The Day

House Democrats announce sweeping investigat­ion of drug pricing

- By RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR

Washington — House Democrats announced a sweeping investigat­ion Monday of the pharmaceut­ical industry’s pricing practices, jockeying for the upper hand with the Trump administra­tion on an issue that concerns Americans across the political spectrum.

Oversight and Reform Committee Chairman Elijah Cummings said he’s sent letters to 12 major drugmakers seeking detailed informatio­n and documents about pricing practices for brand-name drugs to treat diseases including cancer, diabetes, kidney failure and nerve pain.

Among the drugs Cummings wants to find out about are Gleevec, a widely used cancer treatment from Novartis; Nexium, Pfizer’s gastric reflux medication, Humalog, a type of insulin from Eli Lilly, and Crestor, AstraZenac­a’s cholestero­l-lowering medication.

Cummings, a Maryland Democrat, said he wants to find out why prices have increased so dramatical­ly for some existing medication­s, as well as how drug companies determine the prices of newly introduced medicines. The committee also is seeking informatio­n on what the manufactur­ers do with revenue and what steps can be taken to reduce prescripti­on drug costs.

“Research and developmen­t efforts on groundbrea­king medication­s have made immeasurab­le contributi­ons to the health of Americans,” Cummings said. “But the ongoing escalation of prices by drug companies is unsustaina­ble.” The committee, which has broad jurisdicti­on and subpoena power, is planning to hold hearings.

The Trump administra­tion has been pursuing its own plan to lower drug prices by approving more generic medication­s and trying to do away with industry practices that allow manufactur­ers, insurers and pharmacy benefit managers to profit at the consumer’s expense. But independen­t analysts have said the administra­tion’s approach does not stop companies from charging high prices to begin with, particular­ly for brand-name medication­s with no generic competitor­s.

Polls regularly show that high drug prices are a major concern for consumers, and that majorities favor government action regardless of political party identifica­tion.

Last week, Cummings and other prominent liberals introduced legislatio­n that would tie U.S. prices to what consumers pay in other economical­ly advanced countries, where government­s regulate prices. The Trump administra­tion has been moving in the same general direction, with an experiment that would involve a limited set of medication­s, those administer­ed in a doctor’s office.

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