IMS Health Study: U.S. Drug Spending Growth Reaches 8.5 Percent in 2015
April 14 2016 - 9:01AM
Business Wire
Specialty Medicine Innovation Drives Growth,
Partially Offset by Price Concessions from Manufacturers
Total spending on medicines in the U.S. reached $310 billion in
2015 on an estimated net price basis, up 8.5 percent from the
previous year, according to a new report issued today by the IMS
Institute for Healthcare Informatics. The surge of new medicines
remained strong last year and demand for recently launched brands
maintained historically high levels. The savings from branded
medicines facing generic competition were relatively low in 2015,
and the impact of price increases on brands was limited due to
higher rebates and price concessions from manufacturers. Specialty
dug spending reached $121 billion on a net price basis, up more
than 15 percent from 2014.
The study—Medicines Use and Spending in the U.S.: A Review of
2015 and Outlook to 2020—found that longer-term trends continued to
play out last year, driven by the Affordable Care Act and ongoing
response to rising overall healthcare costs. Increasingly,
healthcare is being delivered by different types of healthcare
professionals and from different facilities, while patients face
higher out-of-pocket costs and access barriers. The outlook for
medicine spending through 2020 is for mid-single digit growth,
driven by clusters of innovative treatments and offset by the
rising impact of brands facing generic or biosimilar
competition.
Total spending on an invoice price basis—without adjusting for
the impact of estimated rebates and other price concessions—reached
$425 billion in 2015, up 12.2 percent over 2014 levels. Invoice
prices for branded medicines rose 12.4 percent in 2015, compared
with 14.3 percent in the prior year. Heightened competition among
manufacturers, along with more aggressive efforts by health plans
and pharmacy benefit managers to limit price growth, resulted in
concessions that reduced price increases on an estimated net basis
to 2.8 percent, significantly lower than in prior years.
“The challenge of balancing access and the cost of care in an
era of innovative but more expensive treatments continues as a
theme across our healthcare system,” said Murray Aitken, IMS Health
senior vice president and executive director of the IMS Institute
for Healthcare Informatics. “The level of price concessions
achieved in 2015 points to a shift in market dynamics as
manufacturers accept lower price increases on existing products. At
the same time, spending on new brands continued at near-historic
levels.”
The report’s key findings include the following:
- Total spending on medicines. In
2015, spending net of off-invoice discounts and rebates reached
$309.5 billion and grew 8.5 percent year over year. Growth
moderated about 2 percentage points from the 2014 level, when total
spending was at its highest since 2001. The increase in 2015
spending of $24.3 billion on a net basis and $46.2 billion on an
invoice basis was fueled by new brands and protected brand price
increases, offset by the impact of patent expiries. The greater use
of generics and a small increase in demand for branded drugs
contributed to the spending growth.
- Growth in specialty drugs.
Spending on specialty medicines has nearly doubled in the past five
years, contributing more than two-thirds of overall medicine
spending growth between 2010 and 2015. Increased specialty spending
was driven primarily by treatments for hepatitis, autoimmune
diseases and oncology, which accounted for $19.3 billion in
incremental spending. Overall, 2015 saw a 21.5 percent spending
increase for specialty medicines to $150.8 billion on an invoice
price basis.
- Transformative new medicines. A
total of 43 New Active Substances (NASs) was launched in 2015, a
third of those receiving orphan drug designations from the FDA. An
additional 30 brands were launched last year, bringing new
combination therapies, alternative dosing and treatment
administration options to patients. The strong momentum of
breakthroughs and R&D productivity is reflected in the 2015
cohort of new medicines. Among last year’s launches, the number of
non-orphan drugs with new mechanisms of action reached 14, double
the number in 2014. Among the 2015 NAS launches were notable
advances in precision medicines, rare disease therapeutics and
chronic disease medicines that could benefit large
populations.
- Prescription volume growth.
Total prescriptions dispensed in 2015 reached 4.4 billion, up 1
percent year over year. Demand was higher in some therapy areas
such as antidepressants and anti-diabetes, each of which increased
about 10 percent in 2015. Among those therapy areas that declined,
narcotic drugs saw a 16.6 percent drop in the number of
prescriptions dispensed. Provisions under the Affordable Care Act
for coverage to the uninsured through Medicaid expansion and Health
Exchange Plans (HIX) have been the leading drivers of retail
prescription growth in the past two years. At the same time, growth
in Medicare Part D subscriptions has slowed, and the number of
retail prescriptions filled through commercial plans (excluding
HIX) and for cash have declined.
- Patient cost exposure. The
average patient cost exposure for brand prescriptions filled
through a commercial plan has increased more than 25 percent since
2010, reaching $44 per prescription last year. The increased
prevalence of health plans with pharmacy deductibles, co-payments
and co-insurance is contributing to the rise. In response, brand
manufacturers are steadily increasing their use of mechanisms such
as coupons or vouchers to help patients offset these expenses.
