Welcome to the Week in Review.

Price Hikes Harm Black & Latino Communities

On Thursday, Patients For Affordable Drugs released a new report – based on drug price data released in July – that exposes Big Pharma’s excessive price hikes this year and details how price increases disproportionately harm Black and Latino patients. This year, big drug companies raised prices on over 1,000 essential medicines, half of which outpaced the rate of inflation. Our analysis sheds light on five cancer medications with significant price hikes in July, four of which had already been hiked in January. These medications are used to treat certain kinds of cancers like multiple myeloma, breast cancer, and prostate cancer, which disproportionately affect Black and Latino patients. “Black and Latino families are more likely to suffer from chronic conditions and certain cancers … that do require those long-term, very expensive drugs,” P4AD’s Executive Director Merith Basey told NBC BLK for their coverage of the report. “A lot of that is also linked to racial disparities in health care that have been well documented due to systemic racism.” Nearly half of Latinos and one-third of Black Americans aged 65 or older report not taking their prescribed medications due to cost, underscoring the urgent need for comprehensive drug pricing reform to address exorbitant prices, curb patent abuses, and promote affordable access to life-saving medications for all communities. — (P4ADBlack EnterpriseRolling OutNBC BLKASPE)

Senate HELP Hearing With Novo Nordisk CEO

At a hearing this week, the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pension (HELP) Committee grilled Novo Nordisk CEO Lars Jørgensen on the outrageous U.S. list prices set by the company for widely-used GLP-1s; Ozempic and Wegovy. In the U.S., Ozempic and Wegovy carry monthly list prices of $969 and $1,394 respectively, which is significantly higher than in other countries including Germany where the drugs carry $59 and $92 monthly list prices respectively. When confronted with questions about the company’s pricing practices, Jørgensen shifted the blame onto pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs), claiming the middlemen demand high rebates for favorable coverage. However, Committee Chairman Bernie Sanders shared that top pharmacy benefit managers recently pledged to not limit coverage of Ozempic and Wegovy if Novo Nordisk chose to lower the price of these treatments. This was the second time Jørgensen had testified before the committee about the company’s monopolistic pricing practices. In May 2023, Jorgensen testified alongside CEOs from Eli Lilly and Sanofi about insulin pricing practices. Holding drug manufacturers as well as PBMs accountable for actions that drive up drug prices and limit access to breakthrough medicines must remain a top priority for Congress. Innovation is worthless if patients can’t access it due to high cost. — (EndpointsReutersSenate HELP Committee)

 

Competition Delivers Long-Awaited Relief

Robust competition within the prescription drug market continues to be the primary factor driving down drug prices. P4AD’s Lisa Ann Trainor, featured this week in Tradeoffs and STAT News, illustrated how increased competition and affordable generic medicines have helped millions of patients like herself gain access to treatments they need. In 2018, after years of living with a chronic illness, Lisa finally found Vyvanse, a drug that for the first time, was able to effectively manage her attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). But two years later due to a change in insurance coverage, Lisa was forced to pay nearly $1,000 out-of-pocket for her Vyvanse — a drug with no generic alternative at the time. Overnight, Lisa’s “life-changing treatment” was priced out of reach for nearly three years until last summer when the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) finally approved a generic version of Vyvanse that she could afford. Patients like Lisa are the bedrock of P4AD advocacy efforts to ensure generic versions of drugs become available sooner to drive down prices and bring essential medicines within reach. — (TradeoffsSTAT, patientspushforcompetition.org)

ICYMI

On 60 Minutes last week, Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Chair Lina Khan highlighted Big Pharma’s exploitation of our patent and regulatory systems which blocks competition and extends its monopoly pricing power. Khan broke down pharma’s anti-competitive tactics to Lesly Stahl, succinctly explaining how they patent every aspect of asthma inhalers as an example, without making any change to the active ingredients in the formula. Watch here.

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