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What You Need to Know About the Drug Price Fight in Those TV Ads

What You Need to Know About the Drug Price Fight in Those TV Ads

(Moment/Getty Images)

In recent months ominous ads about prescription drugs have flooded the TV airwaves. Perhaps by design, it鈥檚 not always clear who鈥檚 sponsoring the ads or why.

Or, for that matter, why now?

The short answer is that Congress is paying attention. House and Senate members from both parties have launched at least nine bills, parts of which may be packaged together this fall, that take aim at pharmacy benefit managers, companies that channel prescription drugs to patients. Here鈥檚 a primer to help you decipher what鈥檚 happening.

  • What are pharmacy benefit managers? Known as PBMs, these companies were created in the 1960s to help employers and insurers select and purchase medications for their health plans. The industry mushroomed as prescription drug spending between 1967 and 2021. In addition to negotiating discounts with manufacturers, the PBMs set payment terms for the pharmacies that buy and dispense the drugs to patients. In effect, they are the dominant middlemen among drugmakers, drugstores, insurers, employers, and patients.
  • How big is the PBM industry? There are around 70 PBMs in the U.S. Through mergers, three of them 鈥 CVS Caremark, Optum Rx, and Express Scripts 鈥 have come to control 80% of the prescription drug market, and each brings in tens of billions of dollars in revenue annually. The PBMs control the drug pipeline from manufacturers to the pharmacy counter.

    Their buying power allows them to obtain discounted drugs for health plans while setting prices and terms for sales at drugstores. The big three are part of massive conglomerates with important stakes in almost every sector of health care; each of them owns a powerful health insurer 鈥 Aetna, UnitedHealth, and Cigna, respectively 鈥 as well as pharmacies and medical providers.

    For example, UnitedHealth contracts with 70,000 doctors, making it the . CVS Health, with the big pharmacy chain, also owns Caremark and Aetna. Secret price negotiations and hidden corners of each PBM-linked corporation make it hard to track where the money ends up.
  • Why am I seeing all these ads about PBMs? Other sectors of health care are alarmed by the power of the PBMs and are appealing to the Biden administration and Congress to rein them in. Drugmakers, employers, pharmacies, doctors, and even patients chafe at PBM practices like 鈥渟pread pricing,鈥 in which the companies pocket money negotiated on behalf of health plans. Non-PBM-affiliated pharmacists, from mom and pop stores to large chains like Kroger, say the PBMs squeeze their businesses by forcing them to sign opaque contracts that include clawbacks of money long after sales take place. PBMs often steer patients using expensive drugs to their affiliated pharmacies, cutting revenue to independents.

    Doctors say PBMs act as gatekeepers for the insurers they represent, blocking or slowing coverage of necessary drugs.

    Finally, the pharmaceutical industry has lost of sales revenue to PBM middlemen in recent years 鈥 even while getting most of the bad publicity for high drug prices. (The median launch brand-name drugs went from $2,100 to $180,000 a year between 2008 and 2021, yet net revenues for drug companies have stagnated in recent years.) prefer high producer list prices, because the rebates that drugmakers pay the PBMs in exchange for favorable health plan coverage of their drugs often are calculated as a percentage of those list prices.
  • Who鈥檚 paying for the ads? The Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, the trade group for most of the big drug companies, is the top driver of the anti-PBM campaign. are sponsored by the PBM Accountability Project, a pop-up lobby, funded partly by the drug industry, that includes unions and patient advocates whose membership complains of restrictive PBM and insurance industry policies.

    In one PhRMA ad, a smarmy guy in a suit a young woman鈥檚 prescription. The Pharmaceutical Care Management Association, the PBM trade group, has responded with , blaming drug companies for high prices and for 鈥渢argeting your pharmacy benefits.鈥 AHIP, the health insurance lobby, has with its own campaign.
  • What鈥檚 Congress doing about it? Members from both parties talk indignantly about PBM behavior and have fired up bills to address it. The Senate Finance Committee, whose jurisdiction over Medicare and Medicaid gives it a lead role, has that would prohibit PBMs from collecting rebates and fees calculated as a percentage of a drug鈥檚 list price, to discourage PBMs from favoring expensive drugs. The committee also plans legislation to require PBMs to pass along discounts directly to seniors, allow patients to use the pharmacy they prefer, and release more information about where their money ends up.

    Sen. Bernie Sanders, who leads the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, that bans spread pricing, while measures and House on PBM practices independent and rural pharmacies. require more transparency or for drug approvals.

    Meanwhile, have taken a pragmatic path to lower PBM-related costs, using high-tech auctions to get the best deals for their employee health care plans.

What鈥檚 the bottom line? While the PBMs鈥 secrecy, ubiquity, and power make them a target of outrage, they generally operate on behalf of their customers, which are insurance plans and employers, whose goal is to hold down prices. The PBMs do that by extracting painful concessions, a double-edged sword.

鈥淧BMs are the only thing we have to lower brand-name drug prices and prevent the drug industry from charging whatever they want,鈥 said Benjamin Rome, an internist and health policy researcher at Harvard Medical School.

If those drug prices were 100% covered by insurance, that might sit fine with consumers, but it would further blow up health care spending, already of the economy. Hospitals, insurers, the drug industry, and PBMs all point fingers at one another to shift blame, but they all benefit from the system. The smarmy PBM guy in the suit may prevent you from getting the drug your doctor ordered, but that鈥檚 only because the maker of another drug gave him 鈥 and therefore your insurance company 鈥 a better deal.

On the other hand, the vertical integration of the PBMs 鈥 an issue the Federal Trade Commission is studying but that is not the subject of any bill in Congress 鈥 enables unfair competition. 鈥淢y concern with any bills is the unintended consequences,鈥 Rome said. 鈥淲ill the new structures they create be any better for patients?鈥