Latest News | Nov 7, 2025

The Week in Review in Prescription Drug Pricing: WH Deal on Weight Loss Drugs, Novo’s DTC Searches, AZ Downplays MFN, FDA on Gene Editing Therapy

Welcome to the Week in Review.

White House Announces Agreements With Eli Lilly & Novo Nordisk on Blockbuster Weight Loss Drugs

From the Oval Office on Thursday, President Trump announced lower prices on several blockbuster weight-loss drugs, including Ozempic, Wegovy, and Zepbound, for patients on Medicare, as well as for anyone who purchases them through the administration’s forthcoming TrumpRx direct-to-consumer website. Though many of the details have not been made public, including how the $50 cost-sharing proposal might work in Medicare and how it might affect current plan costs, the White House fact sheet outlined that TrumpRx will offer Ozempic and Wegovy for $350 and Zepbound for $346 per month. That’s a steep reduction from current list prices of between $1,000 and $1,350 per month, but still higher than prices for these drugs in other high-income nations. Additionally, Medicare will now cover these drugs for weight loss, expanding coverage and reducing the price to $245 per month. With Ozempic and Wegovy both included in the second round of Medicare negotiation, important questions remain about how these agreements will relate to the Medicare-negotiated prices and whether this new voluntary initiative will complement or complicate the savings patients are due to receive, especially given that Lilly and Novo have a long history of price-gouging American patients who take insulin and have consistently increased their prices in lockstep with one anotherStill, this announcement is welcome news for patients like Gloria, whose health and well-being depend on one of these life-changing but wildly overpriced drugs. — [White HouseKFFP4ADWashington PostSTAT NewsPOLITICOCBS NewsBloombergWashington PostWall Street JournalEndpoints NewsSTAT NewsABC NewsReuters]

Novo Manipulates Searches to Push Ozempic

Ozempic manufacturer Novo Nordisk spent $7.5 million on paid keywords over the course of two years, according to a new analysis from JAMA, pushing direct-to-consumer advertisements to individuals searching the internet for weight loss solutions despite the drug not being FDA-approved for weight loss. Over 3,500 of the keywords didn’t even contain a mention of the drug, in what the researchers concluded was an attempt to influence consumers and even “potentially circumvent traditional advertising regulations.” Direct-to-consumer (DTC) drug ads are a practice largely unique to the U.S., and estimates have found that each 1.5% increase in DTC TV ad spending is associated with a 10% increase in sales. The Trump administration cracked down on misleading DTC ads with an executive order in September, organizations like Generation Patient have been working to fight DTC social media ads, and we’ve endorsed legislation like The No Handouts for Drug Advertisements Act that would eliminate a tax break that makes it cheap and easy for Big Pharma to flood the airwaves with ads. Internet searches are just another way pharmaceutical companies funnel misleading advertisements directly to consumers through less-regulated methods, and it’s time for the law to catch up. — [JAMA NetworkSTAT NewsTIMEWhite HouseSen. HawleyNPR]

AstraZeneca Downplays the Impact of MFN

Following its mid-October MFN drug pricing deal with the Trump administration, AstraZeneca executives are downplaying the financial impact. On Thursday, CFO Aradhana Sarin told Bloomberg that the company could fully “absorb” the cost of the agreement, while at the same time, CEO Pascal Soriot appeared on Bloomberg TV, warning that lower U.S. prices could harm an “environment that attracts investment from large pharma companies”. It’s a familiar contradiction: publicly warning that lower prices will devastate innovation while assuring investors that profits are secure. It’s the same playbook the industry has used with Medicare negotiation for years. Big Pharma has repeatedly claimed negotiation would stifle R&D and limit new cures, yet in shareholder meetings and earnings calls, pharmaceutical executives routinely emphasize that the impact on their bottom line will be minimal. This is an industry that could lose $1 trillion in revenue over a decade and remain one of the most profitable industries in the world, and these conflicting messages reveal what’s really at stake: not innovation, but preserving the system that allows drugmakers to charge whatever they want, for as long as they can. — [BloombergTV EyesWest Health]

