Wnited States Senate
WASHINGTON, DC 20510
December 17, 2015
Mr. Andrew Slavitt, Acting Administrator
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
Department of Health and Human Services
200 Independence Avenue, SW
Washington, DC 20201
Dear Acting Administrator Slavitt:
We are writing to express our concern regarding rising prescription drug costs. In recent
years, U.S. spending on prescription drugs has increased dramatically and is now growing at a
rate faster than any other health care item or service. As our country focuses on advancing a
health care system that delivers better care at lower costs for all Americans, high drug prices
threaten the gains our country has made in this sector.
Our pharmaceutical system, while not perfect, rewards innovation and incents drug
developers to take on scientific uncertainty, enabling us to cure diseases, improve patient quality
of life, and avoid costlier medical treatments. Here in the United States Senate, we have
consistently supported efforts to further public sector medical research and have worked to foster
pharmaceutical innovation in the private sector. However, the choice between innovation and
affordability is a false one. In 2014 alone, spending on prescription drugs rose by 12.2%.
Inevitably, these rising costs squeeze American household budgets as well as federal and state
budgets, Medicare, Medicaid, and other public health care programs that use taxpayer dollars to
pay for drugs.
‘There are numerous reasons why patients and heath care payers are experiencing rising
prescription drug costs, and the solutions are not simple, We commend the Department of Health
and Human Services Forum on Pharmaceutical Innovation, Access, Affordability and Better
Health, but urge CMS to engage and collaborate with industry, patient groups, providers, and
other relevant stakeholders to chart a path to reducing drug costs moving forward, To that end,
‘we are seeking answers to the following questions:
1, What statutory authority, if any, does CMS have to limit the impact of rising prescription
drug costs on consumers? Under what circumstances has CMS exercised this authority?
2. How does CMS plan to leverage the authority of the Center for Medicare and Medicaid
Innovation (CMMI) to examine the potential of alternative payment mechanisms,
including examining methods to increase use of and access to competitive gene
medications, and alternatives to the current ‘ASP-+6%" model?
3. A number of outside, independent organizations and researchers including the
Patient~Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) and the Institute for Clinical andEconomic Review (ICER) are assessing the comparative effectiveness of various
‘treatments, How can CMS use this information to improve beneficiary outcomes and
lower program spending?
4. Current Medicaid drug pricing and policy infrastructure was designed for a fee-for-
service environment. How is CMS working with the states to ensure that coverage and
costs remain reasonable for consumers, particularly as Medicaid moves towards a system
of managed care?
5. How does CMS plan to evaluate new ways to empower consumers and healthcare
providers to make informed decisions about the cost of the prescription medications
available to them?
6. Within the individual private insurance market, an increasing number of consumers are
enrolling in high-deductible plans, How does CMS plan to continue to use its regulatory
authority to ensure consumer access to prescription drugs on the individual market?
7. The federal exchange represents a way for the federal government to help consumers
compare drug costs, as well as enable them to compare coverage among plans. CMS
recently enabled to consumers to access a tool allowing them to compare drug coverage
and cost-sharing within individual plans, How does CMS plan to engage stakeholders to
censure that this and other tools reduce out-of-pocket drug costs for plan enrollees?
As our healthcare system continues to foster innovation and move towards achieving the
aims of better care, better health, and lower costs, we urge CMS to continue to ensure that
consumers have access to affordable and consistent drug coverage. Should you have any
questions regarding this request, please do not hesitate to contact Marvin Figueroa on Senator
Wamer's staff at 202-224-2023 or mfigueroa@warer.senate.gov,
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