Pfizer CEO says Medicare will likely face legal action over drug price negotiations

Pfizer CEO says Medicare will likely face legal action over drug price negotiations


Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla talks during a press conference with European Commission President after a visit to oversee the production of the Pfizer-BioNtech Covid-19 vaccine at the factory of US pharmaceutical company Pfizer, in Puurs, on April 23, 2021.

John Thys | AFP | Getty Images

Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla on Thursday said pharmaceutical companies will likely take legal action against Medicare drug price negotiations — which aim to cut costs for older Americans but will likely reduce company profits.

“I think that there will be legal action, but I’m not sure if we’ll be able to stop anything before 2026 or not,” Bourla said during a live-streamed interview with Reuters. 

Bourla referred to a provision in the Biden administration’s Inflation Reduction Act that will allow the Medicare program to negotiate prices on the costliest prescription drugs each year.

The first negotiations start in September and new prices will go into effect in 2026.

He said the most “certain way” to stop the negotiations would be to call on Congress to introduce legislation that will revise the federal government’s plan. But Bourla noted that he is “not optimistic” about that happening. 

Democrats control the Senate and President Joe Biden would likely veto any such bill.

Some drugmakers are already preparing to fight Medicare drug negotiations, industry sources told Reuters. 

Bourla called the plan “negotiation with a gun to your head.”

He argued that it will cut pharmaceutical profits and force thousands of companies to pull back on developing life-saving medicines. 

“They will be very careful where and how much they invest in research,” he said. 

Bourla called it “unfortunate” that the government enacted a law that “creates a lot of disincentives” for the industry, even after seeing the pivotal role companies played during the pandemic. 

“We’re coming out of a global health crisis that became a financial crisis as a result of Covid. But the only reason why we are here today was because we had a thriving life sciences industry,” Bourla said. “They did the tests, the vaccines, the treatments, you name it.”

Pfizer and rival drugmaker Moderna are the leading developers of Covid vaccines.

Despite his criticism, Bourla acknowledged some positive aspects of the law for patients, such as lower out-of-pocket costs for medicines.

Another provision of the Inflation Reduction Act requires Pfizer and other prescription drug companies to refund Medicare through rebates if the prices of their drugs rise faster than the rate of inflation. 

Five of Pfizer’s drugs are among the first set of 27 Part B prescription drugs that will be subject to Medicare inflation rebates starting April 1, the Department of Health and Human Services said in March.



Source

Making U.S. biotech more competitive with China’s could help rare disease patients, experts say
Health

Making U.S. biotech more competitive with China’s could help rare disease patients, experts say

The growth of China’s biotechnology sector has been staggering. Beijing is pumping money into the industry, backing research efforts and helping launch a new wave of labs and incubators in the country. That’s a problem for the U.S. biotech industry and also affects rare disease patients who are waiting for a cure. Among the experts […]

Read More
Healthy Returns: Novo Nordisk CEO on GLP-1 pricing, and more insights from the JPM conference
Health

Healthy Returns: Novo Nordisk CEO on GLP-1 pricing, and more insights from the JPM conference

A version of this article first appeared in CNBC’s Healthy Returns newsletter, which brings the latest health-care news straight to your inbox. Subscribe here to receive future editions. Good morning from San Francisco! It’s day three of the annual JPMorgan Healthcare Conference – the biggest gathering of biotech and pharma execs, investors and analysts in […]

Read More
OpenAI acquires health-care technology startup Torch
Health

OpenAI acquires health-care technology startup Torch

OpenAI has acquired the health-care technology startup Torch, the company announced on Monday. Torch was building a “unified medical memory” for artificial intelligence that aimed to bring a patient’s health data, which is typically siloed and stored across a number of different vendors and formats, into one place. Torch’s employees will join OpenAI as part […]

Read More