Who will get the new Alzheimer’s drug?

From: POLITICO's Prescription Pulse - Tuesday Jul 11,2023 04:01 pm
Presented by 340B Health: Delivered every Tuesday and Friday by 12 p.m., Prescription Pulse examines the latest pharmaceutical news and policy.
Jul 11, 2023 View in browser
 
POLITICO's Prescription Pulse newsletter logo

By Katherine Ellen Foley and David Lim

Presented by 340B Health

With Carmen Paun

Driving the day

A picture of a human brain taken by a positron emission tomography scanner, also called PET scan, is seen on a screen on January 9, 2019, at the Regional and University Hospital Center of Brest (CRHU - Centre Hospitalier Régional et Universitaire de Brest), western France. - The CHRU of Brest has just acquired a new molecular imaging device, the most advanced in France today according to the hospital center, capable of better detecting deep lesions and especially cancerous pathologies, the hospital announced on January 9, 2019. (Photo by Fred TANNEAU / AFP) (Photo by FRED TANNEAU/AFP via Getty Images)

Newly approved Alzheimer's drug Leqembi might be unaffordable for many of the patients it could help. | AFP via Getty Images

A NEW ALZHEIMER’S THERAPY … AT WHAT COST? Less than a week after the FDA granted full approval to the first Alzheimer’s drug in more than two decades, concerns about its affordability and accessibility are spilling out into the open.

From Alzheimer’s advocacy groups to the chair of the Senate’s most powerful health care committee to independent drug value estimators, serious questions are being raised about how much and how many Alzheimer’s patients will be helped by Leqembi.

The $26,500-a-year drug, made by Eisai and Biogen, will be available to Medicare beneficiaries who enroll in a nationwide registry that will track their progress on the drug over time: That coverage is broader than it was when Leqembi had only accelerated approval from the FDA.

But drug-pricing experts have been quick to point out that the financial burden of the drug to patients and the federal government will be huge — and Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), chair of the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, is unhappy and demanding more information from HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra.

Consider these statistics and estimates:

— $5,000: The annual co-pay Medicare beneficiaries will have to pay

— $8,900: The price the respected Institute for Clinical and Economic Review estimates the drug should cost annually given its modest cognitive decline benefits

— 6.7 million: The number of people living with Alzheimer’s in the U.S.

 — 10,000: The number of patients Eisai estimates will be taking Leqembi by next April

— 100,000: The number of patients Eisai estimates will be taking the drug after three years

— $2.7 billion: Medicare’s projected spending on Leqembi if 100,000 beneficiaries receive the drug over the next three years, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation — significantly more than the $1.8 billion Medicare spent in 2021 on a bone-density drug that is the third most expensive drug under the program’s Part B prescription coverage

— $17.8 billion: Medicare’s projected spending on Leqembi if just 10 percent of those living with the disease take the drug, which is more than the $15.9 billion Medicare spent in 2021 on the top 10 drugs covered under Part B.

“A prescription drug is not effective if a patient who needs that drug cannot afford it,” Sanders wrote in a letter Monday to Becerra.

Sanders demanded that Becerra answer several of his questions about Leqembi’s estimated cost for older adults and Medicare — and noted that if he does not receive a response by July 21, he’ll instead invite the HHS secretary to testify before the HELP Committee.

IT’S TUESDAY. WELCOME TO PRESCRIPTION PULSE. Hoping everyone stays safe with the severe weather on the East Coast this week.

Send news and tips to David Lim (dlim@politico.com or @davidalim or @david.a.lim) or Katherine Ellen Foley (kfoley@politico.com or @katherineefoley).

TODAY ON OUR PULSE CHECK PODCAST, host Ben Leonard talks with Megan R. Wilson, who breaks down what lies in store for lawmakers returning from their July recess — with only 11 legislative days before their next. Expect high policy aspirations and partisan gridlock as deadlines approach for must-pass health care legislation.

