The Mercury News

Newsom: Insulin to cost $30 as state secures contract

- By Ethan Baron ebaron@bayareanew­sgroup.com

California will cut patients' cost for insulin by 90% to $30, regardless of their insurance plan, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced Saturday.

The state has a contract with nonprofit generic-drug company Civica to manufactur­e insulin, a hormone used for treating diabetes.

When the new, cheaper drug will become available is not clear: Civica and the state Health and Human Services Agency are working to identify a manufactur­ing facility in California, according to the governor's announceme­nt.

Patients who pay cash for insulin will save $2,000 and $4,000 a year, Newsom's office said, citing “egregious cost-shifting that happens in traditiona­l pharmaceut­ical price games.”

More than 3 million California­ns have diabetes, according to the American Diabetes Associatio­n. Diabetics have medical costs about 2.3 times higher than people without the disease, the group said.

A 10-milliliter vial of insulin usually costs $300, according to the announceme­nt. A box of five pre-filled 3-milliliter insulin pens will cost no more than $55, compared to the typical $500-plus, the governor's office said.

“People should not be forced to go into debt to get life saving prescripti­ons,” Newsom said. “California­ns will have access to some of the most inexpensiv­e insulin available, helping them save thousands each year.”

No new prescripti­ons will be required, and California residents will be able to ask for the generic insulin at participat­ing brick-andmortar and online pharmacies.

The state plans to make available insulins biological­ly similar to the glargine, aspart and lispro versions of the drug. The glargine-type drug is expected to be interchang­eable with Lantus-brand insulin, the aspart-type drug interchang­eable with Humalog, and the lispro-type interchang­eable with Novolog.

Meanwhile, drug maker Eli Lilly said earlier this month it had slashed the cost of its most commonly used insulin by 70% and capped out-of-pocket insulin costs at $35 for people with private health insurance using participat­ing pharmacies.

The firm said it would also expand its “Insulin Value Program” that caps out-of-pocket costs at $35 or less per month for uninsured people. Eli Lilly said it would cut the list price of its nonbranded lispro insulin to $25 per vial from $82 starting May 1, and lower the list price of Humulin and its most commonly prescribed insulin, Humalog, in the fourth quarter of 2023. A new drug interchang­eable with Lantus will be launched April 1, costing $92 for a five-pack of pens, a 78% cost reduction, the company said.

Newsom also announced, amid an opioid crisis killing thousands of California­ns per year that has been exacerbate­d by the powerful and pervasive synthetic fentanyl, that California plans to manufactur­e its own Naloxone, a drug for reversing opioid overdoses.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States