Title: Approaches to Pharmaceutical Regulation in Europe and the USA
1Approaches to Pharmaceutical Regulation in Europe
and the USA
- Panos Kanavos
- London School of Economics
- Washington, D.C., 10 June 2003
2Agenda
- Pharmaceutical Regulation in Europe
- Lessons for the US
3Key issues maintain quality of care whilst
containing increasing costs improving
allocation of resources
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5Trends in health care expenditure
6Pharmaceutical consumption, 1998/9
Per capita spend, US PPP
Rx spend as of total health
7EU-US differences in Rx Drug policy
- In European Union member states, there is/are
- Limited role of voluntary health insurance
- (Near) universal access to Rx medicines
- A process of frequently regulated or negotiated
drug prices - Modest patient co-payments
- Significant co-payment exemptions
- No explicit DTCA, but access to information
- Significant and rising parallel trade
8Bi-lateral comparisons of ex-manufacturer prices
(UK100)
1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 5-yr av
France 106 112 86 85 84 95
Germany 128 124 108 108 97 112
Italy 82 91 82 81 83 92
Netherla 134 112 93 - - -
Spain 87 88 71 71 67 77
USA 170 183 175 174 184 187
Austria - - - 81 83 96
Belgium - - - 86 84 97
Finland - - - 86 85 98
9Rx drug spending increases
- Between 1990 and 2000 spending on prescription
drugs far outstripped spending for hospital care
and physician services
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11National approaches to the pricing of Rx
medicines
- Rate of Return (RoR) Regulation
- Price Setting
- command control
- Negotiation and agreement
12Pricing Reimbursement Methodologies Managing
the Supply Side
- Free pricing (Germany, Denmark, Hungary, Estonia)
- Profit control (UK)
- Average Pricing (Czech Republic, Ireland, Italy,
Netherlands, Portugal, Slovenia, Sweden) - International Price Comparisons (several)
- Cost-Plus Pricing (Spain, Greece, Poland, Czech)
- Reference Pricing (Germany, Netherlands, Sweden,
Italy, Norway, Spain, Czech) - Periodic price reductions (France)
- Price Cuts/Freezes (most European)
13Pricing Reimbursement Methodologies
Controlling the Supply Side
- Me-too Pricing (France, Sweden, Hungary)
- Industry paybacks when budgets are exceeded
- Taxes on promotion expenditure (France, Sweden)
- Developing a market for parallel imports (UK,
Netherlands, Germany, Denmark) - Developing a market for generics (mainly UK,
Netherlands, Germany, Denmark) - Controlling generics prices (France, Greece)
- Fixed or revenue budgets for industry (Spain,
France)
14Variation in Average European Prices
- Pricing methods at times irrelevant
- Little evidence of price consistency between US
the EU
15Rate of Return Regulation
- Supply-side
- PPRS, Jul.99-Jul.04
- Price cut _at_4.5 1999 - 2001
- Free price modulation from January 2001
- Price control for generics
- Limited negative list
- PPRS judicial review
- Demand-side
- NICE binding clinical cost-effectiveness
guidance - Practice guidelines
- Extensive generic prescribing
- Cost conscious GPs
- Budgets for PCGs
- Prescription audit
16Price Setting Regulation
- Historical PricingJustifiable Cost Increases
- Different variations
- Price comparisons
- Basic cost
- Cost-plus
- RPI-X
- Inevitable, Arbitrary Categorisation often ad hoc
rules - Exhaustive Rules Loopholes or Tedious
Updating Process - Enforcement is dependent on Resource Potential of
Agency
17Reference Pricing variations
- Country Year Attributes
- Germany 1989 identical substance
- Denmark 1993 identical substance, exemption
s - Netherlands 1991 clusters of interchangeable
products (incl. patent) - Sweden 1993 identical substance
- Italy 2001 identical substance
- Spain 2000/1 identical substance
- USA (Medicaid) 2002 identical substance cluster
18Reference pricing policy dilemmas
- Design parameters
- Coverage by reference pricing system
- In-patent drugs
- Setting the reference price
19Reference pricing Impact
- Prices downward pressure
- Prescribing volume unaffected
- Switch effect can be significant
- Quality of care little evidence of impact
20Reference Pricing a Specific Type of
Incentive-based Formulary
Out-of-pocket contribution
Reference price (ACE inhibitors 27 per 30 day
supply)
Total drug price
Paid by drug benefits program
21Economic Effects of Reference Pricing of ACE
Inhibitors in B.C.
(right scale)
20
0
Schneeweiss et al, NEJM 2002 346822-9)
-20
22Reference Pricing in the US
- Massachusetts, August 2002 Delaware, April 2002
- Establishment of the Massachusetts Health Drug
List creating drugs of choice - Group classes of drugs together (e.g.
H2-blockers, PPIs, NSAIDs, Cox-II, non-sedative
antihistamines) and reimburse the lowest in the
class whether generic or brand - Deviate from above regime in case of demonstrated
medical necessity only - Demonstrated medical necessity means there is no
other service that would achieve the same outcome
at minimum cost
23Types of Agreements
- Framework agreements (France, Spain, Denmark)
- Price volume tradeoff
- Price freezes in exchange for modest increases
later - Limit pharmaceutical market growth to GDP growth
(Spain) - Paybacks if pre-agreed upon budgets are exceeded
(Belgium, France, Spain, Portugal) - Faster access to market for speedier subsequent
price reductions (France)
24Health Economics Official Requirements
- Under preparation or rising in influence
- Italy
- France
- Greece
- Poland
- Hungary
- Slovenia
- Current practice
- Denmark
- Switzerland
- Sweden
- Finland
- The Netherlands
- England Wales NICE
- Portugal
- Norway
25Regulation and acceptance of economic evaluation
High
u
Australia
u
Canada
Regulation
u
Spain
Low
High
Low
Acceptance
26Requirements for economic evaluations
- Pricing and Reimbursement
- Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Finland, Portugal,
Netherlands, France, Australia, Canada - Appraisal
- NICE UK
- Not mandatory but considered
- Sweden, Spain, Italy, Germany, Hungary
- Formularies
- UK, USA, Canada, Australia, Denmark
- Used in guidelines
- Denmark, Germany, Netherlands, Sweden, UK
27The economic impact of parallel trade
- Increasing in significance
- Allowed by European jurisprudence
- Encouraged by several EU Member States
- Parallel trade policies in conflict with other
incentives for industry - Static v. dynamic effects
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29Statins and parallel trade UK
30Overall concluding remarks
- Lessons from EU countries may include
- Using (the right) economic evidence more
intensively - Managing price better or differently
- Aggressively managing formularies and bargaining
- Reference pricing
- Physician incentives
- Return on capital formulae for drug procurement
- More aggressive discounts required for early
launch/use - Myth interventions have isolated effects
balloon squeeze - Appropriateness of care?
- All EU countries continue to be aware of rising
cost issues and are experimenting with policy
changes - Emphasis on value-for-money
- Strong emphasis on the demand-side
- Continued emphasis on the supply-side in some
cases, increased emphasis on S-S - Shift towards aggressive bargaining rather than
command-and-control