Despite this progress, there is still one reputational issue that dwarfs all others – the price of drugs. In fact, while our country is divided on almost every problem we face, drug pricing unifies political foes. It even brought together former President Donald Trump and his left‐leaning nemesis Senator Bernie Sanders. At a press conference in January 2017, President Trump said: “Our drug industry has been disastrous….And the other thing we have to do is create new bidding procedures for the drug industry, because they are getting away with murder [1].” Senator Sanders responded: “He’s right and I’ve been saying this for years. Pharma does get away with murder. Literally murder. People die because they can’t get the prescription drugs that they need [2].”
The pharmaceutical industry should not be surprised by the backlash. After all, stories about high drug prices appear almost daily. How can a single pill cost $1000? How can healthcare systems stay afloat when life‐saving gene therapies are priced at over $2 million per patient? Why is Senator Sanders taking busloads of Americans over the border to Canada to get insulin for their diabetes? How can Pfizer and Moderna justify billions of dollars in revenues for their mRNA vaccines? This book seeks to answer these and other questions. Is the drug industry filled with profiteers “getting away with murder” or is it an industry made up of companies that invest in a high‐risk business called “innovation” that makes reasonable returns on at‐risk capital? You decide.
REFERENCES
1 1. Karlin‐Smith, S. (2017). Trump says drug industry “getting away with murder” Politico, (11 January).
2 2. Carter, Zachary D. and Schumaker, Erin (2017). Bernie Sanders: Donald Trump is right about big pharma, HuffPost, (11 January).
CHAPTER 1 THE $1000 PILL: THE FISCAL CONSEQUENCES OF CURING HEPATITIS C
The company in this case” is asking for a blank check which if granted will blow up family budgets, will blow up state Medicaid budgets, will blow up employer benefit costs and wreak havoc on the federal debt.” This provocative comment was made by Ms. Karen Ignagni, former president and chief executive officer (CEO) of America’s Health Insurance Plans, the trade association of health insurance companies. The cause of Ms. Ignagni’s alarm was SovaldiTM, a breakthrough drug that cured the liver disease hepatitis C. Manufacturer, Gilead, priced its new medicine at $1000 a pill. Given that the standard course of treatment was once‐a‐day for 12 weeks, the cost of this cure was $84 000/patient. Ms. Ignagni’s concern was shared. Dr. Steven Miller, chief medical officer (CMO) of Express Scripts, a prescription management company, called this drug pricing unsustainable [1].
The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that globally 71 million people have chronic hepatitis C with roughly 3 million of those in the United States. The most common modes of infection are through exposure to small quantities of blood. While largely asymptomatic, the hepatitis C virus (HCV) resides in the liver and can lead to devastating consequences such as liver scarring, cirrhosis, liver failure, and liver cancer. Many of these patients will ultimately require liver transplants to survive – a surgery that costs more than $300 000.
Older treatments were modestly effective. Cure rates ranged from 40 to 80%, depending on the severity of the disease. Patients were given a cocktail of drugs plus injections of interferon for 24–48 weeks. However, these medicines are poorly tolerated, particularly the interferon component that causes flu‐like symptoms in patients. As a result, many with hepatitis C often avoided treatment.
SovaldiTM provided new hope. The pill was found to cure hepatitis C in more than 90% of patients in just 12 weeks. Furthermore, it is safer and roughly 20% cheaper than the older treatments that cost over $100 000. One would think that the maker of such a wonder drug would be hailed for providing a major medical advance. Instead, Gilead was vilified.
At a Financial Times U.S. Healthcare and Life Sciences Conference in New York City, I had a chance to hear Ms. Ignagni talk about the high cost of SovaldiTM. During the Q&A session, I asked her the following question.
“SovaldiTM is a drug that cures hepatitis C. It actually saves the healthcare system money in that it will prevent patients from dying from liver cancer, cirrhosis and liver failure. Liver transplants alone can cost $300,000 and then patients must take anti‐rejection drugs that cost $40,000 per year for the rest of their lives. The price of SovaldiTM, while high now, will drop, first when competitive drugs in late‐stage development reach the market and then when the drug is generic. Given all of this, what price for SovaldiTM would have been acceptable to you – $60,000, $40,000, $10,000? What price are you willing to pay for innovation?”
Ignagni never answered the price question. Instead, she focused on the innovation part, saying that, for years, she has heard that high pricing is needed to sustain innovation. Yet innovation is still occurring. Her response ignores worrying trends that roil the biopharmaceutical industry – the mergers, the small company closings, the reductions in private investment in drug research and development (R&D). Yes, innovation is still occurring, but lower revenues result in less money invested in R&D. Less R&D equals less innovation.
Given the $1000 pill headlines, it was not surprising to see politicians jumping on the bandwagon and expressing outrage over the price. Rather than reacting to this medical breakthrough with applause, this furor sparked Senators Wyden and Grassley to probe all of Gilead’s expenses, from the acquisition of Pharmasset (originator of SovaldiTM) to the costs of the development program. Their aim: to embarrass Gilead publicly and, perhaps, shame them into a price cut.
These senators and other politicians have little grasp of the intricacies of drug R&D. Sure, they know R&D is difficult and expensive. They might even appreciate that the entire process, from coming up with the initial idea to getting the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval, can take 15 years. But they have little idea as to how and why drug prices are determined. Do patients or physicians really care how much a company spent in the discovery and development of a new medicine? What they want to know is whether the drug works and, relatively speaking, is it safe? The same can be said of payers. Again, they could not care less about R&D expenditures. They are much more concerned about the drug’s short‐term impact on their balance sheet.
Biopharmaceutical companies try to elicit sympathy by talking about failure rates. The industry works on the cutting edge of medical science, looking for novel compounds to prove or disprove medical hypotheses. This is difficult and often frustrating work. Far more projects fail than succeed. Thus, in justifying the high cost of new drugs, companies will cite figures showing that billions of dollars need to be invested across a portfolio of programs to get one new drug approved. Indeed, for a biopharmaceutical company to survive, it has to be profitable. It must provide a return on investment for its shareholders. However, patients, physicians, and payers do not shed tears over a company’s litany of failures. The belief is that companies should be rewarded for success, and not for “nice tries.”
Thus, in the minds of patients, physicians, and payers, the pricing of drugs should have little to do with the expense of biomedical R&D, nor should it be associated with recouping R&D investment. Pricing should be based on only one thing – the value that the drug brings to healthcare in terms of:
1 Saving lives.
2 Mitigating pain/suffering and improving the quality of life for patients.
3 Reducing