Current:Home > NewsMerck sues U.S. government over plan to negotiate Medicare drug prices, claiming "extortion" -Infinite Edge Capital
Merck sues U.S. government over plan to negotiate Medicare drug prices, claiming "extortion"
View
Date:2025-04-15 22:19:50
Drugmaker Merck is suing the U.S. government over its plan to allow Medicare to negotiate prices for a handful of drugs, calling it "extortion."
The plan, part of the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act, is expected to save taxpayers billions of dollars on common drugs the government pays for. The law directs the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services to select 10 drugs with no generic or biosimilar equivalents to be subject to government price negotiation. (The list will eventually expand to 20 drugs.)
In its lawsuit, filed on Tuesday in federal court in the District of Columbia, Merck called the program "a sham" that "involves neither genuine 'negotiations' nor real 'agreements.'" Instead, the pharmaceutical firm said the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services selects drugs to be included and then dictates a discount, threatening drugmakers with "a ruinous daily excise tax" if they refuse the conditions.
Merck added that it expects its diabetes treatment, Januvia, to be subject to negotiation in the first round, with diabetes drug Janumet and the cancer drug Keytruda affected in later years.
The Rahway, New Jersey-based drugmaker is seeking to end the program. "It is tantamount to extortion," it said in the complaint.
Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra, who is named as a defendant in the suit, said in a statement that the agency plans to "vigorously defend" the drug price negotiation plan.
"The law is on our side," he said.
The lawsuit also names HHS and Chiquita Brooks-LaSure, administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, as defendants.
Merck said the program violates elements of the Constitution, including the Fifth Amendment's requirement that the government pays "'just compensation' if it takes 'property' for public use," according to the complaint.
The drugmaker noted that Congress could have simply allowed HHS to state a maximum price it would pay for a drug, but that would have enabled drugmakers to walk away from talks, leaving millions of Medicare beneficiaries without essential medications, the complaint said.
Instead, Merck said the government uses the threat of severe penalties to requisition drugs and refuses to pay fair value, forcing drugmakers "to smile, play along, and pretend it is all part of a 'fair' and voluntary exchange." This violates the First Amendment, the suit claims, calling the process "political Kabuki theater."
Patient advocate slams Merck
David Mitchell, founder of the advocacy group "Patients For Affordable Drugs Now," slammed Merck's suit as an attempt to "unilaterally set prices that are untethered to quality at the expense of patients."
"The reality is, drug corporations that are subject to Medicare's new authority – and who already negotiate with every other high income country in the world – will engage in a negotiation process after setting their own launch prices and enjoying nine years or more of monopoly profits," Mitchell said in a statement.
He added, "Medicare negotiation is a desperately needed, long-awaited rebalancing of our drug price system that will help millions of patients obtain the medications they need at prices they can afford while ensuring continued innovation."
Medicare is the federally funded coverage program mainly for people who are age 65 and older. Currently, drug companies tell Medicare how much a prescription costs, leaving the federal government and Medicare beneficiaries to pay up.
The Inflation Reduction Act's drug negotiation provisions mark the first time that the federal government will bargain directly with drug companies over the price they charge for some of Medicare's costliest drugs. Government negotiation with drugmakers and price caps on drugs are common in other developed nations.
Republican lawmakers have also criticized President Joe Biden's administration over the drug pricing plan, saying it could deter drugmakers from developing new treatments.
The federal government is expected to soon release rules for negotiating drug prices. In September, it is scheduled to publish a list of 10 drugs that it will start price negotiations on next year. Negotiated prices won't take hold until 2026.
With reporting by the Associated Press.
- In:
- Medicare
- merck
veryGood! (58287)
Related
- Average rate on 30
- Julia Fox's Latest Look Proves She's Redefining How to Wear Winged Eyeliner Again
- Former Los Angeles Deputy Mayor Raymond Chan convicted in sprawling bribery case
- Christina Applegate says she has 30 lesions on her brain amid MS battle
- Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
- Dallas resident wins $5 million on Texas Lottery scratch-off game
- Missouri boarding school closes as state agency examines how it responded to abuse claims
- Debate emerges over whether modern protections could have saved Baltimore bridge
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- Feel like a lottery loser? Powerball’s $865 million jackpot offers another chance to hit it rich
Ranking
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- Driving along ... and the roadway vanishes beneath you. What’s it like to survive a bridge collapse?
- Best remaining NFL free agents: Ranking 20 top players available, led by Justin Simmons
- Dallas resident wins $5 million on Texas Lottery scratch-off game
- Average rate on 30
- Former Sen. Joe Lieberman, Democrats’ VP pick in 2000, dead at 82
- Who are the victims in Baltimore's Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse? What we know about those missing and presumed dead
- NCAA President Charlie Baker urges state lawmakers to ban prop betting on college athletes
Recommendation
Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
Schools in the path of April’s total solar eclipse prepare for a natural teaching moment
Mega Millions has a winner! Lucky player in New Jersey wins $1.13 billion lottery jackpot
Man in custody after fatal shooting of NYPD officer during traffic stop: Reports
Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
House of Villains Season 2 Cast Revealed: Teresa Giudice, Richard Hatch and More
Sweet 16 bold predictions forecast the next drama in men's March Madness
Pennsylvania’s mail-in ballot dating rule is legal under civil rights law, appeals court says