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Views Conflict on Trump’s Drug-Pricing Blueprint

P&T Journal - for the original article go HERE.  For a PDF version go HERE.
Most Actions Face Political, Legal, and Technical Roadblocks

Battle lines have been drawn and heavy political armaments have been moved to the front line as drug-industry partisans fight to protect the parts of their turf endangered by the policy advances proposed in President Donald Trump’s Blueprint to Lower Drug Prices and Reduce Out-of-Pocket Costs.1 Its aggressive concepts, such as forcing the posting of drug list prices, ending rebate payments to pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs), introducing formulary management to Part B of Medicare, and changing formulary requirements for Part D, have been the equivalent of a trumpet rallying call to manufacturers, PBMs, health insurers, pharmacy professionals, and patient groups, who are often on the opposite sides of any anticipated initiative.

The wide-ranging Blueprint includes 136 questions or possibilities of changes that cover Medicare most heavily, but also affect Medicaid and private plans. The spotlight on the president’s suggestions burns a bit more brightly after Pfizer, Novartis, and Merck claimed national headlines this summer for postponing plans to raise drug prices in the third quarter of 2017 with the intention of giving the Trump administration time to finalize details and actions stemming from the Blueprint.

Some in the pharmaceutical distribution chain have even proposed doing Trump one better. Fanning the flames of the controversy surrounding high list prices, Express Scripts, the giant PBM, thinks drug companies should “reintroduce their products as competing brand drugs, with new/different NDCs [national drug codes], that would allow the market to move to lower list price products.” A spokeswoman for Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA), the drug manufacturers trade group, declined to comment on that proposal, which goes beyond anything in the Blueprint.

P&T committees could take on both added responsibilities and added burdens as a result of any Trump administration initiatives, particularly with regard to Medicare. The Trump administration wants to allow PBMs to negotiate prices for some or all Part B drugs. Those are pharmaceuticals infused or injected in either a physician’s office or an outpatient clinic. Currently, Medicare pays the list price for those drugs and patients pay for them subject to a Part B deductible of $250. These are often expensive oncology drugs, which, if they were paid for under Part D, as the administration wants, would be subject to formulary management by P&T committees at Part D plans or their PBMs. There is no guarantee, however, that patients would pay less for oncology, hepatitis C, and other expensive drugs under Part D. They could conceivably (in some instances) pay more.

Part D is also under the microscope as far as its formulary and P&T committee policies are concerned. The American Medical Association (AMA) thinks that disclosure of P&T committee information for Part D Medicare plans would constitute “a critical step forward.” There are a few rules today governing P&T committee membership, but very few if any requiring significant “transparency.” An AMA spokesman did not respond to a query asking what kinds of disclosures the group has in mind.

Backing From Congress Unlikely


The fact that drug companies are sitting on the edge of their seats waiting for the administration to put a plan in place doesn’t mean a plan will evolve quickly. It clearly won’t. Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Alex Azur told the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee on June 26, six weeks after the Blueprint was released, that, for example, he believes his department, through the Food and Drug Administration, has the authority to force drug companies to disclose list prices in television advertisements. But he added that he would welcome legislation to “shore up” that authority because manufacturers will “certainly challenge” any new requirement in court. He went on to say that he would also welcome legislation eliminating the 100% cap on drug rebates imposed under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, “which would create a significant disincentive for drug companies to raise list prices.”

Congress is unlikely to jump at those requests. Senator Dick Durbin (D–Illinois), the second-ranking Democrat in the Senate, introduced the Drug-Price Transparency in Communications Act (S. 2157) in November of 2017.2 No Republican has cosponsored it and no hearings have been held. In March of 2017, Senator Ron Wyden (D–Oregon) introduced the Creating Transparency to Have Drug Rebates Unlocked (C-THRU) Act of 2017 (S. 637), which would require the HHS to publish rebates PBMs obtained from drug manufacturers under Part D and the Marketplace Exchange insurance program.3 Again, no action taken, no Republican co-sponsors obtained. Neither the House Energy and Commerce Committee nor the Ways and Means Committee, the two committees with jurisdiction over health care, have held hearings on drug prices, much less the Blueprint.

