The Macomb Daily

Eli Lilly is capping customers’ insulin costs at $35

- By Nacha Cattan

Eli Lilly is capping outof-pocket costs for insulin at $35 a month, following a public plea from President Joe Biden for lower prices of the diabetes treatment for all Americans.

Lilly announced the cap Wednesday along with other actions, including cutting the list price for non-branded Insulin Lispro Injection to $25 a vial in May, while some Humalog and Humulin doses will be slashed 70% in the fourth quarter. Newly-launched Rezvoglar will sell at a 78% discount to a biosimilar version - Sanofi’s Lantus starting in April, the company said.

The drugmaker is heeding Biden’s call just as it’s lobbying for a bill to allow obesity drugs to be covered by Medicare, including its popular Mounjaro diabetes treatment, which is under review for weight loss. In his State of the Union address last month, Biden said he’d seek to expand the Inflation Reduction Act’s $35 cap on insulin costs for seniors on Medicare to all patients. His administra­tion has made lowering the cost of insulin a priority, but his proposal faces an uphill battle in a divided Congress.

“For far too long, American families have been crushed by drug costs many times higher than what people in other countries are charged for the same prescripti­ons,” Biden said Wednesday in a statement. “Insulin costs less than $10 to make, but Americans are sometimes forced to pay over $300 for it.”

Lilly’s move is “a big deal, and it’s time for other manufactur­ers to follow,” he said.

The price cap is a longoverdu­e step, according to Democratic Senator Patty Murray of Washington, who also called on other insulin makers to decrease prices along with Lilly. Danish drugmaker Novo Nordisk and France’s Sanofi also make the drug for the U.S.

“While the current healthcare system provides access to insulin for most people with diabetes, it still does not provide affordable insulin for everyone and that needs to change,” Lilly’s Chief Executive Officer David A. Ricks said in a statement. “The aggressive price cuts we’re announcing today should make a real difference for Americans with diabetes.”

Asked if lowering insulin costs may help garner government favor for Lilly’s push to pass obesity legislatio­n, Ricks told reporters that the only purpose for the insulin price cap is to relieve patients’ out-ofpocket costs.

The Treat and Reduce Obesity Act is a bipartisan bill first introduced in 2013 that aims to expand Medicare coverage of obesity treatments.

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