By Ransdell Pierson
(Reuters) - Pharmacy benefit manager Express Scripts Holding Co said it
may quickly change its preferred drug formulary to favor an expected
new hepatitis C drug from AbbVie if it is clinically equivalent and less
costly than Gilead Science Inc's $84,000 Sovaldi and $94,500 Harvoni
treatments.
Sovaldi, with its
price tag of $1,000 a pill, has become a lightning rod in a debate over
the high cost of specialty drugs, despite its cure rate of more than 90
percent and gentle side effect profile.
"The cost of it is
unsustainable for many of our plans," Steve Miller, chief medical
officer of Express Scripts, told analysts on a conference call on
Wednesday, referring to Sovaldi. The drug had third quarter sales of
$2.8 billion even though it was only approved in December.
Harvoni, approved this month by U.S. regulators, combines Sovaldi with
another Gilead drug and is expected to dominate treatment of the liver
disease that affects an estimated 3 million Americans.
Miller
said Sovaldi's cost is particularly hitting state prisons and Medicaid,
the insurance program for the indigent funded jointly by states and the
federal government, because those populations have high rates of
infection with the hepatitis C virus.
Express Scripts said U.S. regulators by December could approve AbbVie's product, which combines three drugs into a single pill.
"(We) are hoping they take a different approach when it comes to pricing," Miller said.
But Adelle Infante, an AbbVie spokeswoman, said no price has been
disclosed for her company's drug, which does not yet have a name. The
suburban Chicago drugmaker is hoping it will be approved this year.
Gilead officials could not immediately be reached for comment.
The AbbVie product, like Harvoni, would not need to be taken with
interferon, a harsh injectable drug that for years had been part of a
standard regimen for the disease, which can quietly harm or destroy the
liver over a period of decades.
Should the AbbVie drug be deemed
clinically equivalent but less costly than Sovaldi and Harvoni, Express
Scripts spokesman Brian Henry said the Gilead drugs could be given lower
priority on its drug formulary, or be removed from it.
Express
Scripts is the largest U.S. pharmacy benefit manager. It administers
drug benefits for employers and health plans and also runs large mail
order pharmacies.
Shares of Gilead, which on Tuesday reported a
more than tripling of net profit for the third quarter, were down 3.6
percent in afternoon trading.
Source: Reuters
No comments:
Post a Comment