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In addition to warmer weather, June will usher in changes in asthma and COPD inhaler costs for many patients, potentially reducing barriers to those seeing high prescription prices. Price ceilings have been set by some companies, likely following action earlier this year by a Senate Committee which pointed to higher costs of US inhalers compared with other countries.

Senator Sanders stated: “In my view, Americans who have asthma and COPD should not be forced to pay, in many cases, 10-70 times more for the same exact inhalers as patients in Europe and other parts of the world.”

Starting June 1, Boehringer Ingelheim will cap out-of-pocket costs for the company’s inhaler products for chronic lung disease and asthma at $35 per month, according to a March 7, 2024, press release from the German drugmaker’s US headquarters in Ridgefield, Conn. The reductions cover the full range of the company’s inhaler products for asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) including Atrovent, Combivent Respimat and Spiriva HandiHaler and Respimat, Stiolto Respimat and Striverdi Respimat. In the release, Boehringer Ingelheim USA Corporation’s President and CEO Jean-Michel Boers stated, “The US health care system is complex and often doesn’t work for patients, especially the most vulnerable. While we can’t fix the entire system alone, we are bringing forward a solution to make it fairer. We want to do our part to help patients living with COPD or asthma who struggle to pay for their medications.”

Similar announcements were made by AstraZeneca and GSK. GSK’s cap will go into effect on January 1, 2025, and includes Advair Diskus, Advair HFA, Anoro Ellipta, Arnuity Ellipta, Breo Ellipta, Incruse Ellipta, Serevent Diskus, Trelegy Ellipta, and Ventolin HFA. The AstraZeneca cap, which covers Airsupra, Bevespi Aerosphere, Breztri Aeroshpere, and Symbicort, goes into effect on June 1, 2024.
 

Senate statement on pricing

These companies plus Teva had received letters sent on January 8, 2024, by the members of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions: senators Sanders, Baldwin, Luján and Markey. The letters cited enormous inhaler price discrepancies, for example $489 for Combivent Respimat in the United States but just $7 in France, and announced the conduct of an investigation into efforts by these companies to artificially inflate and manipulate prices of asthma inhalers that have been on the market for decades. A statement from Sen. Sanders’ office noted that AstraZeneca, GSK, and Teva made more than $25 billion in revenue from inhalers alone in the past 5 years (Boehringer Ingelheim does not provide public US inhaler revenue information).

 

Suit claims generic delay

A federal lawsuit filed in Boston on March 6, according to a Reuters brief from March 7, cited Boehringer for improperly submitting patents to the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The purpose of those patents, the suit charges, was to delay generic competition and inflate Combivent Respimat and Spiriva Respimat inhaler prices.

Inhaler prices soared in the United States, according to a March 10 U.S. News & World Report commentary by The Conversation, a nonprofit news organization, after the 2008 FDA ban on chlorofluorocarbon (CFC)-propellants led to the phase-out of CFC-containing inhalers and their replacement with hydrofluoroalkane-propellant inhalers. For the insured that meant an average out-of-pocket inhaler cost increase from $13.60 per prescription in 2004 to $25 in 2015. The current rate for the now nongeneric HFA-propelled but otherwise identical albuterol inhaler is $98. Competition from a more recently FDA-approved (2020) generic version has not been robust enough to effect meaningful price reductions, the report stated. While good insurance generally covers most of inhaler costs, the more than 25 million uninsured in 2023 faced steep market prices that put strain even on some insured, the CDC found, driving many in the United States to purchase from Mexican, Canadian, or other foreign pharmacies. The Teva QVAR REdiHaler corticosteroid inhaler, costing $9 in Germany, costs $286 in the US. Dosages, however, may not be identical. A first FDA-authorization of drug importing this past January applied only to agents for a limited number of disease states and pertained only to Florida, but may serve as a model for other states, according to the commentary.

“The announced price cap from Boehringer Ingelheim,” stated Kenneth Mendez, president and CEO of the Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America (AAFA) in a press release, “is a step toward improving access to essential asthma medicine and demonstrates that the voice of the asthma patient community is being heard.” The AAFA release noted further that asthma death rates, while declining overall, are triple in Blacks compared with Whites. Death rates, asthma rates, and rates of being uninsured or underinsured are much higher in Black and Puerto Rican populations than in Whites. The complex layers of the current US system, composed of pharmaceutical manufacturers, pharmacy benefit managers, insurance companies, employers, and federal policies often conspire against those people who need asthma drugs the most. AAFA research has shown that when drug prices become a barrier to treatment, people with asthma ration or simply discontinue their essential asthma medications. Beyond saved lives, access to asthma medications can reduce hospitalizations and lower the more than $82 billion in annual asthma costs to the US economy.

