Eli Lilly Says It Will Cut the Price of Insulin
The
company also trumpeted an existing policy that caps monthly out-of-pocket cost
for its lifesaving products at $35.
The drugmaker Eli Lilly and
Company said on Wednesday that it would
significantly reduce the sticker prices of several of its lifesaving insulin products
that are used by diabetes patients and whose prices Lilly has repeatedly increased
in the past.
Seeking to quiet an outcry about
excessive drug prices, Lilly also said it would cap at $35 a month what patients
pay out of their own pockets for the company’s insulin — even though the company
already had such a policy in place.
Lilly has been a primary contributor
to soaring prices for an injection that millions of Americans rely on to keep their
blood sugar at levels that will keep them alive. The announcement comes at a time
of mounting political pressure on drug companies to rein in what lawmakers and other
critics view as the industry’s pattern of abusive profiteering.
Over nearly three decades, for
example, Lilly has raised the list price on its most widely used insulin product,
Humalog, by more than 1,000 percent.
The high costs of insulin made
by Lilly and other drug companies — out-of-pocket payments for people on certain
high-deductible insurance plans can exceed $1,000 a month, though most patients
pay far less — have led many patients to ration their insulin supply.
In his State of the Union address
last month, President Biden blasted drug companies for increasing the prices
for insulin. “Big Pharma has been unfairly charging people hundreds of dollars,
$400 to $500 a month, making record profits,” he said.
On Wednesday, Mr. Biden hailed
Lilly’s announcement as “a big deal, and it’s time for other manufacturers to follow.”
Lilly trumpeted its decision
as a victory for patients. In reality, though, Lilly’s moves are more limited than
they initially appear. Lilly’s existing $35 cap on out-of-pocket payments will be
easier for privately insured patients to take advantage of. But the policies announced
Wednesday will not have much, if any, effect on what many people are actually paying.
And Lilly was already charging
insurers only a fraction of its high list price when accounting for rebates and
discounts.
David Ricks, Lilly’s chief executive,
acknowledged in an interview on Wednesday that there was no guarantee that the company’s
changes would result in insurers paying less for Humalog, though he said he expected
that would happen.
In addition, the lower list
prices, which will take effect over the course of this year, only apply to Lilly’s
older insulin products.
“I don’t think that these prices
are quite as impressive as they look when you first see them,” said Stacie Dusetzina, a professor of health policy at Vanderbilt University
School of Medicine. “It doesn’t necessarily mean that Lilly is taking a big financial
hit to do this.”
More than 30 million Americans
have diabetes, and more than seven million of them rely on insulin. Without insulin,
patients can die or face serious health consequences including amputation and kidney
failure.
Lilly’s price cuts follow years
of mounting pressure not just from officials in Washington and state capitals but
also from a well-organized community of patients who have called for insulin to
be more affordable.
Lilly’s announcement follows
a change that went into effect at the start of this year for patients on Medicare.
Under last year’s Inflation Reduction Act, Congress imposed a $35-a-month ceiling
on insulin co-payments for Medicare patients.
Lilly said that it planned to
reduce the list price of Humalog by 70 percent in the last three months of this
year.
A vial of Humalog — patients
often go through several vials per month — has a list price of $275; Lilly plans
to reduce that to $66. However, insurers already pay much less than that: The average
net price Lilly charged in 2021 for a vial of Humalog or its generic version was
$43 after discounts and rebates, according
to the company’s website.
Humalog’s new $66 list price
will still be more than triple what it was when the product was introduced in 1996.
(Lilly said it will also sharply reduce the list price of its generic version of
Humalog, as well as another of its insulin products, Humulin.)
Lilly said that one of its newer
Humalog products, a prefilled insulin pen that has a list price of $530,
would not have its price cut. Nor would its long-acting insulin product, Basaglar, which was first approved in 2015.
Lilly’s announcement “does not
mean that the situation is fixed or everything is solved,” said Elizabeth Pfiester, who has diabetes and is the executive director of
T1International, a group that has been pushing for a federal ceiling on insulin
list prices.
“This is good news for some,
but we need regulation to make sure that the companies can’t change their mind again
and decide to raise the price,” she added.
Some patient advocates are also
pushing for legislation that would require insulin manufacturers to charge no more
in the United States than they do elsewhere. Insulin is much cheaper in other countries,
where governments negotiate prices directly with drug manufacturers.
Mr. Ricks said that Lilly opposes
“price setting from the federal government,” saying his company and other drug makers
need incentives to innovate and develop improved versions of insulin.
Asked whether Lilly would rule
out further price increases for Humalog and the other products for which it announced
price cuts on Wednesday, Mr. Ricks declined to make a firm commitment. He said the
company has not increased the list price of any of its insulin products since 2017.
The price of the lifesaving
product has been a sensitive issue ever since insulin was invented.
When Frederick Banting helped
create the substance a century ago, he refused to put his name on the first patent application
because he felt it would be at odds with the Hippocratic oath he had taken as a
physician. The inventors soon transferred the patent to the University of Toronto
for $1, in the hopes of making it as widely available and affordable as possible.
“Insulin does not belong to me,” Mr. Banting famously said. “It belongs to the world.”
That is not how it has ended
up. In recent years, the three leading insulin manufacturers — Lilly, Sanofi and
Novo Nordisk — have replaced older products with newer, costlier versions and steadily
increased their prices. Together, the three companies control about 90 percent of
the insulin market in the United States.
Researchers have estimated that a vial of insulin costs less than
$7 to manufacture and could be sold profitably at less than $9. In 2019, in response
to a Senate inquiry into high insulin prices, Sanofi acknowledged that, by one measure, it cost
the company less than $2 to make one of its insulin pens, which at the time carried
a list price of $75.
Representatives for Sanofi and
Novo Nordisk would not say whether they would follow Lilly’s moves, but said they
already have programs that significantly limit most patients’ out-of-pocket costs.