Taylor Haulsee, spokesman for the Senate HELP Committee, did not respond to an inquiry asking whether the committee had plans to take up the Durbin and Wyden bills or to develop its own drug-pricing legislation. If the Republican president expects help from the Republican Congress to smooth the way for some of his more controversial policy proposals, he may be waiting a long time. That said, there is no question that the Trump administration has already moved perceptibly in some minor areas on drug pricing. But the Blueprint raises the stakes for drug companies, pharmacy benefit managers, insurance companies, health professionals, and consumers. Here are some of the more flammable, high-profile possibilities:

  • requiring drug manufacturers to include list prices in drug ads
  • putting a ceiling on out-of-pocket payments by Part D participants
  • reducing from two to one the number of drugs offered in the six Part D protected classes
  • allowing state Medicaid programs to use formularies and P&T committees
  • moving drugs now paid under Part B to Part D and subjecting them to utilization review
  • reimbursing for drugs based on their indication
  • charging higher prices for a drug when it is used off-label


How Out of Whack Are Drug Prices?


The premise of the Trump administration’s attempt to rein in drug prices is that those prices are out of control. As a general premise, that probably is inaccurate. The American Hospital Association (AHA) cites figures from National Health Expenditures data showing that retail drug spending increased by 1.3% in 2016. But the AHA argues that while that level of growth may appear low, it follows two consecutive years of expansive growth in retail drug spending: 12.4% in 2014 and 8.9% in 2015.4
What are particularly worrisome are launch prices for new brand-name drugs. The AHA cited:4
  • Taltz (Eli Lilly), used for treating psoriasis, costs $50,000 a year.
  • Keytruda (Merck), used for treating melanoma, costs $152,400 a year.
  • Kymriah (Novartis), used for treating leukemia, costs $475,000 for a course of treatment.
  • Spinraza (Biogen), used to treat spinal muscular atrophy, costs $750,000 for the first year of treatment and $375,000 per year thereafter.
Moreover, there has been a spate of exorbitant price increases for existing brand-name drugs. America’s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP) says that during June 2018 and the first two days of July, drug companies announced more than 100 separate price increases for prescription drugs with an average increase of 31.5% and median percentage increase of 9.4%. Seemingly unfathomable price increases for old generics have led to Congressional hearings.

High drug prices can also be untenable in some instances for hospitals, where drug prices are bundled into diagnosis-related group (DRG) reimbursement. In 2016, the AHA and the Federation of American Hospitals worked with NORC at the University of Chicago (a nonprofit research institute) to document hospital and health system experience with inpatient drug spending. Specifically, NORC found that, while retail spending on prescription drugs increased by 10.6% between 2013 and 2015, hospital spending on drugs in the inpatient space rose 38.7% per admission during the same period.5 In its comments to the HHS, the AHA stated: “These price increases, from the hospitals’ perspective, appeared to be random, inconsistent and unpredictable: large unit price increases occurred for both low- and high-volume drugs and for both branded and generic drugs.”


Is Value Pricing the Answer?


There are some who argue that seemingly unreasonably high drug prices themselves are not the problem. Jonah Houts, Vice President for Corporate Government Affairs at Express Scripts and the author of the company’s comments, suggested that lowering drug prices as an absolute goal might not even be the smartest thing to do. “The central flaw with focusing on incentivizing lower drug prices is that this concept necessarily assumes clinical efficacy of all drugs are equal across all classes and disease indications,” he wrote. “Incentivizing payments for lower-priced drugs comes at the expense of discouraging considerations of clinical effectiveness or other factors such as likelihood for adherence, then even the ‘cheapest’ drug ends up costing Medicare significantly by failing to potentially treat the patient’s condition according [to] their needs. Of course, such failures may eventually lead to more costly medical interventions in the future, or worse—patient harm.”

Certainly there is a good argument to be made for value-based drug pricing, which is in its infancy and has had trouble getting out of the crib because of, if one listens to the manufacturers, impediments ensconced in federal law such as the Anti-Kickback statute and the rules for reporting the Medicaid Best Price. That said, value-based drug pricing doesn’t help some patients, especially less well-heeled ones, who may have high deductibles and out-of-pocket costs. The fact that, in the long run, they may avoid the costs and terrible effects of a chronic disease such as hepatitis C may be hard to appreciate if they go bankrupt in the short term.