FDA Clears Way for Faster Personalized Gene Editing Therapy

The FDA is set to publish an outline for the agency’s new approach to simplifying custom gene-editing treatments this month, in an attempt to streamline the lengthy and expensive approval process. By allowing patients with related genetic disorders to be grouped into a combined trial, researchers say the cost for custom-made cell and gene treatments could reach a few hundred thousand dollars — still exorbitantly expensive, but a significant improvement over the current multimillion-dollar price tag. While gene and cell therapies have the potential to transform medicine and patients’ lives, offering cures for previously intractable diseases like sickle cell, leukemia, or lymphoma, the lack of a sustainable pricing model in the U.S. means that access is limited. Spain’s decentralized model for manufacturing CAR-T therapy has sped up production times at a cost of one third of the U.S. price, and a similar model was launched in Brazil in 2024 that’s also set to lower CAR-T’s cost. Cell and gene therapies are revolutionary and lifesaving treatments, but only if patients can afford to access them.  — [BloombergSTAT NewsCaring Cross]

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Patient Advocate Spotlight: Kaye Peterson
Background: 67-year-old retired librarian from Lebanon, Kentucky
Condition: Type 1 Diabetes and Polyneuropathy
Drug: Lispro ($639.59 / vial), Lantus ($649.75 / vial), Midodrine ($185.99). Kaye pays $35 per vial for Lispro and Lantus, and Midodrine is covered by her insurance. 

In her words: “Even with good insurance coverage, prescription drug prices are still ridiculously high for patients who need them. A minor change in my insurance could leave me with soaring out-of-pocket costs.” 

“I believe in lower prescription drug prices because I am way too tired to have to continue asking this question: How many people have to continue to die because they can’t afford their insulin and inhalers?” 

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WASHINGTON, D.C. — The White House announced agreements today with pharmaceutical giants Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk to lower the prices of their blockbuster weight-loss drugs Ozempic, Wegovy, and Zepbound for patients on Medicare, as well as for anyone who purchases them through the administration’s new TrumpRx direct-to-consumer program, expected to launch in January 2026.

Under the deals, for which few details have been made public, patients will be able to purchase Ozempic and Wegovy for $350 and Zepbound for $346 per month through TrumpRx — a steep reduction from current list prices of between $1,000 and $1,350 per month, though still higher than prices in other high-income nations like Canada, Germany, and Japan. 

For the first time, Medicare will also expand coverage of these drugs for weight loss, expanding beyond previous coverage for heart disease and diabetes, at a reduced price of $245 a month.

“If you are a patient whose health and well-being depends on one of these life-changing but wildly overpriced drugs, today’s announcement is welcome news,” said Merith Basey, Executive Director of Patients For Affordable Drugs Now. “We commend the Trump administration for continuing to take steps that can bring much-needed relief to Americans who have been price-gouged for decades by pharmaceutical giants like Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk. Patients are overwhelmingly calling on the Administration and Congress to hold Big Pharma to account at a time when almost 60% of patients have skipped or delayed a prescription because of cost. Any voluntary deal with Big Pharma must be complemented with legislation that tackles the root causes of high drug prices.” 

The news comes just days before Medicare’s second round of negotiated drug prices is expected to be announced under the 2022 Prescription Drug Law — a round that includes both Ozempic and Wegovy. While Administration officials have shared that the new deals are separate from those negotiations, the overlap raises important questions about how these agreements will relate to the binding Medicare-negotiated prices and whether this new voluntary initiative will complement or complicate the savings patients are due to receive under the law.

High costs for drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy have forced patients to skip doses, go into debt, or look abroad for affordable options. Lower prices could bring these medications within reach for people like:

The drug companies’ CEOs joined the President in the Oval Office for the announcement. Stock prices for both companies rose following early reports of the deal.

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Patients For Affordable Drugs Now is the only national, patient advocacy organization focused exclusively on policies to lower drug prices. We empower and mobilize patients and allies, hold accountable those in power, and fight to shape and achieve system-changing policies that make prescription drugs affordable for all people in the United States. P4ADNow is bipartisan and does not accept funding from organizations that profit from the development or distribution of prescription drugs. To learn more, visit: PatientsForAffordableDrugsNOW.org

Welcome to the Week in Review.