Sen. Sanders, on March 20, applauded the GSK announcement: “As Chairman of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee, I very much appreciate GlaxoSmithKline’s announcement today that Americans throughout the country with asthma and COPD will pay no more than $35 for the brand name inhalers they manufacture. I look forward to working with GSK to make sure that this decision reaches as many patients as possible.”

“Inhaled medications continue to be an essential part of the therapy for patients with asthma, COPD, and other respiratory conditions,” said Diego J. Maselli, professor and chief, Division of Pulmonary Diseases & Critical Care, UT Health at San Antonio, San Antonio, Texas, in an interview with CHEST Physician. He added, “Unfortunately, with increasing cost of these and other treatments, access has been challenging for many patients. Patients, families, and providers constantly experience frustration with the difficulties of obtaining these lifesaving medications, and cost is the main barrier. Even those with ample insurance coverage face difficult challenges, as the high prices of these medications motivate insurance carriers to constantly adjust what is the ‘preferred’ option among inhalers. Regrettably, noncompliance and nonadherence to inhaled therapies has been linked to poor patient outcomes and increased health care utilization in both asthma and COPD. Because of the high prevalence of these diseases in the US and worldwide, efforts to increase the access of these vital medications has been a priority. With the leveling of the prices of these medications across the world, we hope that there will be both improved access and, as a consequence, better patient outcomes.”

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In addition to warmer weather, June will usher in changes in asthma and COPD inhaler costs for many patients, potentially reducing barriers to those seeing high prescription prices. Price ceilings have been set by some companies, likely following action earlier this year by a Senate Committee which pointed to higher costs of US inhalers compared with other countries.

Senator Sanders stated: “In my view, Americans who have asthma and COPD should not be forced to pay, in many cases, 10-70 times more for the same exact inhalers as patients in Europe and other parts of the world.”

Starting June 1, Boehringer Ingelheim will cap out-of-pocket costs for the company’s inhaler products for chronic lung disease and asthma at $35 per month, according to a March 7, 2024, press release from the German drugmaker’s US headquarters in Ridgefield, Conn. The reductions cover the full range of the company’s inhaler products for asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) including Atrovent, Combivent Respimat and Spiriva HandiHaler and Respimat, Stiolto Respimat and Striverdi Respimat. In the release, Boehringer Ingelheim USA Corporation’s President and CEO Jean-Michel Boers stated, “The US health care system is complex and often doesn’t work for patients, especially the most vulnerable. While we can’t fix the entire system alone, we are bringing forward a solution to make it fairer. We want to do our part to help patients living with COPD or asthma who struggle to pay for their medications.”

Similar announcements were made by AstraZeneca and GSK. GSK’s cap will go into effect on January 1, 2025, and includes Advair Diskus, Advair HFA, Anoro Ellipta, Arnuity Ellipta, Breo Ellipta, Incruse Ellipta, Serevent Diskus, Trelegy Ellipta, and Ventolin HFA. The AstraZeneca cap, which covers Airsupra, Bevespi Aerosphere, Breztri Aeroshpere, and Symbicort, goes into effect on June 1, 2024.
 

Senate statement on pricing

These companies plus Teva had received letters sent on January 8, 2024, by the members of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions: senators Sanders, Baldwin, Luján and Markey. The letters cited enormous inhaler price discrepancies, for example $489 for Combivent Respimat in the United States but just $7 in France, and announced the conduct of an investigation into efforts by these companies to artificially inflate and manipulate prices of asthma inhalers that have been on the market for decades. A statement from Sen. Sanders’ office noted that AstraZeneca, GSK, and Teva made more than $25 billion in revenue from inhalers alone in the past 5 years (Boehringer Ingelheim does not provide public US inhaler revenue information).

 

Suit claims generic delay

A federal lawsuit filed in Boston on March 6, according to a Reuters brief from March 7, cited Boehringer for improperly submitting patents to the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The purpose of those patents, the suit charges, was to delay generic competition and inflate Combivent Respimat and Spiriva Respimat inhaler prices.

