The debate around the U.S. 340B prescription drug discount program is once again heating up in court and in Congress. A day after the American Hospital Association called on the FTC and Department of Justice to investigate alleged antitrust issues with the rebate models a few drug companies have proposed, some members of Congress raised concerns Sept. 9 about how providers are abusing the program. Meanwhile, a U.S. appellate court heard arguments that same day on whether states can speak in the silence of the federal law that created the program more than 30 years ago.
A federal appeals court opened the door Aug. 6 for an amended class-action lawsuit alleging that Astrazeneca plc, Eli Lilly and Co., Novo Nordisk A/S and Sanofi SA engaged in a horizontal price-fixing conspiracy involving insulin products and GLP-1 drugs indicated in diabetes when they each adopted similar policies in 2020 to impose restrictions on 340B discounts to an unlimited number of contract pharmacies.
After shutting down manufacturers’ efforts last year to offer the mandated 340B discounts on outpatient prescription drugs as a rebate rather than an up-front price, the U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) is now inching the rebate door open for drugs that were selected for the first round of Medicare price negotiations.
It’s time for the U.S. Congress to finally put some guardrails on the 340B prescription drug discount program it created more than 30 years ago as a way to help fund health care for low-income patients. That’s the overall conclusion of a majority staff report from the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee that follows a years-long investigation into the program.
One of the uncertainties in the changing of the guard in both the U.S. administration and Congress is the future of 340B reforms. Now the Inflation Reduction Act makes reforms more critical than ever, as it requires manufacturers of drugs selected for price negotiations to certify that they’re giving 340B entities the lowest price, be it the 340B discount or the maximum fair price set by the CMS as part of the negotiation process.
Makers of devices and diagnostics face a new set of policy questions following the 2024 U.S. general elections, but many of the impending changes at the executive branch seem directed more toward drugs and vaccines, seemingly leaving the device and diagnostics industries largely out of harm’s way.
With the U.S. Congress sitting on its hands on reforms to the 340B drug discount program, states are stepping into the gap. While most state efforts have been aimed at forcing biopharma companies to give the federally mandated drug discounts to an increasing number of contract pharmacies, California is looking in a different direction. According to unofficial election results, a slim majority of the state’s voters said yes to Proposition 34, which would require certain providers that benefit from the drug discounts to spend at least 98% of their 340B revenues on direct patient care.
Meeting the deadline the U.S. Health Resources & Services Administration imposed in a Sept. 27 final warning letter, Johnson & Johnson (J&J) notified the agency Sept. 30 that it would not implement its proposed 340B rebate model pending resolution of the issues.
With time running out on the 118th U.S. Congress, a group of lawmakers is urging the leadership of the House Energy and Commerce Committee to consider a bipartisan path forward on strengthening the 340B drug discount program.
The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has no rulemaking authority over the 340B prescription drug discount program, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit said May 21 as it handed the government its second big loss in the ongoing debate over whether drug manufacturers have to give unlimited contract pharmacies the steep discounts the program provides to certain health care providers.