FDA Announces Steps to Expedite Approval of Lower-Cost Biosimilars

The FDA took a significant step in accelerating biosimilar approvals this week, announcing a new draft guidance to cut unnecessary red tape and streamline duplicative clinical trial requirements. The change is designed to speed lower-cost treatments known as biosimilars to market for diseases like cancer, arthritis, and autoimmune conditions, delivering relief to patients who’ve waited too long for more affordable options. It’s a move we’ve long supported: the P4ADNow-endorsed Biosimilar Red Tape Elimination Act, introduced by Senators Lee, Hassan, Paul, and Lujan and Representatives Pfluger and Landsman, would codify the same commonsense reforms. While this is welcomed progress, there’s still an urgent need to address the patent abuses that big drug companies employ to block competition and keep lower-cost alternatives from reaching the market. That’s why we’re pushing for several bipartisan patent reform measures in Congress that would close these loopholes and complement the FDA’s announcement – ensuring faster access to affordable medicines for patients. — [C-SPANFDACongressP4ADNowNew York TimesThe HillEndpoints NewsSTAT NewsFierce PharmaBioPharma DiveBio Space]

Senate HELP Hearing Highlights Need for Affordable Prescriptions

Amid growing bipartisan pressure to lower drug prices, the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor & Pensions (HELP) held a hearing this week on U.S. biotechnology that revealed familiar fault lines. While some lawmakers echoed industry talking points about the IRA’s impact on innovation, others pressed for action to make drugs more affordable. Dr. Aaron Kesselheim of Harvard Medical School and Dr. Reshma Ramachandran of the Yale School of Medicine cut through the noise — underscoring what patients and advocates have long known: innovation is useless if people can’t afford it.

The hearing made clear that while pharma continues to frame affordability as a threat to innovation, experts — and an increasing number of lawmakers on both sides of the aisle — are focused on the real issue: ensuring breakthroughs in medicine actually reach the patients who need them.

Cigna Ends Prescription Drug Rebates — Will Patients Benefit?

Cigna is the latest to promise lower drug prices — but whether patients will actually benefit remains an open question. On Monday, the Cigna Group, which owns pharmacy benefit manager (PBM) Express Scripts, announced plans to eliminate prescription drug rebates across many of its commercial health plans starting in 2027, claiming that the move will lower “monthly prescription drug prices by an average of 30% for those who pay full cost.” HHS Secretary RFK Jr. praised the move, saying it aligned with the administration’s “vision of empowering patients.” But the details matter. Previous efforts to pass rebates directly onto patients have often resulted in raised premiums or produced limited savings for most enrollees, especially those not paying full price for their drugs. In an interview with Bloomberg Radio, Cigna Express Scripts president Adam Kautzner said the company expects to “extract more value out of drug manufacturers” — and Cigna’s stock rose nearly 2% by midday of the announcement. Cigna’s move may grab headlines, but the real test is whether the savings reach patients, or just stay with insurers and manufacturers. — [AxiosBloombergX.comBloomberg RadioEndpoints NewsWashington PostSTAT News]

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Patient Advocate Spotlight: Bob Parant
Background: New York resident, living with diabetes for 53 years 
Condition: Type 1 Diabetes 
Drug: Insulin ($825 per month, before the $35 cap) and Entresto ($765)

In his words: “I am thankful for the insulin that has been developed that I use to manage my disease, but the cost is inhumane. I need insulin to live, but far too often, the high prices of insulin stand in the way of patients accessing this essential drug.” 

“The reforms passed in the Inflation Reduction Act make a huge difference in my life. The new $2,000 cap on out-of-pocket costs for my prescriptions, plus the $35 insulin copay caps, mean that I’ll spend much less each year on my drugs. With lower drug costs, I’ll be able to visit my grandchildren more and not worry as much about my retirement funds.” 

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WASHINGTON, D.C. — In response to today’s announcement from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) on new draft guidance to accelerate biosimilar approvals, Patients For Affordable Drugs Now executive director Merith Basey released the following statement: 

“We welcome the administration’s commitment to increasing biosimilar competition to lower drug prices for American patients. Expediting the biosimilar approval process – by cutting unnecessary red tape and streamlining duplicative clinical trials – will help speed lower-cost treatments to market for diseases like cancer, arthritis, and autoimmune conditions, delivering relief to patients who’ve waited too long for more affordable options.”

“To build on this effort, Congress must tackle the patent abuses that allow big drug companies to block competition even after FDA approval. Bipartisan patent reform measures currently in Congress would crack down on these patent abuses and close regulatory loopholes. Together, these actions can help restore fairness and accountability to a system that has favored pharmaceutical monopoly power for too long.” 