 

A message from 340B Health:

340B bridges the gaps in access to specialized services, providing support and ensuring equitable access to life-saving treatments. 340B helps pay for care for patients with diabetes, cancer, HIV/AIDS, opioid dependency, and mental illness, as well as those needing emergency trauma or burn care. 340B drug discounts – not taxpayer dollars – pay for this comprehensive care. Protecting 340B is crucial for the health of patients and communities. Learn more.

 
Play audio

Listen to today’s Pulse Check podcast

Medicare

Dr. Meena Seshamani

On Monday, CMS Deputy Administrator Meena Seshamani discussed implementing Medicare drug price negotiations.

SESHAMANI WEIGHS IN ON BONA FIDE MARKETING At a roundtable Monday, CMS Deputy Administrator Meena Seshamani addressed how the agency will implement Medicare drug price negotiations this year, including what criteria the agency might use to determine whether a drug has a generic competition.

If a drug has generic competition, it can be excluded from the list of drugs CMS will select for drug price negotiations later this year and in the future. Seshamani seemed to imply that CMS will want to make determinations for exemptions case by case.

“The various drugs all have nuances to them, the markets are different, the patient populations are different, the combinations of different drugs that may be utilized are different,” Seshamani said.

The topic was part of a discussion on lowering prescription drug prices for older adults hosted by nonprofit Protect Our Care that also featured executives from AARP and the Brookings Schaeffer Initiative.

The criteria discussion was partly sparked by a new article in The New England Journal of Medicine in which academics argued that CMS must more clearly define what counts as so-called bona fide marketing of a generic or biosimilar drug; in short, a term that describes how much market share and over what time period a generic or biologic gains after FDA approval. The metric is important to track, the article’s authors argue, saying that some brand-name drugmakers could try to avoid Medicare negotiations by saying their drugs face generic competition “that is largely illusory.”

The researchers suggested that CMS consider defining a threshold of 50 percent market share after one month of availability for generic drugs in Medicare Part D to “ensure that only drugs with meaningful generic competition are exempt from price negotiation.”

“The various drugs all have nuances to them, the markets are different, the patient populations are different, the combinations of different drugs that may be utilized are different,” Seshamani said.

Eye on the FDA

In 2010, the FDA called on its advisers 47 times. That figure steadily decreased over time, and in 2021 it only called on its advisers 18 times.

WHERE HAVE ALL THE AD COMMS GONE? The FDA is reviewing more and more complex drugs than ever before. And yet, in the past decade, the agency has held far fewer public meetings of its independent expert advisers.

In 2021, the number of meetings of FDA outside expert panels for human drugs was less than half of what it was in 2010, a new Harvard study found.

The work, published in JAMA Health Forum, found that over the 11-year span studied, there were 409 advisory committee meetings for drugs.

The meetings are one of the few opportunities the public has to hear deliberations about a product under FDA review before an approval decision is made.

“The role of advisory committees in the current regulatory landscape should be more clearly and publicly defined,” the study authors concluded, echoing a sentiment they and other public health experts have shared before. The authors believe the transparency of ad comm meetings would improve public trust in the FDA.

There’s a difference between when advisers positively and negatively review a candidate, according to an accompanying commentary by Genevieve Kanter, an associate professor of public policy at the USC Sol Price School of Public Policy. When the committee voted in favor of approval, the FDA agreed 97 percent of the time. But when advisers recommended against approval, the FDA followed their advice only 67 percent of the time.

“The FDA appears to have been looking for reasons to approve drugs,” Kanter said, which may erode public trust in the drug approval process.

The FDA wouldn’t comment on the study but said generally that while it views the ad comm discussions to be a useful resource, ultimately, career staff make approval decisions. “The FDA continues to explore ways to improve its advisory committees to ensure the agency gets timely and sound advice from these committees and will communicate any updates when available,” said Michael Felberbaum, an FDA spokesperson.

