QuoteIt's been widely reported that the actual list price for Auvi-Q is $4,500, which will be the starting point for insurers to negotiate discounts and rebates. It appears Kaléo will foot the bill for patients with commercial insurers that choose not to cover the Auvi-Q.
It's a bold move that could offer serious competition to Mylan and its EpiPen products, which have no such guarantee of a $0 cost for commercially insured patients. Previous reports have suggested the Auvi-Q had a market share of only 10% when it was available.
"We wish we didn't have to do this, but the system is set up in a way that without this bold move, patients wouldn't get access and be able to afford Auvi-Q," Kaléo CEO Spencer Williamson told CNBC Thursday. "We're confident the model provides access and affordability, and that it is a sustainable model."
QuoteStill, the $4,500 list price — even with rebates — is "an attempt to push an extraordinary burden on to the commercial and federal (insurers)," says Michael Rea, CEO of Rx Savings Solutions, which represents insurers.
No one pays the list price, Kaleo CEO Spencer Williamson said Thursday. "Our view is that the most important price is the price to the patient," he said. Anything else would be paid by insurers, he said.
Although Williamson repeatedly said many plans will cover Auvi-Q, he refused to name any of them.
QuoteIn his statement to me, Williamson said most people won't pay anywhere close to $4,000 for Evzio. Even with a high-deductible insurance plan, he said, a patient won't pay more than $360 and might end up paying nothing thanks to the company's "enhanced patient access program."
But that isn't price transparency. That's a magician's trick known as misdirection. Williamson is saying, "Don't look at the crazy list price in this hand, look instead at the sweet discounts in this hand."
The upshot is that his company's prices remain indecipherable.
"It's awfully hard to see much value in this opaque approach to real drug pricing," said Nicholson Price, an assistant law professor at the University of Michigan who focuses on healthcare and regulation. "Especially if we want to have patients be more cost-conscious to keep costs down, opaque pricing does us no favors."
What it does do, he added, is "create lots of opportunities for gaming and middlemen."
Kaleo's gamesmanship isn't new. As my colleague Melody Peterson noted in a story about naloxone pricing last year: "Not long ago, a dose of the decades-old generic drug cost little more than a dollar. Now the lowest available price is nearly 20 times that."
The reason Williamson can so confidently declare that the list price for Evzio isn't worth fretting about is because he knows it's completely arbitrary. Drug companies and hospitals routinely open their negotiations with insurers with a made-up price and then settle for a much lower amount, which is what the patient ultimately sees.
Unfortunately, that system, such as it is, no longer works. An increasing number of Americans face the full cost of healthcare as a result of high-deductible insurance plans.
Kaleo might pat itself on the back for its patient subsidies and protections, but the reality is that somebody has to pay the company's bills, either the patient or the insurer. Sky-high list prices for insurers raise premiums for everyone.
What's to be done? At the moment, the only effective tool is public shaming.
QuoteIt's true that patient assistance programs may help patients cover out-of-pocket expenses. Aronin wrote in his letter that Marathon has "developed the most robust patient access program allowed by law," and a document on Marathon's website says it will offer a copay assistance program to people with nongovernmental insurance who face out-of-pocket costs for the drug, but it doesn't say how much that assistance will be.
Aaron Kesselheim, an associate professor of medicine at Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, called patient assistance programs a "classic marketing strategy" that doesn't solve the larger issue of high drug prices. Some patients might not benefit from assistance programs because they don't know about them, don't qualify for them or the programs last only a limited time.
Plus, they still leave insurers on the hook for most of the cost — an expense that can get passed down to consumers, he said.
"Somebody's paying for that," Kesselheim said. "In the case of private insurance, it's everybody who's paying for it in terms of higher premiums, and in the case of Medicaid and Medicare, it's taxpayers paying for it."
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But the arguments that insurance will cover much of a drug's cost and that patient assistance programs will decrease out-of-pocket expenses don't always reflect the reality patients face when it comes to pricey drugs, experts say.
Those who need costly medications can face thousands of dollars in deductible and co-insurance payments, depending on how their insurance plans cover drugs and whether they get help from patient assistance programs. Even with insurers covering most of the expenses, that coverage can come at a cost to all consumers in the form of higher premiums.
"This idea that the vast majority of people out there are just paying flat $20 copays, it's based on an old understanding of what insurance (does)," said Rena Conti, a University of Chicago associate professor of health policy who studies drug prices.
QuoteTwo U.S. lawmakers have called on privately held Marathon Pharmaceuticals LLC to explain how it came to price its newly approved drug to treat Duchenne muscular dystrophy at $89,000 a year when patients have for decades been able to acquire it overseas for as little as $1,000.
The drug, Emflaza, known generically as deflazacort, is a steroid, one of a class of drugs commonly used to treat Duchenne's that patients could import for personal use because it was not available in the United States. Last week it won U.S. approval, closing off that option for patients.
"We are investigating how Marathon set its price for this drug and how much the company stands to make as a result," Independent Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Democratic Congressman Elijah Cummings from Maryland wrote in a letter to Marathon Chief Executive Officer Jeffrey Aronin on Monday, adding that the price tag was "outrageous."
Drug pricing is a hot political issue. Democrats and Republicans have both investigated Mylan NV for sharply increasing the price of its emergency EpiPen allergy treatment. Last year Turing Pharmaceuticals became a household name after it dramatically increased the price of an important antibiotic.
President Donald Trump has said he wants to lower drug prices and increase competition, though he has not spelled out how.
Marathon officials did not immediately respond to a request for comment. In an interview last week, the company's chief financial officer, Babar Ghias, said Marathon took the pricing issue "very seriously" and that its goal was to ensure patients can access the drug for zero to low cost.
The company said the price of the drug reflected its investment in the product.
The Food and Drug Administration approved Emflaza under its "orphan" drug program that provides incentives to drugmakers to develop treatments for diseases with small patient populations. The incentives include seven years of market exclusivity. Duchenne's, a devastating muscle-wasting disease, affects some 15,000 patients in the United States, mostly young boys.
"Marathon will have a monopoly on deflazacort for years to come, preventing less expensive generic competitors from entering the market, despite the fact that this drug is already available in generic form in other countries," the lawmakers wrote.