The FDA’s new draft guidance would streamline the process for approving biosimilars, which are more affordable than their biologic reference products. The proposal would remove unnecessary human trials, known as interchangeability studies, when advanced testing already shows that a biosimilar works the same as the brand-name drug and would make it easier for doctors and pharmacists to substitute lower-cost biosimilars, much like generic drugs. 

In announcing the new draft guidance, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. underscored the human cost of high drug prices and the role pharmaceutical lobbying played in maintaining monopolies: “Across our country, millions of Americans struggle to afford essential medicines. Families are rationing prescriptions, seniors are skipping doses, and parents are facing heartbreaking choices,” he later added that “when Congress wrote the Biologics Price Competition and Innovation Act, the pharmaceutical industry rigged the rules…They claimed that biologics were too delicate, that they were too mystical to allow true generics… it was all clever marketing, none of it was based on science. Then, to block pharmacists and doctors from switching patients to lower-cost options, the lobby invented a fake distinction between biosimilars and interchangeable biosimilars. The result has been sky-high costs, endless red tape, and a biosimilar market that still lags far behind Europe’s.

FDA commissioner Dr. Marty Makary also highlighted how biologics are driving drug spending and stressed the importance of accelerating competition: “We can create more intense competition and let market forces do their work. When Humira had its biosimilar come out seven years later, it should have been closer to two years — or even one year, as we often see in Europe. When there’s that kind of gap, it means a longer period with no competition and higher prices. We want to see more competition, and we want to see more innovation

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Patients For Affordable Drugs Now is the only national, patient advocacy organization focused exclusively on policies to lower drug prices. We empower and mobilize patients and allies, hold accountable those in power, and fight to shape and achieve system-changing policies that make prescription drugs affordable for all people in the United States. P4ADNow is bipartisan and does not accept funding from organizations that profit from the development or distribution of prescription drugs. To learn more, visit: PatientsForAffordableDrugsNOW.org

Welcome to the Week in Review.

ORPHAN Re-Score Explodes Cost ~$9 Billion, as P4ADNow & AARP Urge Congress Against EPIC

The re-score of the ORPHAN Cures Act by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) confirmed what patients feared: the bill is even more expensive and more harmful than originally projected. The cost to taxpayers has jumped from $5 billion to $8.8 billion, after the first analysis failed to account for the exemption of blockbuster drugs like Keytruda, Opdivo, and Darzalex from Medicare negotiation. This week Senators Welch, Cortez Masto, and Wyden introduced legislation to repeal the provision in the One Big Beautiful Bill and replace it with a targeted policy: exempting only true rare-disease drugs that account for less than $400 million in annual Medicare spending, rather than the current $200 million threshold. The goal is to preserve incentives for genuine rare-disease innovation while ensuring overpriced blockbusters can still be negotiated. But even as legislators work to correct the damage from ORPHAN, Pharma is already pushing its next attack on Medicare negotiation — the EPIC Act, which would delay negotiation for small-molecule drugs, which make up 90% of all prescriptions. As reported exclusively by The Hill. P4ADNow and AARP sent a joint letter to congressional leadership opposing EPIC, warning that it would have disqualified more than half the drugs already selected for negotiation, including Eliquis, Jardiance, and Ozempic. The industry continues to look for more ways to roll back progress. — [CBOPOLITICOSenator WelchAxiosP4ADNowThe HillEPIC One-PagerSTAT NewsReutersEndpoints NewsPOLITICOFierce HealthcareCommon DreamsHealthcare Finance]

Big Pharma Smashed Yet Another Lobbying Record

PhRMA is continuing to buy influence on Capitol Hill, spending nearly $30 million on lobbying so far this year — with record-breaking individual totals in all three quarters. As the industry continues to lose both in court and in public opinion, it’s clear Pharma now views Congress as its last line of defense. But patients are fighting back: the P4AD community has already sent nearly 54,000 letters urging lawmakers to defend Medicare negotiation and stand with patients, not the industry. — [Washington PostPOLITICOEndpoints NewsPOLITICO ProEndpoints News]

New I-MAK National Survey Proves Bipartisan Support for Drug Pricing Reform

The Initiative for Medicines, Access and Knowledge (I-MAK) released the findings from their recent survey, showing just how widespread the affordability crisis remains — and how strongly Americans across the political spectrum want change. The data reinforces what we hear from patients every day: the high cost of drugs affects everyone, regardless of party, and voters want lawmakers to act. Among the key takeaways:

The message is clear: lowering drug prices isn’t a partisan issue — it’s an American priority.

