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Drug Pricing Methodologies AWP, MAC, WAC Whats next

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Title: Drug Pricing Methodologies AWP, MAC, WAC Whats next


1
Drug Pricing MethodologiesAWP, MAC, WACWhats
next??
  • Chuck Gamsu, R. Ph
  • Regional Vice President
  • EnvisionRxOptions
  • September 11, 2008

2
Historical Facts
  • Average Wholesale Price (AWP) is the de facto
    standard pricing methodology for drug pricing
    since the 1960s first published in the Red Book
    and Blue Book
  • The AWP was originally determined by comparing
    the average price that pharmacies paid for the
    drugs from several drug wholesalers and was
    originally assumed to be the Actual Acquisition
    Cost (AAC) of the retail pharmacies that
    purchased from wholesales
  • Today the AWP is compared more to a cars sticker
    price it has little reflection of the true cost
    of the drug which may include wholesaler rebates,
    chargebacks and incentive and volume discounts
  • It is important that new methods of pricing be
    introduced to more accurately reflect the actual
    cost of a drug for all payers since it is all
    about to change.

3
Historical Facts
  • With the introduction of computerized pricing and
    updating, First Data Bank (FDB) and Medispan
    became the standard providers for electronic
    pricing
  • Initially, FDB compared average pricing across
    several wholesalers to determine the published
    AWP
  • In 2000, FDB started only comparing McKesson
    Wholesales price in establishing the AWP
  • With profit margins being eroded by third party
    payers, pharmacies were reeling from lower profit
    margins
  • FDB and McKesson set out to change the
    calculation of WAC (the price that McKesson
    allegedly paid from drug manufacturers) from AWP
    minus 20 to AWP minus 25 resulting in higher
    profits for McKessons customers
  • This increased the profit margin that pharmacies
    (McKessons customers) were able to make
    regardless of the WAC. This resulted in higher
    prices for all payers both public and private.

4
Historical Facts
  • In 2007, it was determined by a Federal Court
    that FDB and McK did indeed conspire to fix AWP
    prices.
  • FDB agreed to no longer publish the AWP price
    within two years and agreed, along with Medispan,
    to roll back their AWP to pre-2000 percentages,
    that is 20 off of AWP or
  • 16 2/3 mark up on WAC
  • McKesson now faces repayment penalties of 15
    billion in restitution.
  • The Federal government calculates that they will
    save 4 billion annually with the rolling back of
    pricing

5
Where pricing is moving
  • The implications of this settlement are far
    reaching for pharmacies and PBMs since AWP is the
    basis for most of drug pricing that occurs today
  • An alternative means of pricing needs to be
    established which can provide greater clarity
  • PBMs, retail, specialty and mail order pharmacies
    are scrambling to add language to their contracts
    that preserves their current profitability and
    give clients an out clause if a new contract
    cannot be established

6
Important Pricing Terminology
  • Average Wholesale Price (AWP) is a list price
    used for invoices between drug wholesalers and
    pharmacies or other appropriate drug purchasers
    and is typically used as a benchmark for all
    classes of trade without adjustment for
    discounts, rebates, purchasing allowances, or
    other forms of economic consideration. AWP is
    generally set by the wholesaler or drug database
    provider
  • Actual Acquisition Cost (AAC) is a transaction
    price used to describe the price paid by a
    pharmacy or provider when purchasing a drug
    product from either a drug manufacturer or
    wholesaler. AAC is meant to be the net price
    after all forms of discount, rebate, purchasing
    allowances or any other forms of economic
    consideration have been taken into account.
    However, many of the discounts that contribute to
    AAC are considered proprietary and confidential
    by drug manufacturers.
  • Average Manufacturer Price (AMP) is the average
    price paid to a manufacturer by retail pharmacies
    or by wholesalers for drugs that will be sold to
    retail pharmacies
  • Average Selling Price (ASP) is the average price
    that CMS uses to determine the volume-weighted
    price it pays to physicians for certain
    injectible or infusion type drugs for certain.
    The reimbursement is generally 106 of the
    determined price
  • Estimated Acquisition Cost (EAC) is the price
    that states pay for their Medicaid drug purchased
    based on a discount from AWP
  • Wholesale Acquisition Cost (WAC) is a list price
    used or invoices between drug manufacturers and
    wholesalers and is typically used as a benchmark
    for all classes of trade without adjustment for
    discounts, rebates, purchasing allowances, or
    other forms of economic consideration.
  • Maximum Allowable Cost (MAC) is a proprietary
    list of drugs, most commonly generic drugs, used
    by PBMs or health plans to determine the cost of
    drug reimbursement to a Client regardless of the
    Actual Acquisition Cost

