Thursday, June 18, 2020

Pricey Treatments Face Challenges on Cost Sharing and Data Analysis


Genomic, curative drugs for chronic and terminal diseases are perhaps the most exciting new treatments in medicine. But even though these highly tailored therapies come to market with the potential to save costs for the health care system, the industry is struggling to pay for them because of their high up front costs.
Neil Lund, chief actuary and vice president emeritus of CVS Health Corp., observes that PBMs are already perceived as honest brokers by the plans they contract with. He says PBMs are a possible conduit to share the information necessary for the evaluations of health care products and services with all stakeholders.
"At the core [of a PBM] is this claims processing engine," Lund says. "[They have] a lot of real-time electronic data and the ability with really excellent record keeping as the fundamentals involved."
While the rebate-driven model for purchasing traditional pharmacy products works well for maintenance and incidental treatments, purchasing curative specialty pharmacy products is more complicated. For payers, such therapies have the benefit of reducing the need for chronic care and lessening risk of an inpatient stay, but they also have to front a high capital cost that disproportionately benefits providers and manufacturers, Lund observes.
Yet different metrics can yield different understandings of a new therapy's value, said Brian Leinwand, an associate principal for health economics at Avalere Health, during a recent webinar on alternative financing models for emergent therapies.
"[Decision-makers] typically evaluate products' incremental cost per quality-adjusted life-year gained compared to another therapy or therapies. However, a quality-adjusted life-year is not always the most useful metric for decision-makers in these scenarios, [and] other techniques can be employed."
Lund says member churn adds complication to curative therapy pricing. If a member receives an expensive curative therapy with one plan but departs for a new one a few years later, the new plan benefits but doesn't share in the cost.
"In the short term, the base case issue here is whoever is covering the person at the time of the very expensive treatment, in the way we handle everything today, is on the hook for the full cost," Lund observes. "Subsequent insurers or organizations reap the benefit of that, not the organization that necessarily footed the bill."

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