Thursday,
25 May 2017 | 2:00 PM ETCNBC.com
UnitedHealth Group's Optum
unit has signed a multiyear agreement with Merck to develop a
better way to reimburse drugmakers based on how well their drugs improve a
patient's health.
"The
aim is to identify opportunities where we can align value and payment," on
high-cost treatments, said Curt Medeiros, president of Optum Life Sciences.
"There's a lot of focus on high-cost specialty areas like oncology, but
also in chronic conditions that affect a broad set of the population like
diabetes."
UnitedHealth
and other insurers have been pushing hospitals and doctors toward new value-based
reimbursement contracts for more than five years. In the last 18 months, the
health insurance industry has begun to focus more on new payment deals with
drugmakers to enter outcomes-based risk sharing agreements, or OBRSAs.
Medicare
plan provider Humana has
more than a dozen agreements with pharmaceutical companies covering nearly two
dozen drugs. Aetna announced
a deal with Merck earlier this year. Cigna, Humana and others
have deals in place with Swiss drugmaker Novartis for
its high-cost heart drug Entresto.
UnitedHealth
is targeting signing another five to 10 outcomes-based deals this year.
"The
level of interest in our pharma and our biotech clients has increased
significantly, so the amount of opportunities out there has really grown,"
said Medeiros. "Cost pressure ... is probably the largest driver."
While
the future of federal funding for health programs like Medicaid remains up for
debate in Congress, one thing is clear — the health industry is going to come
under greater pressure to lower costs. And rising specialty-drug prices have
put pharmaceutical companies in the crosshairs of private payers and the
government.
President Donald Trump has
said he would like to see federal programs such as Medicare have the ability to
negotiate lower drug prices. It is an issue that has seen some bipartisan
support. For the pharmaceutical industry, OBRSAs could be a way to get out in
front of potential drug-price controls.
"The
collaboration between Merck and Optum will help advance both organizations'
common goals of improving patient health outcomes, expanding access to
innovative therapies, and ensuring the best use of health care spending,"
said Susan Shiff, senior vice president at Merck, in the companies' announcement.
The
actual returns on the program could still be years away, but UnitedHealth and
Merck say they will share their data publicly with others in the industry to
develop better payment models.
"The
ability to drive down the cost — ultimately to the consumer — is the long-term
objective," said Medeiros. "How much, at this time, we don't
know."
http://www.cnbc.com/2017/05/25/unitedhealth-merck-to-explore-linking-payments-to-drug-performance.html
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