Within the diabetes market, for example, coupons are being used by
patients in commercial plans to reduce their costs. Of those
diabetes patients facing $50 or more per prescription, about half
were able to reduce their out-of-pocket cost to zero in 2015. The
average patient cost exposure for generics has remained at
approximately $8 per prescription since 2010.
- Healthcare delivery changes.
Over the past five years, Integrated Delivery Networks (IDNs) have
expanded their affiliations with healthcare professionals (HCPs) in
an effort to increase negotiating power with insurers, leverage
economies of scale and drive pay-for-performance initiatives. More
than 54 percent of all HCPs nationally now are affiliated with
IDNs. Newer facility types addressing patient access and
convenience, such as urgent care centers and pharmacy in-store
clinics, have grown by 115 percent in the past five years, and are
part of an increasingly diverse set of healthcare facilities. The
number of prescriptions written by Nurse Practitioners and
Physician Assistants more than doubled over the past 5 years,
reaching 676 million prescriptions in 2015.
- 2020 growth forecast. U.S.
spending on medicines on a net price basis is expected to reach
$370-400 billion in 2020, growing at a compound annual growth rate
of 4-7 percent. This growth will reflect increased spending on
innovative medicines, offset by lower spending on brands that will
lose market exclusivity over the next five years. While brand price
increases are expected to continue in the 10-12 percent range on an
invoice basis, they will be significantly offset by rebates,
discounts and other forms of price concessions. The prospects for
additional innovative medicines becoming available for patients
through 2020 are very bright. The late-phase pipeline holds 2,320
novel products, and an average 43-49 NASs are expected to be
launched annually over the next five years.
The full version of the report, including a detailed description
of the methodology, is available at www.theimsinstitute.org. It can
also be downloaded as an app via iTunes at
https://itunes.apple.com/app/ims-institute/id625347542. The study
was produced independently as a public service, without industry or
government funding.
In this release, “spending on medicines” and “invoice-price
spending” refer to the amounts paid to distributors by their
pharmacy or hospital customers. It does not relate directly to
either the out-of-pocket costs paid by a patient or the amount
health plans pay for the medicines, and does not include mark-ups
and additional costs associated with dispensing or other services
associated with medicines reaching patients. “Net-price spending”
is an alternative measure that is an estimate of the amount
received by pharmaceutical manufacturers and therefore reflects
rebates, off-invoice discounts and other price concessions made by
manufacturers to distributors, health plans and intermediaries.
Analyses conducted for the report are based on IMS Health
information resources and focus on prescription-bound products,
including Insulins that are available without a prescription. OTC
products are excluded from the report. Spending figures are derived
from IMS National Sales Perspectives™ and reported at wholesaler
invoice prices that do not reflect off-invoice discounts and
rebates. All analyses in the report are on an invoice price basis
unless otherwise specified. Prescription data are derived from IMS
National Prescription Audit™, which tracks national prescription
trends and activity for all pharmaceutical products. Other IMS
Health information resources used in this report include NPA Market
Dynamics™, National Prescription Audit™, Xponent™ PlanTrak™,
Formulary Impact Analyzer™, Market Prognosis™, Healthcare
Organizational and Professional Services™ and IMS MIDAS™. More
detail on information sources is included in the report.
About the IMS Institute for Healthcare Informatics
The IMS Institute for Healthcare Informatics provides key policy
setters and decision makers in the global health sector with unique
and transformational insights into healthcare dynamics derived from
granular analysis of information. It is a research-driven entity
with a worldwide reach that collaborates with external healthcare
experts from across academia and the public and private sectors to
objectively apply IMS Health’s proprietary global information and
analytical assets. More information about the IMS Institute can be
found at: http://www.theimsinstitute.org.
About IMS Health
IMS Health is a leading global information and technology
services company providing clients in the healthcare industry with
end-to-end solutions to measure and improve their performance. Our
7,500 services experts connect configurable SaaS applications to
10+ petabytes of complex healthcare data in the IMS One™ cloud
platform, delivering unique insights into diseases, treatments,
costs and outcomes. The company’s 15,000 employees blend global
consistency and local market knowledge across 100 countries to help
clients run their operations more efficiently. Customers include
pharmaceutical, consumer health and medical device manufacturers
and distributors, providers, payers, government agencies,
policymakers, researchers and the financial community.
As a global leader in protecting individual patient privacy, IMS
Health uses anonymous healthcare data to deliver critical,
real-world disease and treatment insights. These insights help
biotech and pharmaceutical companies, medical researchers,
government agencies, payers and other healthcare stakeholders to
identify unmet treatment needs and understand the effectiveness and
value of pharmaceutical products in improving overall health
outcomes. Additional information is available at
www.imshealth.com.
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IMS HealthTor Constantino,
+1-484-567-6732tconstantino@us.imshealth.com
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