Christopher
Holt August 2, 2019
This week, the Trump
Administration announced the “Safe Importation
Action Plan” to allow the importation of drugs from Canada and
possibly other countries. While some Trump
Administration officials have previously
dismissed the idea as a gimmick at best and dangerous at worst,
President Trump has long been a champion of the concept. It is worth examining several details of the
proposed policies to understand what the likely impact will be.
The proposal lays out
two pathways for drugs to enter the United States from abroad. The first
pathway would use existing legal authority to allow states, wholesalers, and
pharmacies to apply for demonstration projects in which they would import drugs
from Canada, to take advantage of the lower Canadian prices.
We’ve covered in past Weekly Checkups why
the Canadian government might stymie these activities, but for now let’s assume
no pushback from our friends to the north. The demonstrations would have two
requirements. First, the applicant would have to implement a host of safety and
security measures to guarantee the medication is safe. Second, they’ll have to
demonstrate real savings for patients. That second requirement might seem
easy—it’s well known that Canadian drugs are cheaper—but the first requirement
will bring overhead costs. These
drugs won’t come to U.S. patients at Canadian prices; they’ll come at Canadian
prices plus a markup to cover all the other compliance costs. Whether that
final price offers any savings remains to be seen.
Next, the selection of drugs eligible for this
policy raises questions. Any FDA-approved drug is eligible for
importation—except for controlled substances, biologics, infused drugs,
intravenously injected drugs, drugs inhaled during surgery, any drug with a risk
evaluation and mitigation strategy in place, and so on. In
other words, everything except the
expensive treatments can be imported.
The second pathway
would allow manufacturers to import versions of their own drugs that were
intended for sale in other countries. Imagine I manufacture a drug in India. Some are packaged for
the United States, while some are packaged for France. The drugs going to
France cost less, because the French government says they have to. Under this
forthcoming guidance, I could slap a U.S. label on top of the French label and
sell the drug in the United States at the French price (using a new drug
code to distinguish the French version from the original). Why would I do this? Great question; I’m not
sure.
The administration argues this second pathway
would allow manufacturers to get around pharmacy benefit manager (PBM)
contracts that might force them to sell drugs at a higher price. But this pathway does not eliminate PBMs as
gatekeepers; effectively the only people it would benefit are those who are
willing to pay for their drugs apart from any insurance(meaning the cost
of the drug would not count toward their deductible). The administration
insists that drug manufacturers have been calling for this change. My daughter
has been telling me for years she has a pet unicorn. I have yet to see any
evidence that either claim is true.
Finally, the timeline: There are plenty of weedy
implementation questions outstanding, and administration officials have been forthright that this announcement is
the beginning of a lengthy process, so it’s tough to say exactly when
any importation policy might take effect. This week was really an announcement
of intent to propose a rule that might eventually be finalized. With that in
mind, my best guess for any
implementation is fall 2020.
The fact that drugs
cost less in Canada than the United States is frustrating, but the disparity
exists because the two countries have made different choices about policy tradeoffs. Canada’s single-payer system denies patients
access to medications if manufacturers don’t agree to sufficiently low prices.
In the United States, we’ve chosen to prioritize access over cost, leaving
determinations about treatment to patients and their medical providers rather
than government accountants. That’s a broad simplification of a complex policy
challenge, but it provides the basic contours of what’s at stake in this
debate.
Importing drugs from
Canada is risky, potentially for safety, but certainly for access. This policy
does little to change those dynamics.
https://www.americanactionforum.org/weekly-checkup/the-sound-and-fury-on-drug-importation/#ixzz5vpgsEruo
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