By Jay Hancock and Elizabeth Lucas and Sydney Lupkin July
24, 2017
Two
federal investigations — one examining opioid sales, another about a multiple sclerosis drug whose price had
soared to $34,000 a vial — were only part of the troubles Mallinckrodt faced as
the year began.
The
stock of the drugmaker, whose United States headquarters are in St. Louis, was
tanking. Wall Street worried that Medicare might reduce the half-billion dollars it was
spending yearly on a Mallinckrodt drug with limited evidence of effectiveness.
This
year, the company left the industry trade group Pharmaceutical Research and
Manufacturers of America, or PhRMA, after the group threatened to kick out
companies that did not spend enough on research.
Mallinckrodt,
however, has been increasing its spending in another area: It has been writing
checks to politicians.
After
making meager donations in 2015, the company’s political action committee began
raising its contributions for congressional campaigns last year. Lawmakers in
both the House and Senate collected $44,000 from Mallinckrodt in 2017’s first
quarter, nearly nine times what they got from the company in the same period
two years ago.
Mallinckrodt
also spent $610,000 lobbying Congress, triple the amount of 2015’s first
quarter. The company, which makes pain-control drugs as well as H.P. Acthar, an
injectable gel prescribed for multiple sclerosis and other diseases, has
lobbied on issues related to opioids, patents, Medicare and other
matters, regulatory filings show.
Mallinckrodt
is far from unique. This year, a critical and risky one for drug companies, the
industry as a whole is ratcheting up campaign donations and its presence on
Capitol Hill, a new database compiled by Kaiser Health News shows.
“The
stakes are really high right now,” said David Maris, who follows pharmaceutical
stocks for Wells Fargo, given that President Donald Trump has joined Democrats
to demand action on drug costs.
Mallinckrodt
acknowledges that it has increased its political spending to help its
particular causes. “We actively participate in the political process on issues
that matter to us and our patients,” Rhonda Sciarra, a Mallinckrodt
spokeswoman, said by email. “Our PAC’s absolute spend remains small in relation
to other companies in our industry.”
Congressional
donations from pharmaceutical PACs rose 11 percent in this year’s first
quarter, compared with the first three months of 2015 (the comparable point in
the previous election cycle), according to a Kaiser Health News analysis. The
increase accompanied a spike in pharma lobbying for the period.
Contributions
to powerful committee members who handle health policy matters also increased
in the face of public anger over the opioid crisis as well as anticipated
renewal of legislation that determines the “user fees” companies pay for
regulatory drug approval.
A
dozen Republican committee heads and ranking Democrats on health-related panels
collected $281,600 from pharma-related PACs in the first quarter, up 80 percent
from what people in the same positions collected in the first quarter of 2015,
the data show. Such initial donations often set the pace for a two-year
election cycle, and suggest whom corporate interests are trying to cultivate in
a new Congress, with implied promises of more to come, analysts say.
For
pharma companies, “now would be the time to give out the money, ahead of a
piece of legislation that may come down the road,” said Kent Cooper, a former
Federal Election Commission official who has tracked political money for
decades. “You want to get your name out there and make a connection with these
members’ legislative assistants — so you are known to them and you can get in
their door.”
Other
drugmakers increasing their congressional donations include AbbVie — whose
blockbuster rheumatoid arthritis injection, Humira,
faces threats from competition — and Alexion Pharmaceuticals. A six-figure price
tag for Soliris, Alexion’s treatment for a rare blood disorder, makes it one of
the world’s most expensive drugs.
Pfizer,
the No. 2 pharma donor in the first quarter after Sanofi, gave $130,900 to
congressional campaigns, three times its contribution for the same period two
years ago. So far this year, the company has raised the price of dozens of
drugs by an average of 20 percent, The Financial Times reported.
PhRMA,
a big giver in the past, has not yet joined individual companies in increasing
donations for this election cycle. Congressional campaigns collected $7,000 in
the first quarter from PhRMA, which Politico reported had raised member dues to
prepare for the drug-price fight. They got $31,500 two years ago.
Methodology
Kaiser
Health News analyzed first-quarter campaign finance reports for members of
Congress. We included contributions made both directly and through joint
fundraising committees to candidate campaign committees by political action
committees (PACs) that are associated with pharmaceutical companies, pharmacy
benefit managers and trade groups. These reports are subject to change as
candidates file amendments and issue refunds. We did not include contributions
made by individuals.
The
totals do not include contributions from individual executives and lobbyists,
or donations to leadership PACs. Leadership PACs associated with a particular
member of Congress often spend money on other members’ campaigns, as well as on
things that a campaign committee cannot finance. Details on contributions to
leadership PACs take longer to become available.
