You may not have realized this, but this article is behind a paywall. They say the first 30 days are free so perhaps I will sign up. It looks interesting and it’s very current with a today’s date on the timestamp - January 30, 2017.
Oh no! you know I’m sure you can read it other places. Here’s an alternate link:
Couldn’t have happened to nicer people
I will definitely be looking forward to following the story. I sure hope the plaintiffs know what they are doing and have some excellent counsel because I am sure they’ll be up against some of the most ruthless cutthroat lawyers money can buy…
As an aside, STAT News is headed by some folks from The Boston Globe and they’ve done some pretty interesting health journalism, I think.
It may be worth the subscription price. Thanks for the link.
I have no opinion on the price-fixing. But I am glad insulin manufacturers can make good money if that will keep them investing into new and better insulins. Just see what is happening in the anti-venom sector.
I think the issue of affordability for insulin is somewhat different from that of pharma profits: it is a health system issue.
What is the anti-venom sector? Is there a whole segment of the pharma industry just focusing on research into reversing snake bites?
The opposite. There is very little focus on anti-venom serums because there is little money to be made. Several serums are not being made any more and there seems to be no way to get them in production again. Their last reserves are getting past their validity date, and the only thing people are able to do is to try to prolong the life cycle of the existing stock. A tragedy, really.
EDIT: I recently heard that Novo is discontinuing research on oral insulin because of cash flow problems.
More likely because it’s a dead end
The analysts linked the project discontinuation to bad quarterly results. I think when you deal with risky projects you tend to be willing to cut them in bad times. I have done that many times.
I found this article at this BusinessWire website.
BOSTON–(BUSINESS WIRE)–People living with diabetes have filed a groundbreaking class-action lawsuit against the three makers of analog insulin drug products – Sanofi, Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly – for exponentially raising consumer insulin prices in an organized scheme to drive up prices at the expense of patients who need insulin drugs to live, according to Hagens Berman.
#Insulin Manufacturers Hit w/ #ClassAction #Lawsuit Over Drug Price Inflation Scheme #Diabetes
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The lawsuit states that in the last five years alone, Sanofi, Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly have raised the sticker or “benchmark” prices on their drugs by more than 150 percent. Some plaintiffs now pay almost $900 dollars per month just to obtain the drugs they need, according to the firm.
This first-of-its-kind lawsuit details several accounts from patients resorting to extreme measures to survive rising insulin prices, including starving themselves to control their blood sugars, under-dosing their insulin, and taking expired insulin. Other class members have intentionally allowed themselves to slip into diabetic ketoacidosis – a potentially fatal blood syndrome caused by lack of insulin in the body – so that they can obtain insulin samples from hospital emergency rooms.
“People living with diabetes are practically imprisoned under the price hikes and sadly are resorting to extreme measures to afford the medication they need to live,” said Steve Berman, managing partner of Hagens Berman, which represents the patients.
According to the lawsuit, filed Jan. 30, 2017, in the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts, the three companies have exploited the drug-pricing system in a way that ensures higher profits for drug manufacturers and other players, leaving those living with diabetes crippled by high insulin costs. These acts, says the lawsuit, constitute a RICO enterprise, and violate the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act and various state consumer protection laws.
The manufacturers of insulin even admit that their price hikes are unrelated to any jump in production or research and development costs, the suit explains.
Insulin Sticker Shock
The complaint states that this once affordable drug is now out of reach for many patients due to a behind-the-scenes quid pro quo arrangement: “increased benchmark prices are the result of a scheme and enterprise among each defendant and several bulk drug distributors. In this scheme, the defendant drug companies set two different prices for their insulin treatments: a publicly-reported, benchmark price and a lower, real price that they offer to certain bulk drug distributors.”
The most important of these bulk drug distributors are entities known as pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs). These entities serve as middlemen between health insurers and drug manufacturers, negotiating medicine prices with drug companies on behalf of health insurers. The PBMs also design drug formularies for their health insurer clients, ranking drugs based on efficacy and cost, the suit states. These formularies allow health insurers to funnel patients towards one brand of drug over others. Because the analog insulin products of the big three insulin manufacturers are largely interchangeable, these drugs companies fight for preferential placement on the PBMs’ formularies, offering PBMs “rebates” off their benchmark prices, according to the complaint.
The lawsuit explains that as compensation for their role as negotiator, PBMs pocket a percentage of the difference between the reported benchmark price and the undisclosed real price they are able to secure. This difference in prices is known as the “spread.” The larger the spread, the higher the PBMs’ profits.
