Santa Fe New Mexican

Trump backs down on key proposals in drug price plan

U.S. won’t negotiate with pharma companies directly

- By Robert Pear

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump vowed on Friday to “bring soaring drug prices back down to earth” by promoting competitio­n among pharmaceut­ical companies, and he suggested the government could require drugmakers to disclose prices in their ubiquitous television advertisin­g.

But he dropped the popular and populist proposals of his presidenti­al campaign, opting not to have the federal government directly negotiate lower drug prices for Medicare. And he chose not to allow American consumers to import low-cost medicines from abroad.

He would instead give private entities more tools to negotiate better deals on behalf of consumers, insurers and employers.

Speaking in the Rose Garden of the White House, Trump said that a “tangled web of special interests” had conspired to keep drug prices high at the expense of American consumers.

“Everyone involved in the broken system — the drugmakers, insurance companies, distributo­rs, pharmacy benefit managers and many others — contribute to the problem,” Trump said.

“Government has also been part of the problem because previous leaders turned a blind eye to this incredible abuse. But under this administra­tion we are putting American patients first.”

His proposals hardly put a scare into the system he criticized.

Ronny Gal, a securities analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein & Co., said the president’s speech was “very, very positive to pharma,” and he added, “We have not seen anything about that speech which should concern investors” in the pharmaceut­ical industry.

Shares of several major drug and biotech companies rose immediatel­y after the speech, as did the stocks of pharmacy benefit managers, the “middlemen” Trump said had gotten “very, very rich.” The Nasdaq Biotechnol­ogy Index rose 2.7 percent on Friday. CVS Health, which manages pharmacy benefits for many insurers and employers, finished up 3.2 percent.

Republican­s in Congress welcomed the president’s attention to high drug prices and promised to review his proposals, which Trump said would “derail the gravy train for special interests.”

Democrats embraced the opportunit­y to push health care back to the center of the political debate.

“President Trump offered little more than window dressing to combat the rising cost of drugs — a problem that is pinching the pocketbook of far too many Americans,” Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York, the Democratic leader, said after the speech. “We Democrats have offered a better deal on prescripti­on drugs through true transparen­cy, Medicare Part D negotiatio­n, and a cop on the beat to police and stop exorbitant price hikes.”

After supporting some of those same proposals on the campaign trail, Trump pivoted to a different approach. He said his administra­tion would provide new powers for Medicare’s private prescripti­on drug plans, known as Part D, to negotiate lower prices but he would not use the purchasing power of the federal government to conduct direct negotiatio­ns. He said he would make it easier for pharmacist­s to inform patients of cheaper alternativ­es and would speed the approval of over-the-counter drugs “so that patients can get more medicines without prescripti­on.”

Trump also denounced foreign countries that he said “extort unreasonab­ly low prices from U.S. drugmakers” so that their citizens often pay much less than American consumers for the same drugs.

“America will not be cheated any longer, and especially will not be cheated by foreign countries,” Trump said. He directed his trade representa­tive to “make fixing this injustice a top priority” in negotiatio­ns with every trading partner.

“It’s time to end the global freeloadin­g once and for all,” Trump said.

It is not clear why higher profits in other countries would be passed on to American consumers in the form of lower prices, and officials in those countries pushed back hard.

“With our price regulation­s, drug companies are still making profits — just lower profits than in the United States,” said Dr. Mitchell Levine, chairman of Canada’s Patented Medicine Prices Review Board, which

reviews prices to ensure they are not excessive.

The administra­tion floated several ideas that could radically change the marketing of prescripti­on drugs.

Alex Azar, the secretary of health and human services, said the Food and Drug Administra­tion would explore requiring drug companies to disclose list prices in their television advertisem­ents.

The government, he said, will consider whether to “outlaw rebates” — the discounts and price concession­s that are a key link in the drug supply chain. Pharmacy benefit managers are hired by insurers and large employers to negotiate lower drug prices, but they also receive rebate payments from drugmakers, creating a potential conflict of interest, the administra­tion said.

Trump said he would end “the dishonest double-dealing that allows the middleman to pocket rebates and discounts that should be passed on to consumers and patients.”

Mark Merritt, the president

and chief executive of the Pharmaceut­ical Care Management Associatio­n, which represents drug benefit managers, said the real problem was the high prices set by drugmakers.

“Getting rid of rebates and other price concession­s would leave patients and payers, including Medicaid and Medicare, at the mercy of drug manufactur­ers’ pricing strategies,” Merritt said.

Thomas Moriarty, an executive vice president of CVS Health, said his company already offers clients the option to share rebates and discounts with consumers when they fill prescripti­ons.

Experts said some of the president’s ideas could help lower drug prices.

“It’s framed as a pro-competitiv­e agenda, and touches on a range of government programs that the administra­tion can change through regulation — so that the president can take unilateral action,” said Daniel Mendelson, the president of Avalere Health, a research and consulting company. “The trick here for the administra­tion is to do something visible before the midterm elections, so they can take credit for an action that reduces drug prices for consumers.”

Trump’s “blueprint to lower drug prices” has four main themes: increasing competitio­n in drug markets; giving private plans more tools to negotiate discounts for Medicare beneficiar­ies; providing new incentives for drug manufactur­ers to reduce list prices; and cutting consumers’ out-of-pocket costs.

The administra­tion would lower out-of-pocket costs for Medicare patients by requiring prescripti­on drug plans to pass on some of the discounts and rebates they receive from drug manufactur­ers. Patients could see those savings at the pharmacy counter. At the same time, Medicare officials say, there could be a modest increase in premiums for Medicare drug coverage.

Health policy experts like this idea because it reduces the burden on patients with serious chronic illnesses and spreads the expense of needed medication­s across the entire insured population.

But Democrats said Trump’s policy prescripti­ons fell far short of what was needed, especially next to the populist promises he made during the 2016 campaign.

“I think very expensive champagne will be popping in drug company boardrooms across the country tonight,” said Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Md., who has been investigat­ing drug prices for the last year. “The president is apparently abandoning his campaign promise to authorize Medicare to negotiate directly with drug companies to lower prices.”

Administra­tion officials were somewhat defensive about the president’s plan, saying it was bold and significan­t even though it was not what Democrats wanted — or what candidate Trump favored.

 ?? TOM BRENNER/NEW YORK TIMES ?? President Donald Trump speaks alongside Alex Azar, the health and human services secretary, during an event on prescripti­on drug prices Friday at the White House. Trump’s measures did not include authorizin­g the government to negotiate directly with...
TOM BRENNER/NEW YORK TIMES President Donald Trump speaks alongside Alex Azar, the health and human services secretary, during an event on prescripti­on drug prices Friday at the White House. Trump’s measures did not include authorizin­g the government to negotiate directly with...

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