CVS has become the sixth largest corporation in America, owning not only a chain of pharmacies, but health insurance company Aetna, and Pharmacy Benefit Manager (PBM), Caremark, among other big businesses. To maximize profits, CVS offers many private label products. To increase those profits further, CVS has begun to sell its own prescription drugs, reports David Wainer for the Wall Street Journal.
Bottom line, CVS believes that selling its own biosimilars will generate handsome profits. CVS can steer its customers to these generic drugs through its Pharmacy Benefit Manager or PBM, which determines the drugs on many insurance companies’ formularies, including Aetna’s. In the process, CVS can put competitor manufacturers with lower-cost biosimilars out of business.
The Cordavis unit of CVS Health – lord knows how CVS came up with the name—works with drug manufacturers to create the biosimilars CVS sells. Biosimilars are the generic version of biologicals, prescription drugs made from living cells. The biosimilar market is booming as more blockbuster biologicals, such as Humira, lose their patents.
Beginning shortly, Humira will no longer be available on CVS formularies. CVS will offer its biosimilar. Similarly, Cigna, which has its own PBM, Express Scripts, will take Humira off its formulary and instead offer its private label biosimilar. For now, the cost will be low for patients, 85 percent lower than Humira’s list price, with no out-of-pocket costs to patients.
CVS projects that the biosimilar market will grow exponentially in the next five years to $100 million. It was not even $10 million just two years ago. CVS will steer its customers away from brand-name biologicals to its biosimilars and profit big time in the process. Over time, will patients save money and how much? That’s largely up to CVS, an untenable truth.
The bigger question is how will patients fare as biologicals are replaced by biosimilars? It’s not at all clear; at least for now, it is out of government hands. PBMs, such as CVS Caremark, can and will use their power to determine which drugs people use and at what cost in order to maximize their profits. Before long, some say it’s likely that there will be no prescription drug price competition, only strategies among the PBMs and insurers to maximize profits.
Here’s more from Just Care:
- Blue Shield of California ends contract with CVS Caremark in attempt to lower drug prices
- New York sues CVS for depriving safety net hospitals of millions of dollars
- Primary care through CVS? Financial incentives pose a serious concern
- Whistleblower says CVS won’t cover some low-cost generics
- CVS charged with healthcare fraud
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