The Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA) is not happy with the Biden administration or the new 340B rule, finalized on April 18 by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), concerning the dispute resolution process put in place in 2020.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit may have ruled last year that the Department of Health and Human Services doesn’t get to fill in the gaps in the law that created the 340B prescription drug discount program, but some states and lawmakers are coming up with their own workarounds to force drug manufacturers to give the discounts to an unlimited number of contract pharmacies.
Court rulings favoring biopharma companies that have challenged the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ efforts to force them to unconditionally offer 340B prescription drug discounts to an unlimited number of contract pharmacies could become moot in the future if a bipartisan draft bill becomes law.
The U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has wrapped up its rulemaking for the outpatient prospective payment system (OPPS) for calendar year 2024, bringing some good news and some bad news for the medical device industry. While Philips North America came home with a new technology pass-through (NTPT) payment for its Cavaclear device, Cook Medical Inc., was less fortunate with its Echo Tip device as CMS declared that the Echo Tip did not satisfy the substantial clinical improvement criteria for transitional pass-through payment.
When it comes to recommending reforms for the U.S.’ 30-year-old 340B Drug Discount Program, there’s one thing drug manufacturers and hospitals agree on – pharmacy benefit managers (PBM) and other middlemen should not be profiting from a program that’s intended to help uninsured and vulnerable patients gain access to affordable prescription drugs or other health care services.
Summer is the time when device makers press their cases for add-on and pass-through payments from the Medicare program, and this year’s draft hospital outpatient prospective payment system for calendar year 2024 is no exception. Both Cook Medical and Philips North America are pushing CMS for new technology pass-through (NTPT) payments for their offerings, but these two larger firms have a lot of company in the NTPT sweepstakes.
Rather than waiting on the courts to sort out the 340B dispute between the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and prescription drug manufacturers, a group of senators is looking for bipartisan legislative solutions that would infuse the drug discount program with more accountability, certainty, oversight and transparency.
When it comes to cutting health care costs in the U.S., last year’s Inflation Reduction Act, with its inflationary rebates and direct Medicare negotiations, was just Act 1. Now lawmakers, in both the House and Senate, are feverishly working on bipartisan scripts for Act 2 that go beyond biopharma’s role in drug prices to taking on pricing issues across the health care sector.
Neither the courts nor the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) get to fill in the gaps in the law that created the 340B prescription drug discount program, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit said, as it struck down HHS’ interpretation that requires drug companies to provide the drug discounts to an unlimited number of contract pharmacies.
Election day has come and gone in the U.S., but the question of which party will control Congress remains unanswered, signaling that the country is as divided as ever politically and ideologically. While Democrats and Republicans may agree on problems in the life sciences sector, they often disagree on how to address them.