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Morning Briefing

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Monday, Apr 27 2015

Full Issue

MS Patients Hit With 'Alarming Rise' In Cost Of Older Drugs

A new study shows that people with multiple sclerosis have been hit with skyrocketing bills for medicines introduced long ago. Meanwhile, The Wall Street Journal reports that more pharmaceutical companies are buying drugs they see as undervalued, then raising the prices and driving up the cost of drugs.

Imagine Apple's first iPhone is still on sale today. Now imagine it costs many times its original price of $599, and that the price goes up every time a new, competing phone is released. That bizarro world is what the market for multiple sclerosis drugs looks like, as described in a new paper in the journal Neurology. And doctors are calling for it to change. (Tozzi, 4/24)

There has been an 鈥渁larming rise鈥 in the cost of multiple sclerosis treatments over the past dozen years and the cost of these drugs increased at rates well beyond the overall growth in prescription drug prices, according to a new study. (Silverman, 4/24)

A group of Oregon researchers have issued what amounts to an indictment of pharmaceutical industry pricing, with a new study showing that people with multiple sclerosis have been hit with skyrocketing bills for medicines introduced long ago. Instead of competition driving prices down when superior competing drugs were introduced, costs in the U.S. went up even faster than before, according to the study conducted by researchers at Oregon State University and Oregon Health & Science University. It was published today in the journal Neurology. (Budnick, 4/24)

On Feb. 10, Valeant Pharmaceuticals International Inc. bought the rights to a pair of life-saving heart drugs. The same day, their list prices rose by 525% and 212%. Neither of the drugs, Nitropress or Isuprel, was improved as a result of costly investment in lab work and human testing, Valeant said. Nor was manufacture of the medicines shifted to an expensive new plant. The big change: the drugs鈥 ownership. (Rockoff and Silverman, 4/26)

In other news from the health care marketplace -

Total compensation for some of the highest-paid CEOs in the healthcare industry increased faster than their companies' profits last year, a Modern Healthcare analysis of the first firms to report executive pay found. Corporations with the most richly rewarded CEOs by sector in 2014 included Community Health Systems, a Franklin, Tenn.-based hospital operator; Centene Corp., a St. Louis-based insurer; CVS Health Corp., a retail pharmacy and pharmacy benefit manager based in Woonsocket, R.I., and Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, a New York City-based biotechnology company. (Evans, 4/25)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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