San Diego Union-Tribune

MEDICARE TOLD TO REASSESS PREMIUM HIKE

HHS secretary cites reduced price for Alzheimer’s drug

- BY AMY GOLDSTEIN

The nation’s top health official Monday directed Medicare to consider lowering the premium for the part of the program that covers visits to the doctor and other care outside hospitals. It marked the first time the federal health insurance system for older Americans and those with disabiliti­es has rethought the monthly amount patients pay after a change has gone into effect.

Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra gave the instructio­ns to the Centers for Medicare and Medicare Services, or CMS, the agency that oversees the program, saying a review of the Part B premium is needed because of a price drop in a controvers­ial Alzheimer’s drug that Medicare does not yet pay for but might begin covering soon.

Becerra’s directive comes just days before the agency is due to decide preliminar­ily whether to include the drug, Aduhelm, among the roster of medicines that Medicare covers. The Food and Drug Administra­tion approved the drug in June, despite considerab­le dispute over whether there is enough evidence that it is effective.

Aduhelm’s manufactur­er, Biogen, set its initial price at $56,000 — sparking an outcry from the drug’s proponents and critics alike. That price tag was part of the reason that, when CMS announced the Part B premium for 2022 in November, the monthly amount consumers must pay rose from $148.50 to $170.10. The increase is the largest in dollar amount in the program’s history, which dates to President Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society of the 1960s. In percentage terms, it is the fourth-largest hike.

In November, the agency noted great uncertaint­y about how much the drug would weaken Medicare’s already-fragile finances, if it were to be covered. “Depending on utilizatio­n, the potential costs for this course of treatment range from negligible to very significan­t,” the agency wrote in the Federal Register notice about this year’s premiums.

If 1 million of the roughly 62 million people on Medicare used Aduhelm, spending by the program on that drug alone would be nearly $57 billion a year, the Kaiser Family Foundation estimated several months ago. That would far exceed all other medicines combined covered through Medicare’s Part B, which includes infusion therapies such as Aduhelm and other drugs administer­ed in doctor’s offices. (Medicare has a separate Part D, with private health plans covering medicine patients take at home.)

Late last month, Biogen cut Aduhelm’s price nearly in half, to $28,200.

In a two-sentence announceme­nt of his directive, Becerra called the price change “dramatic,” and said it “is a compelling basis for CMS to reexamine” the monthly premium that began this month.

“It’s unpreceden­ted for any administra­tion to adjust premiums up or down while they’ve been announced,” said Tricia Neuman, a senior vice president at the health policy organizati­on Kaiser Family Foundation who has specialize­d in Medicare for three decades. “I don’t know of any example.”

Becerra’s instructio­n did not come with any time frame for the Medicare agency to review the premium, and two federal health officials said there are no rules for such a process.

Neuman said that, in practical terms, any change would need to be coordinate­d with the Social Security Administra­tion, because most people on Medicare have their premiums deducted from their monthly Social Security checks.

Beginning with this month’s checks, which start to be issued this week, Social Security has a 5.9 percent cost-of-living increase for 2022, but many people on Medicare may first notice that the relatively large premium increase for their health insurance is cutting into the size of their checks.

 ?? SHAWN THEW AP FILE ?? Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra is ordering Medicare to reassess a big premium increase facing millions of seniors this year.
SHAWN THEW AP FILE Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra is ordering Medicare to reassess a big premium increase facing millions of seniors this year.

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