Qureshi Omar, Ramachandran Reshma, Ross Joseph S
Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA.
Section of General Internal Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA.
J Pharm Policy Pract. 2024 Feb 29;17(1):2312374. doi: 10.1080/20523211.2024.2312374. eCollection 2024.
To reduce Medicare prescription drug expenditures, the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) allows the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) to directly negotiate with drug manufacturers on Medicare prices of high-expenditure drugs (≥$200m annual spending) which meet certain eligibility criteria. However, it is unclear what proportion of high-expenditure drugs covered by Medicare, and attributable annual drug spending, would typically be eligible for CMS negotiations in a given year.
We used historical Medicare drug spending data to determine how many high-expenditure drugs, and attributable drug spending, would have been eligible for CMS negotiations had the IRA been in effect from 2016-2019, while also determining which of the IRA's eligibility criteria is most restrictive.
From 2016-2019, approximately one third (33.3% for Part B, 32.4% for Part D) of high-expenditure Medicare drugs would have been eligible for negotiation, with ineligible drugs accounting for 75.2% and 63.8% of spending on high-expenditure drugs in Medicare Part B and D, respectively. Most ineligible high-expenditure drugs were ineligible because they launched too recently. From 2016-2019, between 59 and 74 high-expenditure drugs were eligible per year, indicating that in some years there may not be enough eligible drugs for CMS to negotiate on the maximum number of drugs allowable by law.
The IRA's current eligibility criteria may restrict CMS from being able to negotiate drug prices on approximately two-thirds of the high-expenditure drugs covered by Medicare and may not allow CMS to negotiate on the maximum number of drugs allowable by law. Congress could consider relaxing eligibility requirements for price negotiation, such as those pertaining to launch date recency, to ensure there are a sufficient number of high-expenditure drugs eligible for negotiation or make certain ineligible drugs contributing to significant annual Medicare spending eligible for negotiation on a case-by-case basis.
为降低医疗保险处方药支出,2022年《降低通胀法案》(IRA)允许医疗保险与医疗补助服务中心(CMS)就符合特定资格标准的高支出药物(年度支出≥2亿美元)的医疗保险价格与药品制造商直接谈判。然而,尚不清楚医疗保险覆盖的高支出药物中,以及可归因的年度药品支出中,在给定年份通常有多大比例符合CMS谈判的资格。
我们使用医疗保险药品支出历史数据,来确定如果IRA在2016 - 2019年生效,有多少高支出药物以及可归因的药品支出符合CMS谈判的资格,同时确定IRA的哪些资格标准限制最大。
在2016 - 2019年期间,约三分之一(B部分为33.3%,D部分为32.4%)的医疗保险高支出药物符合谈判资格,不符合资格的药物分别占医疗保险B部分和D部分高支出药物支出的75.2%和63.8%。大多数不符合资格的高支出药物不符合资格是因为它们上市时间太近。在2016 - 2019年期间,每年有59至74种高支出药物符合资格,这表明在某些年份,可能没有足够数量的符合资格的药物供CMS按照法律允许的最大数量进行谈判。
IRA目前的资格标准可能会限制CMS就医疗保险覆盖的约三分之二的高支出药物进行药品价格谈判,并且可能不允许CMS按照法律允许的最大数量进行谈判。国会可以考虑放宽价格谈判的资格要求,例如与上市近期性相关的要求,以确保有足够数量的高支出药物符合谈判资格,或者使某些导致医疗保险年度支出巨大的不符合资格的药物在逐案基础上符合谈判资格。