High cost or high value? Specialty drugs add to employer health care bill

High cost or high value? Specialty drugs add to employer health care bill

In 2015, Blue Care Network spent $55.4 million for just 712 members who each took a specialized drug to treat Hepatitis C.

That’s a staggering amount of money for such a small group of people — and it’s just one specialty medication. 

The drug in question — Harvoni from Foster City, Calif.-based Gilead Sciences Inc. — can cure Hepatitis C, a communicable virus that destroys the liver. The prescription medication’s success can avoid the high cost of a liver transplant to save a patient’s life, plus the ongoing costs of anti-rejection drugs for years afterward.

The drug’s success rate and high cost pose a dilemma for health insurers and employers, who are paying the rapidly rising bill for the new generation of medications that can treat or cure complex diseases. The catch: Those specialty drugs often come with an enormous price tag.

“As outrageously expensive as some of these drugs are, we have to realize there is an economic benefit at the end of the day because of the condition that it’s treating,” said Bob Hughes, the owner and president of Advantage Benefits Group Inc. in Grand Rapids. 

Hughes calls the high costs associated with specialty drugs “a tidal wave” coming at employers. 

As the costs of specialty drugs continue to rise and their use grows, Hughes and others suggest that employers need to take a balanced approach in response. They should have a pharmacy benefit in place that’s designed to control costs as well as help employees who are hit with a complex or genetic-based disease to have access to specialty drugs that can treat their conditions.

In the case of Harvoni for Hepatitis C — which costs more than $1,000 per dose and must be taken for 82 days — “the opposite of not taking that drug can be a lot worse,” Hughes said.

“You have to be careful not to cut off your arm to spite yourself,” he said. “When it’s a drug that really changes a person’s life, it’s hard for the employer to make it go away.”

‘POINT OF PANIC’

The high cost of specialty drugs has been a growing trend over the last few years. However, employer awareness of the resulting cost implications depends on the type of health coverage the company uses, said Shannon Enders, a partner at Lakeshore Employee Benefits in Muskegon.

For fully insured employers that are part of a larger risk pool, “I just don’t think it’s resonating,” Enders said. 

Self-funded employers have the exact opposite reaction.

“It’s resonating big time to the point of panic,” Enders said. “It’s getting tougher and tougher to take the high road and say, ‘I want to provide quality health care to my employees.’”

Employers with fully-insured health coverage typically already have measures built into their benefits packages by their insurance carriers to address the issue. Self-funded employers should make sure their pharmacy coverage does the same, Enders said.

Employers also should make sure their pharmacy benefit requires pre-authorization for a specialty drug and that it has steps built in so patients must first try a lower-cost drug that can treat their conditions, Hughes said. If it doesn’t work for them, then they can move on to the high-cost specialty drug.

Benefits packages also can require a prescription for a specialty drug to be filled only halfway the first time, such as for a 15-day supply instead of a month’s worth.

If a specialty drug doesn’t work for specific patients, or if they are unable to tolerate the side effects and need to change to another medication, then there’s less waste involved, Hughes said.

“You don’t get stuck with a bunch of expensive drugs,” he said. “Yeah, that’s jumping through a hoop, but you just can’t keep writing these blank checks forever.”

Requiring or encouraging the use of and directly contracting with specialty pharmacies can help to control costs, as can adopting a tiered drug formulary that designates “preferred” and “non-preferred” specialty drugs with escalating co-pays. Employers can also add stop-loss coverage to their pharmacy benefits.

An employer should set drug co-pays at levels that encourage the use of lower-cost options first or the use of a specialty pharmacy, Hughes said. He also advises clients to start learning about their options and educating employees about the cost implications and why they may have to pay a higher co-pay for a specialty drug.

Hughes cautions about the use of coupons from pharmaceutical companies that wave the initial drug co-pay, insulating the employee from the actual cost. That can lead to patients starting on the expensive drug because they had a coupon, never having tried a lower-cost option for their conditions because it has a co-pay, he said.

ESCALATING TREND

Research showing the high cost of specialty drugs coming to the market has been emerging the last few years.

After four years of spending increases that ranged from 5.1 percent to 5.5 percent, the nearly 2,500 employers responding to Mercer’s 2015 national survey of health care coverage reported that their prescription benefit cost grew 8 percent. Half of the respondents that had the ability to break out data reported that their cost for specialty drugs grew 22 percent in 2015, according to Mercer.

