Pfizer, GSK, Sanofi and Teva are raising the prices of some medicines by less than 10 percent, according to new report.
Drug manufacturers, including Pfizer Inc, Sanofi SA and GlaxoSmithKline Plc, plan to raise prices on more than 300 drugs in the United States on January 1, according to pharmaceutical companies and data analyzed by research firm 3 Axis Advisors.
The hikes come as pharmaceutical giants are struggling over the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic, which has reduced doctor visits and demand for some medicines. They are also fighting new rules for drug pricing from the Trump administration, which will reduce the profitability of the industry.
The shares kept their price increases at 10 percent or less, and the largest pharmaceutical companies that have raised prices so far, Pfizer and Sanofi, have kept almost all of their increases 5 percent or less, according to 3 Axis. 3 Axis is a consulting firm that works with pharmacist groups, health plans and foundations on the price of medicines and supply chain issues.
GSK has increased the prices of two vaccines – shingles vaccine Shingrix and diphtheria, tetanus and whooping cough vaccine Pediarix – by 7 percent and 8.6 percent respectively, 3 Axis said.
Teva Pharmaceuticals Inc. has raised prices on 15 drugs, including Austedo, which treats rare neurological disorders, and asthma steroid Qvar, which earned more than $ 650 million in sales in 2019 and brought price increases of between 5 percent and 6 percent. Teva increased prices for some drugs, including the muscle relaxant Amrix and the treatment of narcolepsy, Nuvigil, by 9.4 percent.
More price increases are expected to be announced on Friday and early January.
COVID-19
In 2020, according to 3 Axis, pharmaceutical companies increased by an average of about 5 percent prices on more than 860 medicines. The price increases on drugs have slowed significantly since 2015 in terms of the size of the increases and the number of drugs affected.
The increases come because pharmaceutical companies like Pfizer are developing vaccines for COVID-19 in record time. The increases could help offset the loss of revenue as doctor visits and new prescriptions declined during the global exclusion.
Pfizer plans to increase prices of more than 60 drugs by between 0.5 and 5 percent. These include about 5 percent increases on some of its top sellers, such as rheumatoid arthritis Xeljanz and cancer drugs Ibrance and Inlyta.
Pfizer plans to increase prices of more than 60 drugs by between 0.5 and 5 percent [File: Mario Tama/Getty Images]
Pfizer said it has adjusted the list prices of its drugs by about 1.3 percent for all products in its portfolio, in line with inflation.
“This modest increase is necessary to support investments that enable us to continue to discover new medicines and deliver the breakthroughs to the patients who need them,” spokeswoman Amy Rose said in a statement, noting in particular: the COVID-19 vaccine developed by the company. with Germany’s BioNTech SE.
It is said that net prices, which do not include discounts on pharmacy benefit managers and other discounts, have actually fallen over the past three years.
French Sanofi plans to increase prices on a number of vaccines by 5 percent or less and will announce more price increases later in January, spokeswoman Ashleigh Koss said.
None of the company’s price increases will be above the expected growth rate of U.S. health spending of 5.1 percent, Koss said.
Political pressure
The American pres. Donald Trump has given a reduction in the prices of American prescription drugs – which are among the highest in the world – after it was a key promise of his 2016 campaign. He issued several executive orders at the end of 2020 aimed at lowering prices, but its effect may be limited by legal challenges and other issues.
A federal judge blocked a last-minute Trump government rule in December aimed at lowering drug prices, which would be introduced in early 2021. It has been challenged by pharmaceutical industry groups, including PhRMA, the country’s leading pharmaceutical trade group.
Elected President Joe Biden also promised to reduce drug costs and allow Medicare, a US health insurance program for the US government, to negotiate drug prices. He has the support of Congress Democrats to pass such legislation, which according to the Congressional Budget Office would cost the industry more than $ 300 billion by 2029.