The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Lilly to slash some insulin prices

- By Tom Murphy AP HEALTH WRITER

Eli Lilly will cut prices for some older insulins later this year and immediatel­y give more patients access to a cap on costs they pay to fill prescripti­ons.

The moves announced Wednesday promise critical relief to some people with diabetes who can face annual costs of more than $1,000 for insulin they need in order to live. Lilly’s changes also come as lawmakers and patient advocates pressure drugmakers to do something about soaring prices.

Lilly said it will cut the list price for its most commonly prescribed insulin, Humalog, and for another insulin, Humulin, by 70% in the fourth quarter, which starts in October.

List prices are what a drugmaker initially sets for a product and what people who have no insurance or plans with high deductible­s are sometimes stuck paying.

Lilly CEO David Ricks said Wednesday that his company was making these changes to address issues that affect the price patients ultimately pay for its insulins.

He noted that discounts Lilly offers from its list prices often don’t reach patients through insurers or pharmacy benefit managers. High-deductible coverage can lead to big bills at the pharmacy county, particular­ly at the start of the year when the deductible­s renew.

“We know the current U.S. health care system has gaps,” he said.

Patient advocates have long called for insulin price cuts to help uninsured people who would not be affected by price caps tied to insurance coverage.

Lilly’s planned cuts “could actually provide some substantia­l price relief,” said Stacie Dusetzina, a health policy professor at Vanderbilt University who studies drug costs.

She noted that the moves likely won’t affect Lilly much financiall­y because the insulins are older, and some already face competitio­n.

Lilly also said Wednesday that it will cut the price of its authorized generic version of Humalog to $25 a vial starting in May.

Lilly also is launching in April a biosimilar insulin to compete with Sanofi’s Lantus.

Ricks said that it will take time for insurers and the pharmacy system to implement its price cuts, so the drugmaker will immediatel­y cap monthly out-ofpocket costs at $35 for people who are not covered by Medicare’s prescripti­on drug program.

The drugmaker said the cap applies to people with commercial coverage and at most retail pharmacies.

Lilly said people without insurance can find savings cards to receive insulin for the same amount at its InsulinAff­ordability.com website.

The federal government in January started applying that cap to patients with coverage through its Medicare program for people age 65 and older or those who have certain disabiliti­es or illnesses.

President Joe Biden brought up that cost cap during his annual State of the Union address last month. He called for insulin costs for everyone to be capped at $35. “Today, Eli Lilly is heeding my call,” Biden said in a tweet Wednesday. “Others should follow.”

Aside from Eli Lilly and the French drugmaker Sanofi, other insulin makers include the Danish pharmaceut­ical company Novo Nordisk.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States