Wednesday, May 24, 2017

Specialty Drugs: Confronting the Rising Price of Progress

By Scott Holtmyer, R.Ph.



Specialty drugs are expensive. A broad set of medicines for chronic or life-threatening diseases, they are often capable of providing an unprecedented quality of life. But while company health plan members may pay only a fraction of the price out of their own pockets, employers know that offering these drugs is an ever-costlier obligation.
At Script Care, we administer pharmacy benefits for millions of lives, and we see the dramatic impact of specialty drug costs on employer plans every day. For example, a small group adding just one person with a rare autoimmune disorder could see its total pharmacy costs double. Situations like these are precisely why our clients look to us for help.
As recently as 2000, it was rare for specialty drugs to exceed 10% of a plan’s total cost. By 2010, 10% was the norm. In 2014, an article in the journal Health Affairs reported 15% annual growth in US specialty drug spending, which was “expected to account for approximately half ($235 billion) of total annual pharmacy spending by 2018.”1 By 2015 we were already seeing specialty account for up to 40% of pharmacy costs for some Script Care plans.
In a sense, skyrocketing prices are a symptom of scientific success. Specialty drugs help people with rheumatoid arthritis go to work and live without pain. Patients with severe multiple sclerosis, who would otherwise require numerous hospitalizations, can now enjoy a better quality of life. In 2014, Scientific American reported on a hepatitis C treatment that cured over 90% of patients. The article’s headline was revealing: “We Now Have the Cure for Hepatitis C, but Can We Afford It?”2 Today, the treatment applies to four different variants of the virus, including the one that is most common in the US.
Other specialty drugs offer breakthroughs for conditions that never had a drug before, meaning there are more people who can be treated. 25 million people in the US have a rare “orphan” disease. Their drug treatments can cost $300,000 per year.
Meanwhile, doctors today can diagnose conditions like multiple sclerosis far earlier than once was possible. This is good news for patients and families, but it also adds years of high drug costs to an employer’s pharmacy plan.
There is no legal limit to what manufacturers can charge for these drugs, and high prices encourage the development of more specialty products. Of the 22 novel drugs the FDA approved in 2016, nine were for orphan diseases.3
As specialty drug costs continue to challenge employers, we at Script Care challenge ourselves to help control these costs. Our tactics include ensuring proper treatment, creating specialty drug formularies, implementing smarter co-pays, and limiting a member’s day supply per prescription fill.
Solution 1: Proper Treatment
At Script Care, our top priority is to have the right drug matching the right diagnosis for the right person at the right cost. Non-alignment can bring tremendous cost. Script Care once identified a third party laboratory error that could have cost a client $100,000 in unnecessary medication for one of their employees. It shows why we work so hard to avoid mistakes.
Solution 2: Specialty Drug Formularies
Formularies are lists of preferred drugs covered by our plans. Taking advantage of increased competition in the specialty drug market, we choose drugs for our formularies that give our members the best value.
For example, there are ten drugs available for rheumatoid arthritis, with three more in the pipeline. This allows us the flexibility to select effective treatment at a lower cost. There are formulary alternatives to every non-formulary specialty drug a member might be prescribed.
Solution 3: Smarter Co-Pays
To stay competitive and ease the burden on consumers, specialty drug makers often offer co-pay assistance. If tracked improperly, this can strain the obligation on employer plans.
For example, imagine a $1,000 copay on a plan with a $7,000 out-of-pocket maximum. A member might pay only $5 per month with co-pay assistance. If the plan does not account for the assistance, it will record member “payments” of $1,000 per month. The member will thus meet plan’s out of pocket maximum after 7 months, forcing the plan to cover 100% of the member’s remaining costs for the year. In reality, of course, the member has only paid $35.
Our copay assistance accumulator tracks a member’s actual out-of-pocket costs, ensuring that both members and employers contribute their fair share. Meanwhile, manufacturer co-pay assistance for the member continues as usual.
Solution 4: Limiting Day Supply
We limit our specialty medications to a 30-day supply. If we sent a 90-day supply of a specialty medication and the member had an adverse reaction after just a few weeks of treatment, we would waste the remaining medication.
Preparing For the Changes Ahead
2017 is a year of political change and policy uncertainty, especially for the healthcare sector. Alterations to the Affordable Care Act could change our current assumptions about drug prices, and we are closely monitoring legislative and regulatory developments.
In an industry with competing interests and complex incentives, our loyalty remains to our customers and the members they serve with their plans. Regardless of politics or price, Script Care will work tirelessly to keep costs reasonable and get people the treatment that they need.
Scott Holtmyer is the Director of Clinical Services at Script Care, a pharmacy benefits manager.
1 HEALTH AFFAIRS , SPECIALTY MEDICATIONS: TRADITIONAL AND NOVEL TOOLS CAN ADDRESS RISING SPENDING ON THESE COSTLY DRUGS (October 2014).
2 SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, WE NOW HAVE THE CURE FOR HEPATITIS C, BUT CAN WE AFFORD IT? (September 2014).
3 U.S. FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION, 2016 NOVEL DRUGS SUMMARY (January 2017). 

