CMS NEWS
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 15, 2019
Contact: CMS Media
Relations
(202) 690-6145 | CMS Media Inquiries
CMS Issues New Guidance Addressing Spread Pricing in
Medicaid,
Ensures Pharmacy Benefit Managers are not Up-Charging Taxpayers Agency issues guidance for Medicaid Managed Care and CHIP health plans that clarifies how current regulations require “spread pricing” to be accounted in the calculation of Medical Loss Ratios (MLRs)
As part of President
Trump’s efforts to lower prescription drug costs in Medicaid, CMS today
issued guidance for Medicaid and CHIP managed care plans regarding the
calculation of a plan’s Medical Loss Ratio (MLR), which represents the
percent of premium revenue that goes toward actual claims and activities that
improve healthcare quality, as opposed to administrative costs and
profits.
CMS regulations require
Medicaid and CHIP managed care plans to report an MLR and use an MLR target
of 85 percent in developing rates. The 85 percent target means that
only 15 percent of the revenue for the managed care plan can be for
administrative costs and profits. CMS is concerned that some managed
care plans are not accurately reporting pharmacy benefit spread pricing when
they calculate and report MLRs.
“The market for
prescription drugs is convoluted and opaque,” said CMS Administrator Seema
Verma. “States are increasingly reporting instances of spread pricing
in Medicaid, including cases in Ohio and Texas, and I am concerned that
spread pricing is inflating prescription drug costs that are borne by
beneficiaries and by taxpayers. Today’s guidance will ensure that
health plans monitor spread pricing in Medicaid appropriately. PBMs
cannot use spread pricing to upcharge health plans and increase costs for
states – spread pricing must be monitored and accounted for, and not used to
inflate profits.”
Spread pricing occurs when
health plans contract with pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) to manage their
prescription drug benefits, and PBMs keep a portion of the amount paid to
them by the health plans for prescription drugs instead of passing the full
payments on to pharmacies. Thus, there is a spread between the amount
that the health plan pays the PBM and the amount that the PBM reimburses the
pharmacy for a beneficiary’s prescription. If spread pricing is not
appropriately monitored and accounted for, a PBM can profit from charging
health plans an excess amount above the amount paid to the pharmacy dispensing
a drug, which increases Medicaid costs for taxpayers.
The MLR regulations for
Medicaid and CHIP managed care plans currently require them to exclude
prescription drug rebates from the amount of actual claims costs used to
calculate an MLR. In today’s guidance CMS is making clear that, for
purposes of the MLR regulation, “prescription drug rebates” means any price
concession or discount received by the managed care plan or by its PBM,
regardless of who pays the rebate or discount. Some possible examples
include payments from pharmaceutical manufacturers, wholesalers, and retail
pharmacies. Therefore, the amount retained by a PBM under spread
pricing would have to be excluded from the amount of claims costs used for
calculating the managed care plan’s MLR. The policy underpinning this
guidance is that spread pricing should not be used to artificially inflate a
Medicaid or CHIP managed care plan’s MLR.
Spread pricing has been
reported predominantly for generic prescriptions. States have raised
concerns that PBMs can reimburse pharmacies for generic prescriptions based
on lower pricing benchmarks than the benchmarks used for charging Medicaid
and CHIP managed care plans for the same prescriptions. CMS remains
concerned about the practice of spread pricing and is exploring additional
approaches to addressing this issue.
Today’s guidance does not
conflict with the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of
Inspector General’s recent proposed rule regarding the safe harbor for
prescription drug rebates, since even if that rule were to be finalized as
proposed, today’s guidance would apply to additional items of value that must
be deducted from the amount of claims cost used for calculating an MLR.
Today’s guidance builds on other CMS initiatives to execute on President
Trump’s Blueprint for reducing prescription drug prices and increasing
transparency in the market for prescription drugs, including the overhaul of
CMS’s drug dashboards to add pricing data on thousands more drugs.
To read today’s guidance
(CMCS informational bulletin), visit the CMS website at: https://www.medicaid.gov/federal-policy-guidance/downloads/cib051519.pdf.
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Administrator @SeemaCMS, @CMSgov, and @CMSgovPress.
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Wednesday, May 15, 2019
CMS Issues New Guidance Addressing Spread Pricing in Medicaid, Ensures Pharmacy Benefit Managers are not Up-Charging Taxpayers
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