Patient Advocate Spotlight: Mary Simmons
Background: Retired state government employee, from Henrico, Virginia
Condition: Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (ALL) and Diabetes
Drug: Methotrexate

In her words: “After my extended hospital stay, the medical upkeep and additional prescription and medical costs added up. Shortly after, I finally got social security disability insurance (SSDI) and have received more financial coverage and assistance from Medicare and my dual coverage of my husband’s insurance. Yet prescription copays remain at an all-time high, costing me several hundred dollars a month. Due to costs, I even tried switching my medication regimen from brand-name prescriptions to generics, which ultimately caused more problems, forcing me back on the expensive medications. Something needs to be done. Patients deserve lower prices without the stress of worrying how to pay for necessary things when their health is at a low. Big Pharma greed needs to stop!”

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What was once a $5 billion Big Pharma giveaway has exploded to $8.8 billion – a windfall for drug corporations at the expense of patients and taxpayers.

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Patients For Affordable Drugs Now and AARP sent a joint letter to Congressional leadership opposing the EPIC Act (S.832/H.R.1492), warning that the bill would delay Medicare’s ability to negotiate lower prices for small-molecule drugs by an additional four years – threatening one of the most popular and effective drug price reforms in recent history.

Since small molecule drugs make up 90% of prescriptions, if enacted before the passage of the 2022 prescription drug law, EPIC would have disqualified more than half of the drugs selected for negotiation, including Eliquis, Jardiance, and Ozempic, commonly used to treat diabetes, blood clots, heart and kidney diseases. 

The truth is, this isn’t about innovation – it’s about protecting monopoly profits. The industry itself lobbied for a longer negotiation timeline for biologics, and now it’s seeking the same delay for small-molecule drugs. If parity is the goal, both drug types should be subject to negotiation after nine years, not 13.

Further, since the law was passed in 2022, drug company investment and R&D increased. In the nine months following the passage, big drug companies acquired more small-molecule drugs than in the nine months prior. 

EPIC would come on the heels of another massive industry giveaway, with the industry netting a $9 billion handout with the ORPHAN Cures Act. With PhRMA ramping up its lobbying machine and spending $9 million in Q3 alone — its most expensive third quarter to date — we know that EPIC is the next attempt to roll back progress and squeeze patients and taxpayers even further.

But Americans aren’t fooled. Nine in ten Americans want Congress to do more to lower drug prices, and a strong majority supports the government negotiating a better deal for patients. Patients are fighting back. Already, more than 34,000 patients have sent letters to Congress demanding that they oppose the EPIC Act and defend Medicare negotiation.

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October 20, 2025
Dear Majority Leader Thune, Minority Leader Schumer, Speaker Johnson, and Minority Leader Jeffries:

We write to you on behalf of the millions of Americans who want real relief from outrageous prescription drug prices and are urging Congress to protect them from higher costs. Costly legislation like S.832/H.R. 1492 – the Ensuring Pathways to Innovative Cures (EPIC) Act – does not serve the American taxpayers and would instead block or delay patients’ access to lower prescription drug prices at a time when the overwhelming majority support granting Medicare the power to negotiate lower prices for more drugs. 

Simply put, the EPIC Act would give drug companies even more time to charge Americans the same or even higher prices for their medications – all by extending the Medicare drug price negotiation exemption period for small molecule drugs (pills) from nine to 13 years. That’s four more years where patients and taxpayers would continue bearing the burden of high prices, with billions in additional costs. In real terms, taxpayers could face close to 10 billion dollars in unnecessary spending at a time when fiscal responsibility is paramount, while patients face impossible choices like whether to fill their prescriptions or purchase groceries.

The pharmaceutical industry’s claim that current law is stifling the development of small-molecule drugs is not supported by objective evidence. Since Medicare drug price negotiation became law in 2022:

Moreover, only the highest expenditure drugs can be selected for negotiation. To be eligible, products must gross at least $200 million per year from Medicare alone. Coupled with the number of years before Medicare-negotiated drug prices become available, drugs that are eligible for negotiation are well-positioned to recover all of their R&D costs within the existing nine-year window based solely on Medicare revenue. It is also important to note that the pharmaceutical industry does not undertake R&D alone. Taxpayers help underwrite medical innovation: the NIH contributed funding to over 99 percent of drugs approved between 2010 and 2019.