The HHS raises the possibility of “indication-based” pricing, in which consumer and payer costs are linked to the effectiveness of a drug’s indication. Joint comments submitted by a large number of patient advocacy organizations across many disease states said, “This is highly concerning for patients for a number of reasons. Patients using the medications in higher-priced indications would be discriminated against through higher cost-sharing and could have impeded access as a result.”


High List Prices and Their Link to Cost-Sharing


Those higher out-of-pocket costs are often linked to the “list prices” posted by the drug companies. The health insurers use those prices to determine coinsurance and deductible amounts. But the insurer doesn’t pay the list price because it, or its PBM, negotiates discounts and rebates, which don’t find their way to the pharmacy counter when the consumer reaches for his or her wallet. Patient out-of-pocket costs under Medicare Part D are distributed unevenly each year, such that patients face 100% coinsurance until they reach their deductible ($405 in 2018), up to 25% coinsurance until the patient reaches the initial coverage limit ($3,750 in 2018), 35% coinsurance in the coverage gap until the patient reaches the out-of-pocket threshold ($5,000 in 2018), and finally up to 5% coinsurance above that threshold. “For example, in 2015, beneficiaries without low-income subsidies who had spending above the catastrophic threshold (over 1,000,000 individuals) spent on average $5,200.92,” Bristol-Myers Squibb said in its comments. “These high out-of-pocket costs present affordability challenges that jeopardize patient adherence to needed medicines, which could in turn increase costs to the broader health care system.”

According to PhRMA, more than half of all new brand-name osteoporosis prescriptions, more than 40% of all new brand-name autoimmune and oral antidiabetic prescriptions, and more than 30% of all new brand-name antipsychotic prescriptions brought to a pharmacy in 2016 had cost sharing greater than $250. “Not surprisingly, many of these prescriptions went unfilled,” the group stated.

Two Part D reforms included in the president’s fiscal year 2019 budget proposal would provide much-needed financial relief for beneficiaries facing high cost-sharing and high annual out-of-pocket costs:

  • Requiring plan sponsors to pass through a substantial share of negotiated rebates at the point of sale would immediately lower out-of-pocket costs for millions of beneficiaries.
  • Establishing a maximum annual limit on beneficiary out-of-pocket spending would provide a true catastrophic benefit to protect the sickest patients.

The drug manufacturers have been pushing hard behind the proposal to force PBMs to fork over rebates at the pharmacy counter, a proposal the Trump administration appears to favor indirectly in the form of replacing rebates with a fixed price discounting model for PBMs. Big pharma believes rebates are bad, high list prices are not so bad. What they object to is the health insurers basing coinsurance and deductibles on those list prices. Manufacturers believe the health plans should pay all or a portion of all rebates off those list prices to the consumers who pick up that drug at the pharmacy counter instead of using the rebates to lower premiums for all members of a plan. Their argument appears to be that all plan members ought to suffer a little for high list prices rather than just those with expensive chronic conditions, who are suffering a lot.

Although the list price/rebate relationship is frequently cited as the main cause of high consumer drug prices, AHIP argues that rebates are not prevalent, including for the most expensive drugs. A report by the consultant Milliman found that nearly 90% of Part D drug claims were for drugs with no rebates. The Milliman report also found that, when measured on an individual drug basis (i.e., not a script count basis), approximately 70% of brand-name drugs did not have significant rebates. Further, physician-administered drugs paid for under Part B, which account for 30% of prescription drug spending, typically do not receive rebates.6


Power to the P&T Committee?


Insurance companies and their PBMs argue that with regard to the Part D program, the best way to cut costs would be to allow P&T committees more leeway in formulary development. That could entail decreasing from two to one the number of drugs that formularies have to offer in each class and category and doing away with the “all or almost all” language that forces Part D plans to offer all drugs in six categories, the so-called “protected” classes: immunosuppressants, antidepressants, anti-psychotics, anticonvulsants, antiretrovirals, and antineoplastics.