Express Scripts, a St. Louis-based pharmacy benefit manager, reported in March that overall drug spending in the U.S. increased 5.2 percent in 2015. Spending on specialty drugs alone grew 17.8 percent. 

Specialty drugs in 2015 accounted for 37.7 percent of all drug spending in the U.S., according to an annual trend report by Express Scripts. The company projects that to grow to 50 percent by 2018. It also noted that pharmaceutical companies presently are developing some 7,000 potential new specialty drugs, many for the high-use areas of oncology, neurologic disorders and infectious diseases.

Among the drivers for the higher spending are increased prices charged by pharmaceutical companies. Express Scripts cites an increase of more than 18.1 percent last year in the price for Humira and a 17-percent increase for Enbrel, both of which are used to treat inflammation.

Express Scripts predicts that total drug spending will increase by 6 percent to 8 percent annually between 2016 and 2018 in the U.S. Spending on specialty drug spending, led by medications to treat inflammatory conditions and new drugs to treat cancer, will increase an average of 17 percent annually over the next three years, according to the company.

A SMALL, BUT COSTLY COHORT

Quite often for insurers, the cost for specialty drugs stems from a relatively small number of people who need those prescriptions.

About 1 percent of Priority Health’s 650,000-plus members typically use a specialty drug at any given time, accounting for about 40 percent of all drug spending by the Grand Rapids-based health plan. That cost “has been creeping up” by three to four percentage points a year, said Steve Marciniak, Priority Health’s vice president of pharmacy programs.

Priority Health’s overall drug spending increased by more than 10 percent in 2015, after trending in the single digits in prior years, Marciniak said.

The cost increases for specialty drugs have forced health plans to respond. Insurers are giving heavy scrutiny to new specialty drugs coming onto the market and are evolving their business practices accordingly.

The key is assuring a specialty drug is medically necessary and appropriately prescribed for patients and their conditions.

“Our focus is really on making sure the right people get these drugs,” said Laurie Wesolowicz, pharmacy director at Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan. “A lot of it is trying to identify the value a particular drug brings.”

That’s also the case at Priority Health, which is taking “a very hard stance” on an emerging class of so-called “super statins” that lower cholesterol and are administered by self-injection, Marciniak said.

Two super statins have been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and cost about $14,000 a year for twice-monthly injections, Marciniak said. By contrast, a generic version of Lipitor costs about $220 per year, he said.

With about 90,000 members taking a cholesterol-lowering drug and no clinical data to show results from the new super statins, Priority Health uses “very, very strict criteria” on who qualifies for the drug.

“We know that they lower cholesterol, and so does the generic Lipitor, but there are no clinical studies yet to show that they have an improved clinical outcome like improved cardiovascular conditions and that they reduce morbidity or mortality with cardiovascular disease,” Marciniak said. “Until there are outcomes, we’re confident we can maintain a very tight lid on this class of drugs and protect the dollars that we have to spend on other medical uses within our population.”

FINDING SOLUTIONS

But rather than “just saying ‘no’” to a member who is unresponsive or intolerant to Lipitor or other statin drugs on the market, Priority Health is working on alternatives, Marciniak said. For instance, the health plan is forming lipid management clinics to help people better manage their conditions and get re-established on lower-cost statins first before paying for a super statin, he said.

“We’re taking a real holistic approach to understanding that it will take a lot of work to manage this class of drugs,” Marciniak. “That’s just an example to how this space has evolved. It’s not about whether a drug has been approved or denied. You have to have a full-blown strategy to manage these drugs.”

Although health plans are stepping up scrutiny of new drugs and monitoring the price increases by pharmaceutical companies, there are clearly instances where the costs are justified because of the benefits, insurance industry sources said.

At Blue Cross Blue Shield, early research indicates that members who take the Hepatitis C drug Harvoni are beginning to experience overall reduced medical costs, Wesolowicz said.

“It may not be a bad thing to treat people with expensive drugs if, longer term, they’re going to have lower overall costs and they’re going to be healthier and able to work more effectively,” Wesolowicz said. “If you have a high-priced drug that cures something and gives the ability to have a normal life, most people would think that’s a good value. You just have to figure out what that number is.”

Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan, however, takes issue with specialty drugs that cost of $1,000 to $3,000 per month and treat conditions such as skin rashes or acne.

“To me, it’s crazy that a drug to treat acne could be more than a drug to treat rheumatoid arthritis or multiple sclerosis,” Wesolowicz said. 


(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});