Americans deserve a government that prioritizes their needs over unfounded complaints from drug companies. We urge you to stand with patients and older Americans by protecting access to affordable medicines and ensuring taxpayer dollars are used wisely. Please oppose any legislation that would make it harder for struggling patients to gain affordable access to the medications they need, including the EPIC Act (S.832/H.R.1492). 

Sincerely, 
AARP
Patients for Affordable Drugs Now

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Patients For Affordable Drugs Now is the only national, patient advocacy organization focused exclusively on policies to lower drug prices. We empower and mobilize patients and allies, hold accountable those in power, and fight to shape and achieve system-changing policies that make prescription drugs affordable for all people in the United States. P4ADNow is bipartisan and does not accept funding from organizations that profit from the development or distribution of prescription drugs. To learn more, visit: PatientsForAffordableDrugsNOW.org

What was once a $5 billion Big Pharma giveaway has exploded to $8.8 billion – a windfall for drug corporations at the expense of patients and taxpayers.

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) has re-scored the pharmaceutical carveout known as the ORPHAN Cures Act, and the results confirm what patients feared: it’s even more expensive – and more harmful – than originally thought.

The new score reveals the bill will cost taxpayers $8.8 billion, up from a massive $5 billion initially. The CBO’s earlier analysis failed to fully account for the impact of exempting blockbuster drugs like Keytruda, Brukinsa, and Jakafi from Medicare price negotiations – a change that funnels billions in savings away from patients and straight into Big Pharma’s pockets.

“The ORPHAN Cures Act is a wildly expensive handout to Big Pharma that will harm patients, drain taxpayer dollars, and weaken the government’s ability to rein in high drug prices,” said Merith Basey, executive director of Patients For Affordable Drugs Now. “And yet, the insatiable pharmaceutical industry continues to demand more – spending record sums this year to advance additional carveouts like the EPIC Act, which would exempt even more blockbuster drugs from negotiation. Any support for these bills goes against the will of the 90% of Americans who want Congress to go further to lower drug prices – not facilitate another handout to Big Pharma.”

The ORPHAN Cures Act exempts drugs approved for two or more rare diseases from Medicare negotiation, including blockbuster medicines that already generate billions. If drugs have both orphan and non-orphan designations, ORPHAN resets their negotiation timeline to the date of their newest approval, even if they’ve been on the market for years. Rare disease research incentives have existed in the U.S. under the Orphan Drug Act for more than 40 years, and investment in drug R&D has hit record levels since the Inflation Reduction Act was passed, directly contradicting the industry’s fearmongering about innovation.

Following the ORPHAN Cures Act, two additional industry-backed bills – the EPIC Act and MINI Act – threaten to further weaken Medicare’s negotiating power and inflate drug costs:

Both rely on debunked claims that negotiation stifles innovation – and both would sabotage President Trump’s ability to secure a better deal for Americans.

Across the country, patients are mobilizing against these industry giveaways. Collectively, P4ADNow’s community has sent 53,886 letters urging lawmakers to reject carveouts like ORPHAN, EPIC, and MINI and protect Medicare’s power to negotiate lower prices.

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Patients For Affordable Drugs Now is the only national, patient advocacy organization focused exclusively on policies to lower drug prices. We empower and mobilize patients and allies, hold accountable those in power, and fight to shape and achieve system-changing policies that make prescription drugs affordable for all people in the United States. P4ADNow is bipartisan and does not accept funding from organizations that profit from the development or distribution of prescription drugs. To learn more, visit: PatientsForAffordableDrugsNOW.org

Welcome to the Week in Review.

