By Deena Beasley
(Reuters) – Pharmaceutical companies last year launched new U.S. drugs at prices 35% higher than in 2022, reflecting in part the industry’s embrace of expensive therapies for rare diseases like muscular dystrophy, a Reuters analysis found.
The median annual list price for a new drug was $300,000 in 2023, according to the Reuters analysis of 47 medicines, up from $222,000 a year earlier. In 2021, the median annual price was $180,000 for the 30 drugs first marketed through mid-July, according to a study published in JAMA.
More than half of the new products approved by the Food and Drug Administration in 2023 and 2022 were for orphan diseases, meaning they affect fewer than 200,000 Americans, and some are not expected to become big sellers. The orphan rate is slightly higher than the 49% seen in the previous five years.
A high price is justified for a drug with a lot of value to patients, but “prices are just going up and up without any clear rationale as to why,” said Dan Ollendorf, chief scientific officer at the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER), an influential group that evaluates the value and prices of medicines.
He said many rare disease and cancer drugs are not being priced relative to their benefit, but the lack of alternatives gives manufacturers negotiating leverage.
Reuters analyzed 55 novel drugs approved by the FDA last year, up from 37 in 2022. The agency’s biologic division approved 17 new products, including four gene therapies.
The analysis excludes vaccines and drugs used intermittently such as Pfizer’s COVID-19 antiviral Paxlovid. It also excludes drugs that have not yet launched commercially.
Of the 47 medications included in the analysis, the highest price for drugs taken consistently was $1.8 million a year for Regeneron’s Veopoz for CHAPLE disease, an inherited condition diagnosed in fewer than 100 people worldwide in which parts of the immune system become overactive.
The lowest annual price was $576 for diabetes drug Brenzavvy, sold by TheracosBio in partnership with Mark Cuban’s Cost Plus Drugs online pharmacy.
ICER’s Ollendorf said it is too early to tell whether TheracosBio will succeed with its strategy to “blow up” the typical drug contracting model by selling a medication in a widely-used class at a much lower price than the competition.
TheracosBio CEO Brian Connelly said Brenzavvy “sales are increasing at a great clip,” but declined to provide details.
MARKET INCENTIVES
Gene therapies, which are one-time treatments, range in price from $2.2 million for sickle cell disease treatment Casgevy from Vertex and CRISPR, to $3.2 million for Sarepta’s muscular dystrophy therapy Elevydis.
The U.S. gives drug manufacturers market exclusivity, fee waivers, direct funding for research and development, and tax credits for such orphan treatments.
“We created a lot of incentives for innovation for rare diseases and the market responded,” said Dana Goldman, director of the USC Schaeffer Center for Health Policy & Economics. “The hope is that eventually we will see some therapeutic competition in this space and bring prices down.”
The 2022 Inflation Reduction Act limits how much drugmakers can raise prices for treatments offered under Medicare, the federal health plan for people age 65 and over. The legislation does not limit what can be charged for new medicines.
“It means you are encouraging companies to launch at high prices,” Goldman said.
Drugmakers stress they do not determine what U.S. patients end up paying. Many offer savings cards and other programs to reduce out-of-pocket costs, while health insurers can receive discounts and rebates from manufacturer list prices, especially if competing treatments are available.
Drugmakers also say new medicines offer cost-saving value, including the possibility of fewer emergency room visits and hospital stays.
Boston Consulting Group forecast that 24% of 2023’s new drugs will reach blockbuster status – annual sales of over $1 billion – versus 35% from 2022’s crop.
As patents expire, lower-cost generics mitigate prescription drug price inflation, which in the 12 months through December was roughly in line with broader inflation at 3.3%, according to U.S. government data.
(Reporting By Deena Beasley; Editing by Bill Berkrot)