UPDATE: K-V Pharma Slashes Price Of Preterm Labor Drug Amid Outcry
02 April 2011 - 6:08AM
Dow Jones News
K-V Pharmaceutical Co. (KVA, KVB) said Friday that it would
slash the list price of its new premature-birth prevention drug
Makena by 55% after a public outcry over the treatment's original
price tag of $1,500 per shot.
The St. Louis-based company also said it would offer
supplemental rebates and noted that a majority of patients would
pay significantly less for each shot. The response came after K-V
became the latest U.S. healthcare company to face scrutiny over
medical prices perceived to be too high.
K-V's Ther-Rx unit had initially charged $1,500 per injection of
the drug, given weekly to prevent preterm labor. This sparked a
backlash among consumers and lawmakers because versions of the
active ingredient of Makena, hydroxyprogesterone, have been
available since 1956 and were sold for as little as $10 to $15 per
shot.
While the latest price tag--$690 per shot--is still much higher
than the alternate versions, it is lower than the drug's initial
price. One lawmaker Friday called the action positive; however,
K-V's moves didn't satisfy all of its critics.
The March of Dimes, a nonprofit organization that works to
reduce premature births, acknowledged that the price cut was a step
in the right direction, but the organization also announced plans
to terminate a partnership in which K-V had provided financial
support for fund-raising efforts.
"The company's handling of the launch of Makena, and the initial
list price, were highly unsatisfactory and unacceptable to the
March of Dimes and the families we represent," it said in a
statement. The organization will continue to explore all options
for ensuring access to the drug's active ingredient for all
medically eligible women.
"After such a long and positive partnership, Ther-Rx is
disappointed to hear of their decision," a K-V spokeswoman said of
the March of Dimes action. The company had defended its initial
price for Makena, saying it was the first preterm labor drug
approved by the Food and Drug Administration.
K-V had expected to be the exclusive supplier of
hydroxyprogesterone, used to reduce the risk of preterm delivery
before 37 weeks of pregnancy in pregnant women with a history of at
least one spontaneous preterm birth. Previously, so-called
compounding pharmacies have made less expensive versions of
hydroxyprogesterone, also known as 17-P.
K-V recently sent letters to those pharmacies saying FDA would
no longer use enforcement discretion, meaning they would have to
stop making their cheaper versions of the drug. The company has
said unapproved compounded versions of the active ingredient have
risks.
But this week the FDA said it would not take enforcement action
on pharmacies that compound hydroxyprogesterone, citing the need to
support access to the drug in a "unique situation."
KV's Class A shares fell 9.52% to $5.42 in recent trading and
are off more than 40% this week. The price cut and FDA stance are
likely to reduce the commercial potential for Makena, a drug that
K-V has banked on to return to profitability following various
legal and regulatory troubles in recent years.
K-V's Ther-Rx unit, which makes Makena, said Friday that in
addition to the list price cut, it would offer supplemental rebates
that would further lower the price for Medicaid programs, the
government's health program for the poor.
"This will help ensure that every woman who is prescribed Makena
-- regardless of her ability to pay -- has the comfort of knowing a
medication that has been rigorously reviewed by FDA for safety and
efficacy is available to her," K-V said in a press release.
Also, K-V will cap the costs for a full course of therapy to a
maximum of 15 injections for contracted health insurance plans and
state Medicaid agencies, and remove caps to qualify for financial
assistance from the company.
K-V said 85% of patients will pay $20 or less per injection for
Makena, and patients whose financial need is greatest would receive
Makena at no out-of-pocket cost.
U.S. Rep. Henry A. Waxman (D-Calif.), one of the lawmakers who
had criticized K-V for the initial price tag, said the price cut
"is a step in the right direction." He still plans to review
information he has requested from the company to determine if the
new price is appropriate, according to a statement.
Two Democratic Senators had sent a letter to the Federal Trade
Commission last month urging the agency to launch an investigation
into potentially anticompetitive behavior because of the increase
in the cost of Makena compared with compounded products.
Makena was given seven years of market exclusivity when it was
approved under an FDA program that grants incentives to companies
developing treatments for rare ailments.
-Peter Loftus, Dow Jones Newswires; +1-215-982-5581;
peter.loftus@dowjones.com
(Matt Jarzemsky contributed to this article.)
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