AstraZeneca Strikes Deal with Trump, While Undermining Admin’s Powers Behind the Scenes

The Trump administration announced that AstraZeneca struck a deal to sell certain drugs to Medicaid at a discount, and committed to listing any new drugs it releases on the TrumpRx platform. It’s the third deal, and points to how the industry is performing the bare minimum with little actual substance to get on the administration’s good side. AstraZeneca CEO Pascal Soriot joined the White House rollout to praise the partnership, but behind the scenes, the company is pushing hard to block Trump’s ability to lower prices through Medicare, escalating its lawsuit against the Medicare Negotiation Program via a petition to the Supreme Court. AstraZeneca’s performative price reductions to win political points with the White House, while simultaneously fighting to maintain its monopoly pricing on its diabetes drug Farxiga aren’t fooling us. — [Washington PostWhite HouseSTAT NewsWBURThe HillCMSSTAT NewsEndpoints NewsHealthcare Finance]

All Eyes On CMS

All eyes are on CMS as the agency prepares to announce the Maximum Fair Prices for the second round of Medicare drug negotiations. Wednesday marked the deadline for CMS to send offers to the manufacturers of the 15 high-cost drugs, after which manufacturers have until the end of the month to accept the new, lower prices, or withdraw from participation in federal health programs like Medicare and Medicaid. It’s a pivotal moment in the implementation of this historic reform, and will be proof that the Trump Administration is continuing the implementation of the program, launched under the previous administration. With round one prices taking effect on January 1st and the industry continuing to lose in court, this next phase shows that negotiating prices and standing with patients can transcend party politics and find widespread support among American voters. — [KFFArnold Ventures]

Pharma Fact Check

Big Pharma and its allies are recycling familiar talking points to justify monopolies and sky-high profits. A recent Pharmaceutical Executive article offers a snapshot of some of the industry’s most popular arguments, and why they fall apart under scrutiny: 

Claim: “It is unfair to the pharma industry to put these kinds of limits and caps on what they’re doing. Making the pharma industry cap out costs could stifle innovation.” 

Fact Check: Pharmaceutical companies still retain complete control over launch prices. Since the IRA passed, R&D spending has continued to grow, and CBO projects that Medicare negotiation will have less than a 1% impact on the number of new drugs developed over 30 years. The real threat to innovation isn’t fair pricing, it’s a system that lets companies profit from endless monopoly extensions. Meanwhile, every other service or medical product has a set price under Medicare. For years, pharma is the only part of our health care system that’s been gifted the ability to set their own prices.

Claim: “The pharma industry has helped to cure major diseases, like polio.”

Fact Check: The claim that “pharma cured polio” is misleading. The polio vaccine was developed in 1955 by Dr. Jonas Salk and his team at the University of Pittsburgh, with the support of public funding. Salk refused to patent the vaccine, famously saying, “Could you patent the sun?” and was committed to equitable access to the vaccine. National Institutes of Health (NIH) funding was involved in basic or applied research related to over 99% of drugs approved by the FDA from 2010 to 2019. 

Claim: On tariffs: “Will there potentially be an increase in cost? There could be. How much will get passed down to the patient? That remains to be seen.” 

Fact Check: Raising import costs is expected to increase prices, and history shows that drugmakers will pass those costs to patients, rather than absorb them. In reality, only 10% of the active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) used in U.S medicines are produced domestically. Additionally, Trump’s proposed 100% tariff would only apply to brand-name drugs, which already make up three quarters of drug spending despite only being 10% of prescriptions — meaning the patients who rely on these drugs would be hit the hardest. 

In Case You Missed It

On Saturday, P4AD advocate Janet Kerrigan joined NewsNation to discuss her struggles with high drug prices. In the decade since her diagnosis with Multiple Myeloma, an incurable blood cancer, Janet has been through chemotherapy, a transplant, years of high-priced prescription drugs, and, most recently, CAR-T treatment — and she’s still fighting to lower drug prices for patients. You can watch the full interview here

Patient Advocate Spotlight: Jacquie Persson
Background: Graphic designer and marketing manager in Waterloo, Iowa
Condition: Crohn’s Disease
Drug: Otulfi ($3,619 / month)

In her words: “Since my diagnosis, I have been fortunate enough to have good insurance, making all of the medications that I need within reach. Even with my exceptional coverage, not a day goes by that I do not stress about the what-ifs. What if I lose my job? What if my employer changes our insurance plan and my treatment is no longer affordable or covered? What if I am sick enough that I need extended time off from work? To make matters worse, stress is my number one trigger when it comes to my Crohn’s disease flare-ups, so living with these what ifs can just make me sicker.”

Jacquie recently spoke with Reuters about her struggles with high drug prices. 

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