 

A message from 340B Health:

Advertisement Image

 
Around the Agencies

PLANS FOR COVID VAX COMMERCIALIZATION — Early guidance from the CDC said that, by Aug. 3, the federal government will stop ordering Covid-19 vaccines as part of transitioning the shots to the commercial market.

Providers can still work with the feds for vaccine purchases if needed, but the CDC anticipates that new fall boosters due out later this year will be available through doctors, clinics and insurers as vaccines were pre-Covid.

The agency expects the FDA to make authorization decisions in mid- to late September on new boosters based on the XBB.1.5 variant, followed by recommendations from the CDC.

 

UNLEASH THE FUTURE OF HEALTHCARE WITH POLITICO, A 7/20 INTERACTIVE EVENT: Imagine a future where rare genetic diseases are not only treatable, but potentially curable. Where our approach to chronic illness takes a monumental leap forward. That future is already taking shape in the form of next-generation health care treatments such as gene therapy. Join POLITICO on Thursday, July 20 and delve into the burgeoning field of gene therapies, which hold the power to redefine our health care landscape. Are you ready to explore this new frontier in health care? Don't miss this chance to be part of the conversation. REGISTER NOW.

 
 
Vaping

MORE MENTHOL VAPE AUTHORIZATIONS DENIED — The FDA’s Center for Tobacco Products issued marketing denial orders Monday for myBlu menthol e-cigarettes. MyBlu is a major e-cigarette brand; its parent company, Imperial Brands, is valued at around $20 billion.

The agency said the company did not provide enough evidence that its menthol vapes would benefit adult smokers more than tobacco vapes that have already been authorized.

 

A message from 340B Health:

340B hospitals are an essential part of the nation’s health care safety net, providing crucial services to patients with low incomes and those who live in rural America. Hospitals use 340B savings – not taxpayer dollars – to provide most of the nation’s unpaid and Medicaid hospital care, and they deliver vital services where access is limited. They help keep rural hospitals open for the patients and communities they serve. 340B lowers health care costs; supports doctors, nurses, and pharmacists; and expands care for patients – all without using any taxpayer dollars. Protecting 340B is the best way forward for patients and communities. Learn more.

 
What We're Reading

Tennessee's ban on gender-affirming care to minors went into effect this past weekend after a decision from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, POLITICO’s Lucy Hodgman reports.

Old lead-covered cables laid by telecom companies are leaching toxic heavy metal into soil and water supplies in some parts of the country, according to an investigation by The Wall Street Journal’s Susan Pulliam, Shalini Ramachandran, John West, Coulter Jones and Thomas Gryta.

Document Drawer

The FDA laid out details for its planned transition to electronic transmission from paper export documents for medical devices, which starts in 2024.

 

LISTEN TO POLITICO'S ENERGY PODCAST: Check out our daily five-minute brief on the latest energy and environmental politics and policy news. Don't miss out on the must-know stories, candid insights, and analysis from POLITICO's energy team. Listen today.

 
 
 

Follow us on Twitter

David Lim @davidalim

Lauren Gardner @Gardner_LM

Katherine Ellen Foley @katherineefoley

 

Follow us

Follow us on Facebook Follow us on Twitter Follow us on Instagram Listen on Apple Podcast
 

To change your alert settings, please log in at https://www.politico.com/_login?base=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.politico.com/settings

This email was sent to by: POLITICO, LLC 1000 Wilson Blvd. Arlington, VA, 22209, USA

Please click here and follow the steps to .

More emails from POLITICO's Prescription Pulse

Jul 07,2023 04:01 pm - Friday

A 20-year first for Alzheimer’s

Jul 05,2023 04:02 pm - Wednesday

Sanders, Cassidy want a bigger PAHPA

Jun 30,2023 04:01 pm - Friday

Biden’s new medical device

Jun 27,2023 04:01 pm - Tuesday

The Alzheimer’s treatments of the future

Jun 23,2023 04:01 pm - Friday

Wanted: A drug shortage fix

Jun 21,2023 04:02 pm - Wednesday

CDC advisers ponder potential fall vaccines