Thursday, January 19, 2017

Stats of the year: 2016 By the Numbers

A review of the 2016 statistics from the multiple facets that make up the healthcare arena includes: 

  • Television Commercials: A combined 1.3 million ads for prescription and over the counter drugs, raking in an estimated revenue of $4.6 million.
  • Opioid Deaths: A nearly 20% increase in overdose deaths in Massachusetts attributed to the synthetic opioid, fentanyl.
  • Expensive Drug Treatments: Only 3% of Kentucky Medicaid participants were able to receive hepatitis C treatments – a sign of the epidemic burdening the Medicaid system nationwide.
  • Growth in Biotech: Private biotech companies received nearly $4 billion less in venture capital investment than in 2015.


 Additional topics include the gene editing technology, CRISPR; stem cell treatment facilities; the impact of Zika on birth rates in Columbia; and hospice care utilization.

Read STAT News' article on it here.

Friday, December 30, 2016

Study: Patients Cared For by Female Doctors Fare Better Than Those Treated by Men

A new study, published in Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) International, reports that Medicare patients over the age of 80 were less likely to die or be readmitted within 30 days if they were treated by a female doctor; estimates based on the findings indicate that as many as 32,000 annual deaths may have been avoided if the provider had been female. While the study does not draw conclusions regarding why this is the case, anecdotally, experts hypothesize that females are generally better communicators and have higher levels of emotional intelligence. These skills play an important role in not only working with patients, but also when working with the nurses who arrange discharge, social work, home care, etc, and the family members who will play a large role in treatment after discharge.

Listen to the NPR podcast on it here.

Monday, December 12, 2016

Chicago Will License Pharma Sales Reps to Fight Opioid Overprescribing

Chicago will enact a new requirement that all pharmaceutical sales reps maintain a license based on their training for ethics, marketing regulations and industry laws; at a cost of $750, the reps will be responsible for applicable fees and annual renewals. The new ordinance also requires paperwork to be filed with the city regarding the reps’ activities and physician contact. The new regulations come after Chicago filed lawsuits against multiple drug manufacturers and their role in the current opioid epidemic. The fees are expected to exceed $1 million for the city, which will then be used to support ongoing education efforts, regulatory costs and expanding treatment availability for addicts. The pharmaceutical industry argues that the new requirements do nothing to curb opioid abuse.

Read a Stat News article on it here.

Tuesday, December 6, 2016

Should We Use Canada and The WHO's 'Essential Medicines' as Guides for US Drug Pricing?

Revamping our Nation’s approach to drug pricing will be a daunting task and is one that the public is expecting from our next president. Experts suggest a foundation be built from two main sources:

  1. The World Health Organization’s (WHO) Essential Medicines list: Containing over 445 medicines deemed as essential in satisfying the priority health care needs of a population, the Essential Medicines list could serve as a model for the U.S. in identifying important drugs that should be protected from price surges and available to the entire population.
  1. The Canadian approach to drug pricing includes a review of efficacy, quality and safety; the proposed price by the manufacturer; prices of competing medications; and prices set in other countries. Negotiations for drug prices include the pan-Canadian Pharmaceutical Alliance and a price is determined for all provinces of the country.
Read Stat News' article on it here.

Wednesday, November 23, 2016

[Podcast] A Powerful Duo Against HIV

Summary: Current treatment for HIV is a lifelong regimen of antiretroviral drugs that place significant economic and clinical stress on the patients being treated. Additionally, if individuals stop taking these drugs, the virus quickly multiplies and rebounds to its original levels. A major component in the weakening of the immune system by the virus occurs through the destruction of immune cells in the gut. The virus targets these cells, forcing the body to work continuously to repair the damage and, subsequently, pulling needed resources from the rest of the immune system. Researchers have developed a therapy to destroy the protein attached to the cells that directs them to the gut and allows the body to mount a system-wide immune response during infection. When used after a course of antiretrovirals, monkeys receiving the new therapy have been able to control the infection without additional treatments for two years. A safety study for use in humans is currently underway.

You can hear the podcast here.