Inhaler prices soared in the United States, according to a March 10 U.S. News & World Report commentary by The Conversation, a nonprofit news organization, after the 2008 FDA ban on chlorofluorocarbon (CFC)-propellants led to the phase-out of CFC-containing inhalers and their replacement with hydrofluoroalkane-propellant inhalers. For the insured that meant an average out-of-pocket inhaler cost increase from $13.60 per prescription in 2004 to $25 in 2015. The current rate for the now nongeneric HFA-propelled but otherwise identical albuterol inhaler is $98. Competition from a more recently FDA-approved (2020) generic version has not been robust enough to effect meaningful price reductions, the report stated. While good insurance generally covers most of inhaler costs, the more than 25 million uninsured in 2023 faced steep market prices that put strain even on some insured, the CDC found, driving many in the United States to purchase from Mexican, Canadian, or other foreign pharmacies. The Teva QVAR REdiHaler corticosteroid inhaler, costing $9 in Germany, costs $286 in the US. Dosages, however, may not be identical. A first FDA-authorization of drug importing this past January applied only to agents for a limited number of disease states and pertained only to Florida, but may serve as a model for other states, according to the commentary.

“The announced price cap from Boehringer Ingelheim,” stated Kenneth Mendez, president and CEO of the Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America (AAFA) in a press release, “is a step toward improving access to essential asthma medicine and demonstrates that the voice of the asthma patient community is being heard.” The AAFA release noted further that asthma death rates, while declining overall, are triple in Blacks compared with Whites. Death rates, asthma rates, and rates of being uninsured or underinsured are much higher in Black and Puerto Rican populations than in Whites. The complex layers of the current US system, composed of pharmaceutical manufacturers, pharmacy benefit managers, insurance companies, employers, and federal policies often conspire against those people who need asthma drugs the most. AAFA research has shown that when drug prices become a barrier to treatment, people with asthma ration or simply discontinue their essential asthma medications. Beyond saved lives, access to asthma medications can reduce hospitalizations and lower the more than $82 billion in annual asthma costs to the US economy.

Sen. Sanders, on March 20, applauded the GSK announcement: “As Chairman of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee, I very much appreciate GlaxoSmithKline’s announcement today that Americans throughout the country with asthma and COPD will pay no more than $35 for the brand name inhalers they manufacture. I look forward to working with GSK to make sure that this decision reaches as many patients as possible.”

“Inhaled medications continue to be an essential part of the therapy for patients with asthma, COPD, and other respiratory conditions,” said Diego J. Maselli, professor and chief, Division of Pulmonary Diseases & Critical Care, UT Health at San Antonio, San Antonio, Texas, in an interview with CHEST Physician. He added, “Unfortunately, with increasing cost of these and other treatments, access has been challenging for many patients. Patients, families, and providers constantly experience frustration with the difficulties of obtaining these lifesaving medications, and cost is the main barrier. Even those with ample insurance coverage face difficult challenges, as the high prices of these medications motivate insurance carriers to constantly adjust what is the ‘preferred’ option among inhalers. Regrettably, noncompliance and nonadherence to inhaled therapies has been linked to poor patient outcomes and increased health care utilization in both asthma and COPD. Because of the high prevalence of these diseases in the US and worldwide, efforts to increase the access of these vital medications has been a priority. With the leveling of the prices of these medications across the world, we hope that there will be both improved access and, as a consequence, better patient outcomes.”

In addition to warmer weather, June will usher in changes in asthma and COPD inhaler costs for many patients, potentially reducing barriers to those seeing high prescription prices. Price ceilings have been set by some companies, likely following action earlier this year by a Senate Committee which pointed to higher costs of US inhalers compared with other countries.

Senator Sanders stated: “In my view, Americans who have asthma and COPD should not be forced to pay, in many cases, 10-70 times more for the same exact inhalers as patients in Europe and other parts of the world.”

Starting June 1, Boehringer Ingelheim will cap out-of-pocket costs for the company’s inhaler products for chronic lung disease and asthma at $35 per month, according to a March 7, 2024, press release from the German drugmaker’s US headquarters in Ridgefield, Conn. The reductions cover the full range of the company’s inhaler products for asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) including Atrovent, Combivent Respimat and Spiriva HandiHaler and Respimat, Stiolto Respimat and Striverdi Respimat. In the release, Boehringer Ingelheim USA Corporation’s President and CEO Jean-Michel Boers stated, “The US health care system is complex and often doesn’t work for patients, especially the most vulnerable. While we can’t fix the entire system alone, we are bringing forward a solution to make it fairer. We want to do our part to help patients living with COPD or asthma who struggle to pay for their medications.”

Similar announcements were made by AstraZeneca and GSK. GSK’s cap will go into effect on January 1, 2025, and includes Advair Diskus, Advair HFA, Anoro Ellipta, Arnuity Ellipta, Breo Ellipta, Incruse Ellipta, Serevent Diskus, Trelegy Ellipta, and Ventolin HFA. The AstraZeneca cap, which covers Airsupra, Bevespi Aerosphere, Breztri Aeroshpere, and Symbicort, goes into effect on June 1, 2024.
 