CVS believes Part D plans’ P&T committees are well qualified and structured to ensure that beneficiaries have an appropriate choice of drugs in these six classes on the plan’s formulary. Another reason CVS feels the six protected classes ought to be eliminated is that plans cannot impose any type of utilization management edits on the use of the drugs, even if these are based on clinical criteria. This is because Part D plans may only apply prior authorizations and transition fill limitations to beneficiaries who are considered new starters to these drugs. When beneficiaries are new to the plan, however, the plan frequently does not have enough claims history (at least 108 days) to determine whether the drug is considered new as opposed to ongoing therapy. In this case, the plan is required to assume that the drug is ongoing therapy and to provide it without the opportunity to recommend more cost-effective or clinically superior therapies.


Part B


While P&T committees are limited in certain respects, in terms of what they can do in Part D, they do not even have a role in Part B, which pays for physician-administered drugs, often expensive oncology medications. Part B drugs are provided “incident to” physician services and include some antigens, injectable osteoporosis drugs, erythropoiesis-stimulating drugs, blood-clotting factors, oral end-stage renal disease drugs, cancer medications, parenteral and enteral nutrition, nebulizers, immunosuppressive agents, intravenous immune globulin, and vaccines. Part D drugs are infused either in a physician’s office or a hospital outpatient clinic.

HHS Secretary Azar noted at a June 12, 2018, Senate HELP hearing that cost-savings are the key rationale for moving drugs from Part B to Part D, saying that “right now, we’re paying sticker price for these drugs, no discounting. We ought to be able to get 20 to 40% discounting, as we do in Part D, on those drugs. That’s $30 billion of spend.” The Blueprint, however, doesn’t specify which drugs might be switched to Part D, and what would happen if a Medicare recipient did not have a Part D plan.

For a variety of reasons, however, there are some categories of drugs now paid for under Part B that might have a smoother path than others into Part D, including insulin, antiemetics, inhalants, immunosuppressants, and oral anticancer medications, according to the Pharmaceutical Care Management Association, which represents PBMs and like seemingly every interest group—including PhRMA, which is totally opposed to the switch—has concerns about a Part B-to-D move.


Site Neutrality


A potential Part B-to-D shift for drugs brings up another potential Trump administration move likely to affect hospital outpatient clinics, where many Part B drugs are infused. The HHS is considering a site-neutral payment policy to account for differences in reimbursement between the outpatient prospective payment system and the physician fee schedule for drug administration services. In short, hospital outpatient reimbursement for Part B would be reduced.

The AHA opposes a site-neutral payment policy for drug administration services under Medicare Part B. Hospitals with newer off-campus hospital outpatient departments are already subject to significant payment reductions for the “nonexcepted” services they furnish in these settings.

The Blueprint has a host of other suggestions related to the uptake of biosimilars, risk evaluation and mitigation strategies (which have been cited as reasons to deny generic-drug companies samples of brand-name drugs), 340B, Medicaid, and so-called “gag clauses” imposed on pharmacists and other programs. For Medicaid, the Blueprint suggests a new demonstration authority for up to five states to test drug coverage and financing reforms that build on private-sector best practices. This would open the door to “closed formularies” developed by P&T committees, now absent from state Medicaid drug programs. But there is opposition to that limited initiative, as there is to everything the Blueprint considers, from one corner of the industry or another. As to formularies in Medicaid, GlaxoSmithKline says, “We strongly oppose any proposals that ration access to prescription drugs in Medicaid through a closed formulary.”

One thing stands out from reading through some of the 3,000 comments on the Blueprint. They all start out pledging fealty to the Trump administration’s efforts to lower drug prices. Then they all degenerate into opposition to most of the Blueprint’s suggestions. Normally that reaction—and it is broad and deep—would be enough to sink any significant reforms. Of course, President Trump has been known to remain impervious to any cloud of negativity surrounding him—witness trade tariffs or immigration, for instance. Will drug pricing be the next arena in which he upends conventional thinking?

Author bio:
Mr. Barlas, a freelance writer based in Washington, D.C., covers topics inside the Beltway.

Trump Loosens Steel and Aluminum Import Restrictions

The Fabricator - September 2018 for the original article go HERE.

Quotas set for Argentina, Brazil, and South Korea

Argentina, Brazil, and South Korea are no longer subject to the tariffs, according to a presidential proclamation. This could make sourcing steel and aluminum trickier down the road as other countries look to negotiate their own deals to get out from under the tariffs.

