Pfizer to price Covid drug Paxlovid at $1,390 per course

Pfizer to price Covid drug Paxlovid at ,390 per course


Paxlovid, Pfizer’s antiviral medication to treat the coronavirus disease, is displayed in this picture taken on Oct. 7, 2022.

Wolfgang Rattay | Reuters

Pfizer will price a five-day course of its Covid antiviral drug Paxlovid at $1,390 when the company starts to transition it to the commercial market later this year.

A company spokesperson on Wednesday confirmed the price, which was first reported by The Wall Street Journal. That list price, which is before rebates and other discounts to insurers and pharmacy benefit managers, is more than double the $529 the federal government paid for Paxlovid.

The government has purchased and distributed Paxlovid to the public for free since December 2021, when the FDA first authorized the treatment. But beginning in 2024, Pfizer will sell Paxlovid directly to health insurers, which comes as demand for Covid vaccines and treatments slumps nationwide.

Doctors, health experts and patient advocates have raised concerns that a higher price will curb access to the life-saving treatment, which has been shown to reduce the risk of severe disease and death from Covid among vulnerable patients, such as those with diabetes, heart conditions or a weakened immune system. 

But health insurance plans will likely pay much less than the nearly $1,400 list price for Paxlovid, meaning patients will probably have small or no out-of-pocket costs. Pfizer also noted that it is working with payers to lower copays for patients.

Pfizer plans to subsidize copays of people who are commercially insured at least through 2028.

“As always, Pfizer’s goal is to ensure broad and equitable access to our medicines. We are working diligently with payers to achieve the best possible formulary placement for PAXLOVID, resulting in low OOP costs for patients,” a spokesperson for the company said in a statement to CNBC.

On Friday, the company also said it expects revenue from Paxlovid to come in $7 billion lower than previously anticipated, partly due to the return of doses labeled for emergency use by the federal government.

Overall, Pfizer now expects 2023 sales of $58 billion to $61 billion, down from its previous guidance of $67 billion to $70 billion. Pfizer said it cut its revenue outlook “solely due to its Covid products.”

— CNBC’s Angelica Peebles contributed to this report.

Don’t miss these CNBC PRO stories:



Source

‘Advice was so good,’ says CEO who used ChatGPT to pitch new ideas to AI versions of business icons
Health

‘Advice was so good,’ says CEO who used ChatGPT to pitch new ideas to AI versions of business icons

Joanna Stober, Midi Health CEO and co-founder, has never had an opportunity to run her business plans past legendary venture capital investor John Doerr, chairman at Kleiner Perkins. But that didn’t stop her from tapping Doerr, in an AI version, for advice on growing her startup, a virtual clinic offering midlife health care for women. […]

Read More
Eli Lilly cuts cash prices of Zepbound weight loss drug vials on direct-to-consumer site
Health

Eli Lilly cuts cash prices of Zepbound weight loss drug vials on direct-to-consumer site

The Eli Lilly logo appears on the company’s office in San Diego, California, U.S., Nov. 21, 2025. Mike Blake | Reuters Eli Lilly on Monday said it is lowering the cash prices of single-dose vials of its blockbuster weight loss drug Zepbound on its direct-to-consumer platform, LillyDirect, building on efforts by the company and the […]

Read More
Abortion pill makers brace for restrictions a year after Trump’s election
Health

Abortion pill makers brace for restrictions a year after Trump’s election

Mifepristone and Misoprostol pills are pictured Wednesday, Oct. 3, 2018, in Skokie, Illinois. Erin Hooley | Chicago Tribune | Tribune News Service | Getty Images Just over a year since Donald Trump was elected president again, the $6.9 billion abortion pill industry is operating under the same federal rules he inherited from former President Joe […]

Read More