The Columbus Dispatch

Ohio sues Optumrx to recover overcharge­s

- By Catherine Candisky The Columbus Dispatch

Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost is suing pharmacy middleman Optumrx to recover $16 million in overcharge­s to the state for prescripti­on drugs.

In a lawsuit filed in Franklin County Common Pleas Court on Friday, Yost demanded repayment after first seeking mediation in the dispute on behalf of

the Bureau of Workers' Compensati­on, which hired Optumrx to manage pharmacy benefits for injured workers.

"It’s been 30 days, and we only just now have a meeting scheduled to talk," Yost said. "Time's up; give us our money."

As required under the bureau's contract with Optumrx, the state first sought unbinding mediation with the company.

According to the attorney general, the overcharge­s stem from Optumrx's failure to adhere to agreed-upon discounts on generic drugs for nearly three years, as required under the company's contract with the state agency.

The lawsuit is part of a broader state investigat­ion into pharmacy benefit managers hired by the bureau and Department of Medicaid to negotiate prices with drug manufactur­ers and reimburse pharmacist­s for filling prescripti­ons.

"Our review of PBM practices throughout state government is still ongoing," Yost said. "These are the first raindrops, but there’s a storm a-comin'."

Optumrx also is the pharmacy benefit manager for one of Ohio's five Medicaid managed-care plans. CVS Caremark is PBM to the four other companies. Together, the companies administer $2.5 billion in annual Medicaid drug spending.

Gov. Mike Dewine recently ordered Medicaid officials to rebid the state's managed-care contracts to address concerns about PBM pricing and a lack of transparen­cy regarding their rates, rebates they negotiate with drug companies and other fees.

PBM practices in Ohio and other states have been under increased scrutiny after revelation­s that some PBMS have been charging states far more for drug prescripti­ons than the rates they were paying pharmacist­s to fill the prescripti­ons.

Yost contends that Optumrx overcharge­d the bureau $15.8 million for generic drugs bought between Jan. 1, 2015, and Oct.

27, 2018, when its contract ended and the bureau hired a different company to oversee its drug program. The bureau spends about $86 million a year on prescripti­on drugs.

An analysis commission­ed by the bureau and conducted by Healthplan Data Solutions revealed the overcharge­s.

A subsequent study by the same firm for the Department of Medicaid found that Optumrx and CVS Caremark charged the state $224 million more a year for drugs than they were reimbursin­g pharmacies; that money was generated by the PBMS charging Ohio three to six times the going industry rate.

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