Title: Factoring Reimbursement Into the Deal
1 Factoring Reimbursement Into the Deal
May 2, 2005
2Agenda
- Tag overview
- Who pays for health care
- What is reimbursement
- How reimbursement affects deals value
- Developments and trends
- How Medicare is changing biotech market
- Building reimbursement analysis into deal process
3 - U.S. reimbursement planning and problem solving
since 1998 - Former owner SFA Exec VP PAREXEL
- Payer research strategic planning
- Reimbursement forecasting
- Competitive analysis
- Advocacy with major payers
4Tag Client Mix
5Who Pays for Health Care
6Payment Sources forPhysician and Clinical
Services
(Billions)
_____________________________ Source Health
Affairs Volume 23, Number 1 January 2004
7Payment Sources for Prescription Drugs
(Billions)
_____________________________ Source Health
Affairs Volume 23, Number 1 January 2004
8Reimbursement andHow It Affects Deals Value
9Know Whether Reimbursement Means Coverage or
Payment
-
- Coverage
- Is the product or related service an insured
benefit? - Under what circumstances?
-
- Payment
- How much will the insurer reimburse?
- To whom?
10Many Factors Affect Reimbursement
- Tech category (e.g. Rx, OTC, DME, supply,
diagnostic, screen) - Payer
- Tx setting
- Dosage form
- Admin method
- Labeling (on/off)
- Diagnosis
- Safety efficacy
- Product cost (price)
- Related costs (e.g. lab)
- Uniqueness
- Alternative cost
- Cost offsets
- Prescribing Dr.
- Abuse potential
- Political/social
- Evidence-based outcomes
11Reimbursement Winners
- Norplant Medicaid not an OC
- Lupron depot Clinician administered
- EPO Cover as sub Q or we do trials as IV only
- Drug eluting stents Showed payers cost impact,
good and bad
12 And Losers
- tPA Great science, no payment
- Lupron daily injection No coverage for
self-admin - Gliadel wafers Part of DRG, no payment
- Rocephin (otitis media) Pediatricians were
capitated
13Take Away
- Great medicine (tPA) will trump poor
reimbursement - But not every good technology is great medicine
14Case Study Same Technology, Different
Reimbursement
- QLTs Photofrin (porfimer sodium) photodynamic
therapy - Sanofi-Winthrop esophageal and lung cancer
- Novartis macular degeneration
15Poor Return for Sanofi-Winthrop
- Hospital O/P procedure in era of poor hospital
reimbursement - Endoscope/bronchoscope procedures
under-reimbursed based on simple tech - 2 year wait for drug reimbursement code
- Because of reimbursement, procedure viewed as
last resort despite good clinical outcomes
16Winner For Novartis
- Decent reimbursement for physician office single
eye procedure - Strategy developed to deal with subpar
reimbursement of 2nd eye procedure - Good drug reimbursement year 1
- No therapeutic alternative
- Robust uptake, despite mediocre clinical results
17Developments and Trends
18Overview
- Evolving payer objectives Cost avoidance gt Cost
benefit gt Value gt Affordability - Utilization control via patient cost sharing
- Federal government becoming largest customer for
Rx drugs - Medicare evolving payer gt national heath policy
and treatment manager
19Overview contd
- Elimination of provider profit on drugs
- Power shift Provider gt Distributor
- Coverage policy linked to outcomes data
- Health econ and off-label requirements changing
scope of registration studies
20Evolving Payer Objectives
- 1980s Cost avoidance (managed care)
- 1990s Cost benefit (outcomes analysis)
- 2000s Value - money for quality (evidence
based medicine) - On The Horizon Affordability - Employers
(declining profits) and governments (increasing
deficits) not willing to absorb cost of every
medical breakthrough
21Utilization Control ViaPatient Cost Sharing
- Get more beneficiary skin in the game and better
utilization decisions will result - Co-insurance (30) for self-administered
injectables - Do I really need Enbrel for my psoriasis?