7
What happens if AWP disappears...
  • The entire drug pricing industry is built on some
    form of pricing using AWP
  • Retail pharmacies use AWP to determine the
    discounts they give to third party payers and to
    determine their profitability
  • Retail pharmacies also use this benchmark to
    determine their Usual and Customary price that
    they charge cash paying patients without
    insurance
  • The Usual and Customary price also comes into
    play in the calculation of reimbursement between
    retail and mail pharmacies and PBMs
  • The contract between PBMs and pharmacy providers
    generally stipulate that the lowest price
    including the pharmacies usual and customary
    price applies to the reimbursement of drug claims
  • Many PBMs increase their profitability by
    creating a spread between what they collect
    from the payer and what they pay the pharmacy
  • This disparity can account for a large portion of
    the profitability of a PBM that uses pricing
    spread due mainly to the introduction of highly
    utilized generic versions of blockbuster brand
    name drugs and the price difference between the
    AWP and the Actual Acquisition Cost of many
    generic drugs.
  • The loss of benchmark AWP means even more
    transparency in pricing and loss of profitability
    on the dispensing of generic drugs this is most
    evident in cases where the AWP is high and the
    Actual Acquisition Cost is low, sometimes by as
    much as 98.

8
Alternative Pricing MethodologiesASP
  • CMS has established Average Sales Price (ASP) as
    the basis for reimbursement of physicians who
    prescribed and administer drugs (mostly oncology)
    in their office or infusion suites
  • ASP is based on the drugs actual selling price,
    which includes almost all forms of rebates and
    discounts reported to CMS.
  • ASP has proven to be substantially lower than
    AWP. Medicare Part B injectibles and infusions
    are priced at 106 of ASP. This has saved CMS
    800,000,000 annually.
  • ASP more accurately reflects the true cost of
    purchasing prescription drugs, including
    manufacturer-provided rebates, charge backs, and
    other discounts to purchasers
  • This pricing however, can be discriminatory
    because it is volume based and affects those who
    cannot buy in large quantity over those who
    cannot
  • ASP severely cuts into the physicians
    profitability when performing in-office
    administration
  • Consequently, oncologists may begin sending their
    patients to hospital infusion facilities
    ultimately increasing payers costs
  • The issue with ASP pricing, as well as other
    alternative pricing methodologies is the means of
    determining the actual price are ill-defined and
    the appropriateness of such a price, like AWP,
    will hinge on the manner in which it is
    calculated, reported, and employed

9
Alternative Pricing MethodologiesAMP
  • The introduction of Actual Manufacturer Pricing
    (AMP) was set to become the standard of pricing
    for Medicare Part D, however on May 22, 2006, CMS
    Administrator, Mark McClellan, postponed the
    introduction of AMP pricing and retained the use
    of AWP pricing to the delight of retail
    pharmacists whose already eroding margins were in
    danger of being decreased even more.
  • AMP is the price set by the drug manufacturer and
    the price at which they sell to wholesalers or
    pharmacies. AMP may equal WAC but is often times
    less
  • Wholesalers then sell the drugs to retail
    pharmacies at either cost or WAC plus a
    percentage mark up or list less which is AWP
    minus a percentage
  • The price at which pharmacies purchase drugs from
    wholesalers is then considered their Actual
    Acquisition Cost
  • The retail pharmacy then sells their drugs and
    services to consumers at their cost (AMPAAC if
    they buy direct from manufacturer) plus a profit
    to uninsured consumers (the UC). To insureds,
    they charge a negotiated discount off of AWP
    which is now considered the ingredient cost
    plus an appropriate dispensing fee for filling
    the prescription.

10
Conclusions
  • The proprietary nature of drug rebates and charge
    backs masks the true cost of many drugs
  • The AWP is flawed but so are all other forms of
    pricing that cannot be audited or monitored
  • Although some pricing methodologies may give a
    truer picture of cost most can be manipulated
  • There will be intense pressure to preserve the
    profitability of pricing as it exists today
    otherwise pharmacies and PBMs will see decreases
    in their profitability due to the more
    transparent nature of pricing that will prevail
  • AMP for both brand and generic drugs is perhaps
    the most accurate means of pricing the actual
    cost of a drug as determined by the
    pharmaceutical manufacturer with the ability to
    determine the markups along the distribution path
  • It is evident that AWP is not going to survive
    and that cost plus models will become the new
    standard for pricing drugs
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