Assessing the Feasibility and Likelihood of Policy Options to Lower Specialty Drug Costs

Erin Audrey Taylor, Dmitry Khodyakov, Zachary Predmore, Christine Buttorff, Alice Y. Kim

ResearchPosted on rand.org Nov 8, 2024Published in: Health Affairs Scholar, Volume 2, Issue 10, qxae118 (October 2024). DOI: 10.1093/haschl/qxae118

Specialty drugs are high-cost medications often used to treat complex chronic conditions. Even with insurance coverage, patients may face very high out-of-pocket costs, which in turn may restrict access. While the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 included policies designed to reduce specialty drug costs, relatively few policies have been enacted during the past decade. In 2022-2023, we conducted a scoping literature review to identify a range of policy options and selected a set of 9 that have been regularly discussed or recently considered to present to an expert stakeholder panel to seek consensus on (1) the feasibility of implementing each policy and (2) its likely impact on drug costs. Experts rated only 1 policy highly on both feasibility and impact: grouping originator biologics and biosimilars under the same Medicare Part B reimbursement code. They rated 3 policies focused on setting payment limits as likely to have positive (downward) impact on costs but of uncertain feasibility. They considered 4 policies as uncertain on both criteria. Experts rated capping monthly out-of-pocket costs as feasible but unlikely to reduce specialty drug costs. Based on these results, we offer 4 recommendations to policymakers considering ways to reduce specialty drug costs.

Document Details

  • Publisher: Oxford University Press
  • Availability: Non-RAND
  • Year: 2024
  • Pages: 7
  • Document Number: EP-70738

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