CMS NEWS
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 16, 2019
Contact: CMS Media
Relations
(202) 690-6145 | CMS Media Inquiries
CMS Takes Action to Lower Prescription Drug Prices and Increase
Transparency
Final rule modernizes the Medicare Advantage & Medicare Part
D programs
Today, the Trump
Administration finalized improvements to Medicare Advantage and Medicare Part
D, which provide seniors with medical and prescription drug coverage through
competing private insurance plans. These changes will ensure that patients
have greater transparency into the cost of prescription drugs, so patients
can compare options and demand value from pharmaceutical companies.
“The improvements we are
making to Medicare Advantage and Medicare Part D deliver on the promises in
the President’s blueprint to provide more negotiating tools and more
transparency for patients,” said HHS Secretary Alex Azar. “They are
significant steps toward a Medicare program, a drug pricing marketplace, and
a healthcare system where the patient is at the center and in control.”
“Under President Trump’s
leadership, CMS is delivering on price transparency, because patients have a
right to know the cost of their healthcare services before they receive them,”
said CMS Administrator Seema Verma. “Today’s rule requires Part D plans to
adopt tools that provide clinicians with information that they can discuss
with patients on out-of-pocket costs for prescription drugs at the time a
prescription is written. By empowering patients with information on the cost
of their prescription drugs, today’s rule will ensure that pharmaceutical
companies have to compete on the basis of price. This effort builds on new
requirements for hospitals to disclose chargemaster prices and other agency
initiatives to promote price transparency.”
After an implementation
period, Part D plans will be required to provide access to such a tool that
is integrated into clinicians’ electronic prescribing or electronic health
records (EHR) systems. CMS is encouraged that some plans are already offering
these tools, but today’s policy will require all plans to provide clinicians
with access to price information for different prescription drugs. Getting
more information on out-of-pocket costs for prescription drugs to patients
and their clinicians early in the process is critical, as there should be no
surprises at the pharmacy counter.
To further promote
transparency, after an implementation period today’s rule will also require
the Explanation of Benefits document that Part D enrollees receive each month
to include information on drug price increases and lower-cost therapeutic
alternatives. As a result of these changes, patients and their clinicians
will be able to better understand the cost of prescription drugs and seek out
high-value options, helping to increase patient adherence and improving
health outcomes.
CMS is also codifying a
policy that enables beneficiaries to select a Medicare Advantage plan that
negotiates prices for physician-administered medicines when beneficiaries are
first starting on the medicines. By strengthening a plan’s ability to
negotiate with prescription drug companies, this policy will ensure that
plans can better deliver value for a patient’s medical needs. Many physician-administered
medicines are biologics, which are some of the most expensive therapies in
use today. Lower-cost biosimilars are coming to market to compete with
biologics, and this policy is part of the Trump Administration’s broader
strategy to foster innovation in biosimilars in order to drive competition in
the market for physician-administered drugs.
In addition, today’s rule
implements in Part D legislation signed by President Trump to prohibit “gag
clauses,” which keep pharmacists from telling patients about lower-cost ways
to obtain prescription drugs. These efforts to promote transparency on the
price of prescription drugs complement a series of other changes towards this
important goal, including a final rule issued by CMS last week to require pharmaceutical
companies to disclose the list price of prescription drugs in
direct-to-consumer television advertisements.
In the proposed rule, CMS
announced that the agency was considering a policy to ensure that
beneficiaries pay the lowest cost for the prescription drugs they pick up at
a pharmacy, after taking into account back-end payments from pharmacies to
plans. Although CMS is not implementing this policy for 2020, the agency
appreciates the over 4,000 comments that were received on this issue. CMS is
continuing to carefully review these comments as we continue to consider
policies that would lower prescription drug costs, address challenges that
independent pharmacies face, and improve the quality of pharmacy care.
Also in the proposed rule,
CMS proposed facilitating negotiations for discounts for drugs in Part D’s
“protected” therapeutic classes. The agency appreciates the feedback received
on this issue and has chosen not to finalize the proposed changes to its
protected classes policy at this time, but rather is codifying existing
policy. However, the administration remains concerned that prescription drug
companies are offering seniors in Medicare substantially smaller discounts
for protected class drugs than are offered in the commercial market. Seniors
in Medicare are paying more than commercially insured beneficiaries, and CMS
will continue to execute on President Trump’s Blueprint to lower prescription
drug prices and address this problem.
For a fact sheet on the
final rule, please visit: https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/medicare-advantage-and-part-d-drug-pricing-final-rule-cms-4180-f.
The final rule
(CMS-4180-F) can be downloaded from the Federal Register at: https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2019/05/23/2019-10521/modernizing-part-d-and-medicare-advantage-to-lower-drug-prices-and-reduce-out-of-pocket-expenses.
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Thursday, May 16, 2019
CMS Takes Action to Lower Prescription Drug Prices and Increase Transparency
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