increased its muscle in Washington.

Giants like Johnson & Johnson, Amgen, AstraZenec­a and Eli Lilly boosted spending on lobbying by 30 percent or more in the third quarter, according to an analysis of filings by Bloomberg News.

“We support reducing the manufactur­er coverage gap rebate percentage,” Ruud Dobber, president of AstraZenec­a U.S., said in a statement.

Johnson & Johnson spent $1.98 million during that period, more than twice its expenditur­e during the same period a year earlier, according to lobbying disclosure­s filed with Congress. The company said the increase was to pay dues to trade associatio­ns. Its disclosure forms listed “issues related to Medicare Part D,” as the prescripti­on drug program is known, as a key policy it sought to influence.

The drug industry has said it supports seniors paying less for drugs, just not at companies’ expense. “Closing the doughnut hole is a good thing,” Pharmaceut­ical Research and Manufactur­ers of America or PhRMA, spokeswoma­n Juliet Johnson said. But the way it was done earlier this year “was wrong for seniors.”

“This was a rushed and ill-considered change,” the Biotechnol­ogy Industry Organizati­on, which represents biotechnol­ogy companies, said in a statement. “We will continue to make the case to lawmakers in both parties for a fix.”

PhRMA wants insurers, whose share of drug costs was reduced in the new law, to foot more of the bill. Critics of the drug industry say that’s misguided.

“If you shift it back onto the plans, I’m only going to pay more in out-of-pocket or in premiums,” said David Mitchell, who runs the drug price advocacy group Patients for Affordable Drugs NOW. “Why would we revisit this? Why would we even be talking about this? Except that big pharma is unaccustom­ed to having things happen to it by congressio­nal action that they do not like.”

The February increase to the doughnut hole discounts should put $1.3 billion back in seniors’ pockets in 2019, and $600 million more in government coffers, according to Seattle-based research and consulting firm Milliman.

Pharma companies have pushed lawmakers to rein the discount back to 63 percent instead. The industry earlier this year tried to push for that change during negotiatio­ns about an opioid crisis relief package, prompting some critics to say they were seeking a bailout at a time when they were supposed to be addressing other problems.

Part of the argument over the discounts stems from a debate about the February law. After the law went into effect, the Congressio­nal Budget Office found that it reduced spending by more than originally thought. Republican­s have said they want to scale back that impact with a smaller discount, while Democrats have said doing so might unfairly harm seniors.

“Republican­s are just desperate to get their multibilli­on-dollar giveaway to Big Pharma done before a Democratic majority takes over the House,” said Henry Connelly, a spokesman for Nancy Pelosi, the Democratic leader in the House of Representa­tives.

Rep. Greg Walden, the Republican who leads the House Energy and Commerce committee, supports changing the doughnut hole, though said the way it was done in February needs to be fixed.

“He hopes and expects there will be bipartisan support when members return to D.C.,” said Zach Hunter, Walden’s spokesman. The committee would be a starting place for legislativ­e changes to the current law.

The pharma industry’s trade group has consistent­ly been among the top-10 biggest-spending lobbying groups over the past decade. National Associatio­n of Realtors.

AARP, the lobbying group that represents the interests of seniors, says it has been educating people about the way the new discounts will work, and has been making its push to ensure they remain in place.

“This was a real win for beneficiar­ies,” said Megan O’Reilly, director of the federal health & family team at AARP. “We need to protect that and not be rolling it back.”

 ?? Ocskay Mark / Tribune News Service ?? As concern grows about a national opioid epidemic, some seniors now find it harder to get medication­s they need.
Ocskay Mark / Tribune News Service As concern grows about a national opioid epidemic, some seniors now find it harder to get medication­s they need.
 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i / Associated Press ?? Rising prescripti­on drug prices have created a burden on consumers. President Trump outlined a plan Friday to lower costs.
Rich Pedroncell­i / Associated Press Rising prescripti­on drug prices have created a burden on consumers. President Trump outlined a plan Friday to lower costs.

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