President Trump made a slight concession on steel and aluminum tariffs via a presidential proclamation on Aug. 29, but it is unclear whether the White House will conduct a broader review of the exclusion process, which has been heavily criticized.

The proclamation only covered steel imports from Argentina, Brazil, and South Korea and aluminum imports from Argentina. Steel and aluminum import quotas were placed on those countries in lieu of the 25 percent steel and 10 percent aluminum tariffs. No exclusions were allowed for those “quota”
countries.

Now, according to the Trump proclamation, at the end of August exclusions from quotas will be allowed if importing fabricators can make the case that insufficient quantity or quality is available from U.S. steel or aluminum producers. In such cases, an exclusion from the quota may be granted and no tariff would be owed.

A second provision in the proclamation affects steel articles destined for use in a facility construction project in the U.S. that were contracted for purchase before the decision to impose quotas and cannot presently enter the country because a quota has already been reached. In that instance, an exclusion from the quota may be granted, but the product may only be imported upon payment of the 25 percent tariff.

One aluminum industry official who did not want to be identified explained, “This new process won’t affect aluminum much right now, but it would if other countries opt to take a quota instead of the tariff. Absolute quotas are tricky to implement and can be disruptive for consumers, since it’s hard to know when exactly the quota will be reached and therefore hard to plan for purchasing and shipping. An exclusion process on the quotas could be a sort of ‘last resort’ option for the companies that might have purchased their steel before the quota was reached but haven’t yet had it delivered.”


NAFTA Reboot Would Help Manufacturers


The U.S.-Mexico revisions to the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) contain some major benefits for domestic manufacturers, particularly those in the auto industry. But metal fabricators may be unhappy that the agreement does not do away with U.S. tariffs on imported Mexican aluminum and steel.

Whether the U.S.-Mexico agreement even goes into effect probably hinges on whether Canada signs on to the U.S.-Mexico revisions, which may be necessary before Congress would approve the new NAFTA. It also is unlikely U.S. manufacturers would support a Mexico-only agreement.

“Because of the massive amount of movement of goods between the three countries and the integration of operations which make manufacturing in our country more competitive, it is imperative that a trilateral agreement be inked,” said National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) President and CEO Jay Timmons.

The agreement encourages U.S. manufacturing and regional economic growth by requiring that 75 percent of auto content be made in the U.S. and Mexico. Auto industry manufacturers that don’t meet these requirements will pay a 2.5 percent tariff on vehicles crossing the border. The original NAFTA sets the floor at 62.5 percent. Another provision requires that 40 to 45 percent of auto content be made by workers earning at least $16 per hour.

One thing the new agreement does not do is eliminate the 25 percent tariff on steel and the 10 percent tariff on aluminum imported into the U.S. from all countries, including Mexico and Canada. Mexico’s Secretary of Economy Ildefonso Guajardo Villareal said after the agreement was signed that he hoped the tariffs on Mexican exports to the U.S. of steel and aluminum would be eliminated in any agreement approved by Congress.

Author bio:
Mr. Barlas, a freelance writer based in Washington, D.C., covers topics inside the Beltway.

FERC Pressed to Change Pipeline Approval Policies

Pipeline & Gas Journal - September 2018 for the original article go HERE.

Interstate pipeline companies are fending off efforts by environmental groups to pressure the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) to make significant changes to its 1999 pipeline certificate policy. Groups such as the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, Delaware Riverkeepers, some members of Congress and others want the FERC to make it hard to establish economic need for a project and if that initial barrier is crossed, if it is crossed, look at an expanded menu of landowner and environmental concerns, both of which could lead to either slowing down approval for or even cancelation of a project where substantial demand exists. 

The Notice of Inquiry published in April cites four particular areas for reconsideration: “(1) The reliance on precedent agreements to demonstrate need for a proposed project; (2) the potential exercise of eminent domain and landowner interests; (3) the Commission's evaluation of alternatives and environmental effects under NEPA and the NGA; and (4) the efficiency and effectiveness of the Commission's certificate processes.”

Pipeline and anti-pipeline forces are on opposite sides of all those issues. The Interstate Natural Gas Association of America (INGAA) thinks the 1999 policy remains sound  but perhaps certain elements could use “a freshening up.” The INGAA adds, “Wholesale changes are unnecessary and likely would be counterproductive.” 