- 30 difference between 2nd and 3rd tier brands
- Maybe this other drug is just as good as Prozac.
22Federal Government Will Control 40 of Rx Market
(White Dots)
2002 Rx Payment Sources (bil)
2008 Projected (bil)
Total 162.4
Total 260
___________________________ Source 2002 data
Health Affairs Volume 23, Number 1 January
2004. 2008 data Tag
Associates estimate.
23Medicare Evolving to Be NationalTreatment Policy
Manager
- CMS process for evaluating new technology is
rigorous and willing to embrace new costs - Implanted automatic defibrillators
- Drug eluting stents
- Adverse Medicare coverage policy decision is
routinely followed by private payers
24Elimination of Provider Profit on
Clinician-Administered Drugs
- Medicare AWP gt ASP CAP
- Medicaid National reform on the horizon
25Elimination of Provider Profit on
Clinician-Administered Drugs contd.
- Private insurers Feb 2005 interview of 15
medical/pharmacy directors (100 mil. lives) - How will ASP influence your 2006 reimbursement?
- 4 will convert
- 9 are studying
- 2 no influence
- 10/15 have direct supply program
26Power Shift to Distributors
- CAP, direct supply shifts power to distributor
- Ability to control access via formulary
- Reflected in MA activity
- Medco/Accredo
- AmeriSource Bergen/US BioServices
- Caremark/Advance PCS
27Coverage Policy linked to Outcomes Data
- New in 2005 Medicare expands coverage for
selected technologies only if manufacturer agrees
to data collection per CMS spec - Implanted defibrillators
- Off label use of 4 new Ca drugs
28Coverage Policy Linked to Outcomes Data contd.
- Since late 1990s Private tech evaluators become
more influential each year - BC/BS TEC
- Wilkerson Group
- Globalization UK NICE influence spreads across
EU
29Broad Registration Studies Needed to Support
Reimbursement
- Traditional FDA strategy of path of least
resistance still OK for FDA but no longer viable
for payer success - Payers demanding health econ data for coverage
- Clamping down on off label uses not supported by
scientifically rigorous data
30How Medicare Is Changing the Biotech Market
31Clinician-Administered Drugs
- Physician office and hospital O/P drugs are a
pass-through expense rather than a profit center - First time ever formulary as a result of CAP
- Some categories need only 1 drug
32Clinician-Administered Drugs contd.
- Coverage of new tech will require 1 of the
following - Lower price
- Impressive safety or efficacy
- Favorable outcomes data
- Widespread socio-political demand
33Self-Administered Drugs
- Part D establishes a de facto national baseline
formulary of 250 drugs - Beneficiaries have strong incentive to keep
total Rx spending lt2,250 - Between 2,250 and 5,100, patient pays 100
34Building Reimbursement Into Deal Process
35Make It Fundamental to the Go/No Go Decision
- Immediately identify reimbursement issues
- Can development decisions be used to fix problem
or gain advantage? - If problem cant be fixed, how will it impact the
value of the technology?
36Take the Payers Perspective
- Which payer has the biggest stake?
- To whom are they beholden?
- What/who influences their decision making?
- How will technology impact them?
- What happens if they say No?
37Do Not Rely On the Downstream Partner
- Regardless of size and general competence, they
are wrong as often as they are right - They will under-value the technology b/c of
easily manageable reimbursement problem - To the person you are dealing with, it always
looks just like this other product we had 2
years ago in this other category .
38Teach Your Client
- Most technology developers are unaware of
reimbursement issues or have the wrong
information - Help them understand why payers are as much a
customer as clinicians
39Bring a Reimbursement POA to the Discussion Table
- Show prospective partners that you
- Expect them to invest at an appropriate level to
conquer or capitalize on the reimbursement issues - Will not allow reimbursement to be a red herring
that distracts from other more significant issues
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