“The drug manufacturer with the largest spread between benchmark and real price is more likely to secure a PBM’s preferred formulary position, and, as a result, the business of that PBM’s clients,” the suit states. “Where two or more drug manufacturers make largely interchangeable products, those companies would, in an ideal world, continuously drop their real prices to undercut the prices offered by their competitors.” But because of this two-faced public and private system, drug companies instead choose to hike their publicly reported, benchmark prices, while maintaining constant (or only slightly lowering) the real prices they offer to PBMs, the suit states. Instead of competing for PBM business based on significant real price decreases, the drug manufacturers have decided to compete based on significant benchmark price increases.
The lawsuit calls this trend of one-sided price increases “an arms race,” as each of the three defendants – Sanofi, Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly – has raised its benchmark price in “perfect lock step” with its competitors to ensure that the large PBMs keep its drug in rotation. The lawsuit alleges that in a January 2017 statement, Eli Lilly admitted to the benchmark price – a net price scheme.
The figures in the lawsuit illustrate this behavior. There are two types of analog insulin: long-acting and rapid-acting. Novo Nordisk’s Levemir and Sanofi’s Lantus compete in the long-acting category, and Eli Lilly’s Humalog and Novo Nordisk’s Novolog compete in the rapid-acting category.
The firm says this arms race hurt patients – the plaintiffs here – who must pay for a high percentage of their drugs out-of-pocket. Uninsured patients and patients in high-deductible health plans, plans with high coinsurance rates, and Medicare Part D plans have been seriously injured by Sanofi, Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly’s benchmark price hikes, according to the complaint.
“Insulin, in one form or another, has been available for more than a century, and it was formerly an affordable drug,” Berman said. “The only thing that has changed is the insatiable desire of Big Pharma to profit from sickness hand over fist.”
“It is our hope that this suit not only reclaims losses for the millions of U.S. patients struggling to survive with diabetes right now, but that it also shines a spotlight on an egregious scheme perpetrated by these defendants. It’s time to break up the Insulin Racket, and that is the objective of this case,” he added.
The lawsuit seeks to represent a nationwide class of consumers who have purchased analog insulin at recently skyrocketing prices, to reclaim economic losses in an amount to be determined at trial and to put in place an injunction halting this behavior.
About Hagens Berman
Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro LLP is a consumer-rights class-action law firm with offices in 10 cities. The firm served as lead counsel in historic settlements involving inflated benchmark drug prices, including Average Wholesale Price MDL and a class-action lawsuit against McKesson Corp., one of the nation’s largest drug wholesalers, recovering more than $500 million for plaintiffs. More about the law firm and its successes can be found at www.hbsslaw.com. Follow the firm for updates and news at @ClassActionLaw.
Contacts
Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro LLP
Ashley Klann, 206-268-9363
ashleyk@hbsslaw.com
If this is racketeering (and I can certainly see the argument that it is), isn’t the whole Insurance+PBR arrangement a violation of RICO?
Perhaps… cheers to hopefully the tip of the iceberg
I’m a capitalist for sure but what ever happened to the “moral hand” that was the part of making money that would prevent collusion that gouges everyone who requires insulin? I work for a privately owned corporation who makes tons of money putting customers first and always considering stakeholders in their own business decisions - I had formerly worked for a Fortune 500 company who was a slave to decisions that only benifited the corporate office. The bottom line is not just about how much money goes into that profit column - it’ts also about sustainability - if this kind of short sighted policy had always been the case with drug makers we customers would be finding another way to obtain our insulin - wait, many of us are already doing that
Yes it could have happened to the government, far complicit in the hole of drug prices. It’s no coincidence that insulin prices started rising rapidly with the implementation of the ACA. With a pile of new regulations on the pharm industry, and perverse incentives given to them, it’s no wonder drug prices are through the roof.
Only when drugs are allowed to be regulated by free market forces will prices return to normal. And the profit that drug companies make will be able to support further research.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.washingtonpost.com/amphtml/news/wonk/wp/2017/01/30/diabetes-patients-sue-insulin-makers-for-pricing-fraud/ Here’s today’s article. I’m pretty excited about this suit… if it is won by the patients and not by pharma it could have very far reaching implications. I’m not even entirely sure who the bad guys are in the racket anymore (neither are they) but at some point the house of cards has to start crumbling back down to reality, reason, and fairness
Thanks @Terry4 for the excellent article explaining how the price fixing works. It is obvious looking at the price history of insulin that something was going on but I didn’t understand the exact mechanism. Perhaps this will spark a wider discussion of prescription drug prices.
The RICO violator is our government, who has perverted the system to the extent to make it only reasonable for the pharm and pbm industries to act as they have been acting. Just like the real estate crises, the government makes perverse regulations, industry follows the rules and tries to profit in the government created environment, and then the government blames industry for the resultant problems.
The solution? Get government out of private industry. Allow the free market to function normally. Government engineering of private industry has a name: fascism.