On the other hand, the Delaware Riverkeeper Network, which has worked to oppose nearly two dozen FERC pipeline projects “has identified significant and fundamental failures in FERC’s review and approval of pipelines.”

The FERC has this year made a number of pro-pipeline decisions that may indicate which way the wind is blowing at the commission. For example, in granting a certificate to DTE Midstream’s 14-mile Birdsboro pipeline in Berks County, PA in March 2018 the FERC said it would clamp down on allowing “out-of-time intervenors,” that is commenters who want to have their say after a comment deadline has passed. The FERC had previously said out-of-time comments could submitted for “good cause” but in Birdsboro the “good cause” caveat was eliminated, drawing dissenting comments from Commissioners Glick and LaFleur.

In its May 18, 2018 Order denying rehearing of a certificate of public convenience and necessity issued to Dominion Transmission, Inc., the FERC, according to the Riverkeepers, “announced a sudden and unprompted departure from FERC’s practice of evaluating the environmental impact of downstream greenhouse gas emissions from natural gas infrastructure projects and announced a new policy of not evaluating upstream or downstream greenhouse gas emissions in the vast majority of cases.”

Dominion has been in the cross-hairs of many environmental groups because of its Atlantic Coast Pipeline (ACP) which runs through West Virginia, Virginia and into North Carolina. A federal appeals court has sided with the Sierra Club and others about potential damage to stream crossings in very small sections of the 600-mile pipeline. The same court has also cited problems with compliance with Nationwide Permit 12, issued by the Army Corps of Engineers, by the Mountain Valley Pipeline (built by EQT Midstream Partners) which also runs through Virginia along the same general route as the ACP.

Sens. Tim Kaine and Mark Warner, both Democrats from Virginia, argue the two projects should have had their economic and environmental reviews done concurrently, and they should have been co-located along the same right of way, easing the use of eminent domain by pipelines. This support for “regional analysis” of new pipeline applications is a popular demand. The New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection seems to go even further arguing for co-location of the majority of a new pipeline and compressors in an existing right-of-way.

But it was by no means the only popular change supported by landowner and environmental groups who are pressing for greater weight being given to greenhouse gas emissions, both upstream and downstream. 

Although the INGAA, Dominion and other interstate pipeline companies are standing firm behind a “no significant change” position, they do open the door narrowly to small changes in the 1999 pipeline certificate policy. That includes more critical analysis of precedent agreements with affiliates. Boardwalk Partners says, “The Commission should place greater focus on ensuring that precedent agreements are the product of true arm’s-length negotiations.  For projects that are supported largely by precedent agreements entered into by affiliates of the pipeline, the Commission should ensure that the agreements are the product of genuine competition rather than an attempt to bolster the bottom line of the pipeline and affiliate’s common parent.” Boardwalk is a wholly owned subsidiary of Loews, Inc. whose interstate natural gas subsidiary companies include Texas Gas Transmission, LLC; Gulf South Pipeline Company, LP; Gulf Crossing Pipeline Company LLC; and Boardwalk Storage Company, LLC.  

Boardwalk’s position appears to put it at odds with the INGAA which argues, “The Commission should not distinguish between precedent agreements with affiliates and non-affiliates when considering the need for a proposed project because both appropriately represent market need.”
  
It terms of showing demand for a project, the INGAA urges the FERC to consider the economic and national security benefits stemming from exports of natural gas via cross-border pipelines and as liquified natural gas (LNG) that are facilitated by natural gas pipeline infrastructure. That may have some particular resonance given the European Union’s commitment in late July to buy more U.S. LNG as the price of forestalling President Trump’s threat to impose import duties on European autos. 

In terms of the “freshening up” the INGAA would support, that would include expanding FERC communication with landowners. It also advocates for allowing pipelines, following the issuance of a certificate, to conduct limited-scope work outside of approved work areas to accommodate landowners’ requests for non-pipeline related work. That work would be paid for by the pipelines, according to INGAA’s Cathy Landry. 

Author bio:
Mr. Barlas, a freelance writer based in Washington, D.C., covers topics inside the Beltway.