Outrage
was still bubbling last year over moves by Turing Pharmaceuticals and Mylan to raise
prices of cheap-to-make, lifesaving drugs to hundreds of dollars a dose, when
the country elected a Republican president who vowed: “I’m
going to bring down drug prices.” Nearly 8 in 10 Americans said in a September
poll they believed prescription drug prices were
unreasonable.
Evidence
has grown that pharma companies helped fuel the
nation’s addiction and overdose crisis with sales of powerful painkillers,
prompting calls for an overhaul. Drug developers are also preparing for renewal
of the Prescription Drug User Fee Act,
which generates revenue to pay for government review and approval of drugs.
At
the same time, drug companies anticipated Republican efforts to repeal and
replace the Affordable Care Act, which finances billions in drug sales. That
process has stalled in the Senate. All of this gives drugmakers the most
powerful incentives in years to cultivate policymakers, analysts say.
Tense
politics may also be prompting members of Congress to be energetic about
soliciting donations.
“My
sense is that Republicans are nervous in the House — especially given the
long-term record of the presidential party losing seats in the midterm,” said David
Magleby, a political scientist at Brigham Young University who studies campaign
finance. “I would be surprised if Republican incumbents across the board aren’t
more aggressive in raising money in the first and second quarters.”
In
the past six months, Mallinckrodt has come under pressure for both painkiller
sales and price increases for non-narcotic drugs. Earlier this month, the
Justice Department announced the company would pay $35
million to resolve an investigation into whether it ignored enormous volumes of
its oxycodone moving through distributors and pharmacies. Over several
years, The Washington Post reported,
Mallinckrodt was responsible for two-thirds of all the oxycodone sold in
Florida.
Mallinckrodt denied it violated the law and said the
settlement was not an acknowledgment of liability.
In
January, it agreed to pay $100 million to
settle Federal Trade Commission allegations that a company it bought three
years ago had illegally quashed competition, enabling it to raise the price of
Acthar, the multiple sclerosis drug, which the FTC said cost only $40 per vial
in 2001, to $34,000. Mallinckrodt disputed the agency’s complaint but said it settled to put the matter to
rest.
The
drug is prescribed to treat a rare form of epilepsy as
well as multiple sclerosis and other ailments. Even
Mallinckrodt acknowledges that
“clinical trials demonstrating the efficacy for Acthar are limited.”
But
in part because of price increases, global sales of the drug rose from $951
million in the 2014 fiscal year to $1.2 billion in the 2016 fiscal year. It was
Medicare’s most expensive drug per patient in
2015 — $162,371 for the year — and now makes up a third of the company’s
revenue.
Company
shareholders have worried that Medicare will crack down on sales of Acthar.
Mallinckrodt has pledged to keep future price
increases for all drugs to single-digit percentages per year, though that could
still be well above the current inflation rate of less than 3 percent.
Mallinckrodt’s
biggest donations on Capitol Hill, of $5,000 each, went to Ann Wagner, a House
member from its home state, Missouri, and Sen. Orrin Hatch, the powerful
chairman of the Senate Finance Committee. That amount is the maximum a PAC can
give to a campaign committee for each primary and general election.
Ever
since it was spun off as an independent company in 2013, Mallinckrodt has made
its legal home in Ireland, which allows it to take advantage of lower income
tax rates. Hatch favors cutting U.S. corporate taxes to eliminate incentives to
make such moves.
Mallinckrodt
gave lesser amounts to 16 other congressional campaigns, including that of Paul
Ryan, the House speaker. Ryan, who has played down Trump’s attacks on the
pharmaceutical industry, was the top recipient of industry money in the first
quarter, with $82,750 collected, the data show.
The White House has made no proposals on drug costs. Trump has said little about the issue since January, when he said drug sellers were “getting away with murder.”
Drug
companies are hedging their bets, writing checks to individual Democrats and
Republicans. With Trump breaking ranks with Republicans to favor reform, “you
can’t tell who’s your friend and who’s not,” said Maris, the Wells Fargo
analyst. “So you have to go to a ground game — a more one-on-one legislator
basis.”
Correction: This
story has been updated to correct fiscal 2014 sales of the drug H.P. Acthar.
Naema
Ahmed contributed to this report.
KHN’s
coverage of prescription drug development, costs and pricing is supported in
part by the Laura and John Arnold Foundation.
http://khn.org/news/follow-the-money-drugmakers-deploy-political-cash-as-prices-and-anger-mount/?utm_campaign=KFF-2017-The-Latest&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=54666700&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-_H1dvmdK4wolhWrnokoFP_AranOZsw_RV0AKfrZtxYzO46XwsR_sjAbs_O9AQF28rOQ8iylbOoBbfqYIedoQ0JlkEhxA&_hsmi=54666700
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