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Medicare Part D: CMS Should Monitor Effects of Rebates on Drug Coverage and Spending

GAO-23-107056 Published: Sep 19, 2023. Publicly Released: Sep 19, 2023.
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Fast Facts

This testimony discusses the key role of Medicare Part D drug coverage in giving beneficiaries access to innovative drug treatments. Coverage is provided by private insurance plans that vary in their costs and lists of covered drugs—known as "formularies."

Drug makers may give plans rebates in exchange for preferred placement over competitors on formularies. The rebates may lower premiums, but they don't reduce beneficiaries' payments for the drugs.

We found that plans paid less for highly rebated drugs than beneficiaries did.

We previously recommended that Medicare monitor how rebates affect formularies, beneficiaries, and more.

A prescription drug vial on its side with pills spilling out of it, with other upright vials in the background.

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Highlights

What GAO Found

GAO found plan sponsors—private companies that provide voluntary Medicare Part D prescription drug coverage—received $48.6 billion in rebates from drug manufacturers in 2021. Three therapeutic drug classes accounted for 73 percent of rebates: (1) endocrine metabolic agents, including antidiabetic drugs; (2) blood modifiers, including anti-stroke drugs; and (3) respiratory agents, including anti-asthma drugs.

Beneficiary use of highly rebated drugs had different spending implications for plan sponsors, beneficiaries, and Medicare. In general, rebates may reduce plan sponsor payments for drugs with a higher gross cost to an amount lower than the payment for a competing drug with a lower cost. This may lower Medicare drug spending, as its plan sponsor payments are based on drug costs after rebates. However, rebates do not lower individual beneficiary payments for drugs, as these are based on the gross cost of the drug before accounting for rebates. Thus drugs with higher gross costs generally result in higher beneficiary payments relative to payments for competing drugs with lower gross costs. GAO found payments by beneficiaries were more than plan sponsor payments, after accounting for rebates, for 79 of the 100 drugs receiving the most rebates.

Medicare Part D Expenditures by Beneficiaries and Plan Sponsors, after Rebates, for the 79 Highest-Rebated Drugs Where Beneficiaries Paid More than Plan Sponsors, 2021

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) uses drug rebate data to help ensure its plan sponsor payments are accurate, but CMS officials stated they do not use this data in its oversight of plan formularies. CMS conducts an annual clinical formulary review, which includes reviewing if formularies include commonly prescribed drug classes. GAO found that rebates may influence formulary design in ways that could affect beneficiary access for certain drugs. CMS officials told GAO that an evaluation of rebate information is unnecessary given its clinical formulary review, and that CMS is statutorily prohibited from interfering with drug manufacturer and plan sponsor negotiations. However, monitoring rebate and expenditure data would not require CMS to interfere with negotiations between plan sponsors and manufacturers, and it could provide CMS and Congress insight on the extent to which rebates' influence on formularies could discourage enrollment of certain beneficiaries. Such monitoring of rebates will be particularly important as the agency implements the provisions of the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022, which will change Part D plan sponsor, beneficiary, and Medicare drug spending responsibility and may affect formulary design and rebates.

Why GAO Did This Study

This testimony summarizes the information contained in GAO's September 2023 report, entitled Medicare Part D: CMS Should Monitor Effects of Rebates on Plan Formularies and Beneficiary Spending (GAO-23-105270).

For more information, contact John E. Dicken at (202) 512-7043 or DickenJ@gao.gov

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BeneficiariesDrug pricesDrugsFederal spendingMedicareMedicare beneficiariesMedicare spendingPharmacyPharmacy benefit managersPrescription drugsPrice inflation