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Incredible that theycan be so secretive about their pricing.
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From:
Date: Friday, January 15, 2016
Subject: Major drugmakers push back in U.S. price debate (Reuters 1/15/


REUTERS/SRDJAN ZIVULOVIC
Pharmaceutical tablets and capsules in foil strips are arranged on a table
in this picture illustration taken in Ljubljana September 18, 2013.

Major drugmakers push back in U.S. price debate

*BY CAROLINE HUMER
<http://blogs.reuters.com/search/journalist.php?edition=us&n=caroline.humer&>*
Fri Jan 15, 2016 2:27pm EST

*SAN FRANCISCO* With a backlash brewing over the price of medicines in the
United States, drugmakers are pushing back with a new message: Most people
don't pay retail.

Top executives from Eli Lilly and Co (LLY.N
<http://www.reuters.com/finance/stocks/overview?symbol=LLY.N>), Merck & Co (
MRK.N <http://www.reuters.com/finance/stocks/overview?symbol=MRK.N>) and
Biogen Inc (BIIB.O
<http://www.reuters.com/finance/stocks/overview?symbol=BIIB.O>) said in
interviews with Reuters this week that the media focus on retail, or "list
prices," for branded medications is misplaced.

They stressed that the actual prices paid by prescription benefit managers,
insurers and other large purchasers are reduced through negotiated discounts
.

A couple of dramatic price hikes in 2015 exposed the whole industry to
ongoing scrutiny in Congress and on Wall Street. Turing Pharmaceuticals
raised the price of a generic anti-infective drug called Daraprim by 5,000
percent, and the larger Valeant Pharmaceuticals International (VRX.N
<http://www.reuters.com/finance/stocks/overview?symbol=VRX.N>) raised the
price on a heart drug Isuprel by more than 200 percent.

The largest drugmakers quickly portrayed those cases as outliers. But the
industry practice of raising prices each year for treatments used by
millions of people is attracting new attention.

Adam Schechter, Merck's president of Global Human Health, said the industry
needs to better explain the value of drugs and how they can prevent
healthcare costs down the line.

"We have to explain the difference between the list price and the net
price," he said in an interview.

Toward that end, two drugmakers at the JP Morgan Healthcare Conference in
San Francisco this week shared with Reuters some limited information on
actual pricing.

Eli Lilly said the actual average price increase on Humalog, its injectable
insulin used to treat diabetes, has been a modest 1 to 2 percent annually
over the last five years. The company declined to provide a list price.

Horizon Pharma plc (HZNP.O
<http://www.reuters.com/finance/stocks/overview?symbol=HZNP.O>), a small
drugmaker, raised list prices across its business about 7 percent for this
year, Chief Executive Tim Walbert said in an interview. But he said he
expects the company's actual price increases to be 4 percent or less.

More recently, Pfizer Inc (PFE.N
<http://www.reuters.com/finance/stocks/overview?symbol=PFE.N>), one of the
world's largest drugmakers, raised U.S. list prices on more than 100 drugs
as of Jan. 1, according to data from information services company Wolters
Kluwer that was published last week by UBS Securities.

The list included a 9.4 percent rise for pain drug Lyrica and a nearly 13
percent increase for erectile dysfunction drug Viagra. Pfizer said in an
email the prices don't reflect "considerable discounts" to many payers, but
did not provide examples of net prices.

*EXPLAINING PRICE*

Drugmakers keep actual pricing details close to guard their position in
negotiations with commercial insurers and government health plans like
Medicaid. There is no centralized catalog of U.S. list prices or rebates
for medicines.

That drug executives at the San Francisco conference allowed even a glimpse
into their actual pricing strategies reflects the intensity of the new
attention being paid to their practices.

In meetings at the event, investors pressed pharmaceutical executives for
more transparency about pricing, said Les Funtleyder, a portfolio manager
for E Squared Asset Management, which holds shares in Pfizer and Lilly.

"What they really want to know is, are you thinking about this issue?" he
said of the investors. "They are looking for an acknowledgement on the
management team's part."

E Squared expects the new scrutiny will have an impact, projecting that
drugmakers will raise U.S. list prices by 4 percent to 6 percent in 2016,
less than half the rate in 2015.

The candor of some individual pharmaceutical executives follows earlier
messaging by industry advocates. In a November blog post, the industry's
main lobbying group PhRMA, reported that list prices grew 13 percent in
2014, but actual prices increased only 5 percent.

U.S. health insurers say that, even accounting for discounts, drug prices
are rising at an unsustainable rate, and they are pressuring drugmakers for
cuts.

"Whether it's a gross number, or a net number, it is still astronomical,"
said Daniel Hilferty, chief executive of Independence Blue Cross, which
operates in Pennsylvania and New Jersey.

(Reporting by Caroline Humer; Editing by Michele Gershberg
<http://blogs.reuters.com/search/journalist.php?edition=us&n=michele.gershberg&>
and Lisa Girion)

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