Senate statement on pricing

These companies plus Teva had received letters sent on January 8, 2024, by the members of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions: senators Sanders, Baldwin, Luján and Markey. The letters cited enormous inhaler price discrepancies, for example $489 for Combivent Respimat in the United States but just $7 in France, and announced the conduct of an investigation into efforts by these companies to artificially inflate and manipulate prices of asthma inhalers that have been on the market for decades. A statement from Sen. Sanders’ office noted that AstraZeneca, GSK, and Teva made more than $25 billion in revenue from inhalers alone in the past 5 years (Boehringer Ingelheim does not provide public US inhaler revenue information).

 

Suit claims generic delay

A federal lawsuit filed in Boston on March 6, according to a Reuters brief from March 7, cited Boehringer for improperly submitting patents to the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The purpose of those patents, the suit charges, was to delay generic competition and inflate Combivent Respimat and Spiriva Respimat inhaler prices.

Inhaler prices soared in the United States, according to a March 10 U.S. News & World Report commentary by The Conversation, a nonprofit news organization, after the 2008 FDA ban on chlorofluorocarbon (CFC)-propellants led to the phase-out of CFC-containing inhalers and their replacement with hydrofluoroalkane-propellant inhalers. For the insured that meant an average out-of-pocket inhaler cost increase from $13.60 per prescription in 2004 to $25 in 2015. The current rate for the now nongeneric HFA-propelled but otherwise identical albuterol inhaler is $98. Competition from a more recently FDA-approved (2020) generic version has not been robust enough to effect meaningful price reductions, the report stated. While good insurance generally covers most of inhaler costs, the more than 25 million uninsured in 2023 faced steep market prices that put strain even on some insured, the CDC found, driving many in the United States to purchase from Mexican, Canadian, or other foreign pharmacies. The Teva QVAR REdiHaler corticosteroid inhaler, costing $9 in Germany, costs $286 in the US. Dosages, however, may not be identical. A first FDA-authorization of drug importing this past January applied only to agents for a limited number of disease states and pertained only to Florida, but may serve as a model for other states, according to the commentary.

“The announced price cap from Boehringer Ingelheim,” stated Kenneth Mendez, president and CEO of the Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America (AAFA) in a press release, “is a step toward improving access to essential asthma medicine and demonstrates that the voice of the asthma patient community is being heard.” The AAFA release noted further that asthma death rates, while declining overall, are triple in Blacks compared with Whites. Death rates, asthma rates, and rates of being uninsured or underinsured are much higher in Black and Puerto Rican populations than in Whites. The complex layers of the current US system, composed of pharmaceutical manufacturers, pharmacy benefit managers, insurance companies, employers, and federal policies often conspire against those people who need asthma drugs the most. AAFA research has shown that when drug prices become a barrier to treatment, people with asthma ration or simply discontinue their essential asthma medications. Beyond saved lives, access to asthma medications can reduce hospitalizations and lower the more than $82 billion in annual asthma costs to the US economy.

Sen. Sanders, on March 20, applauded the GSK announcement: “As Chairman of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee, I very much appreciate GlaxoSmithKline’s announcement today that Americans throughout the country with asthma and COPD will pay no more than $35 for the brand name inhalers they manufacture. I look forward to working with GSK to make sure that this decision reaches as many patients as possible.”

“Inhaled medications continue to be an essential part of the therapy for patients with asthma, COPD, and other respiratory conditions,” said Diego J. Maselli, professor and chief, Division of Pulmonary Diseases & Critical Care, UT Health at San Antonio, San Antonio, Texas, in an interview with CHEST Physician. He added, “Unfortunately, with increasing cost of these and other treatments, access has been challenging for many patients. Patients, families, and providers constantly experience frustration with the difficulties of obtaining these lifesaving medications, and cost is the main barrier. Even those with ample insurance coverage face difficult challenges, as the high prices of these medications motivate insurance carriers to constantly adjust what is the ‘preferred’ option among inhalers. Regrettably, noncompliance and nonadherence to inhaled therapies has been linked to poor patient outcomes and increased health care utilization in both asthma and COPD. Because of the high prevalence of these diseases in the US and worldwide, efforts to increase the access of these vital medications has been a priority. With the leveling of the prices of these medications across the world, we hope that there will be both improved access and, as a consequence, better patient outcomes.”

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