ECONOMICS OF THE PHARMACEUTICAL
INDUSTRY
25th March 2004
Jon SussexOffice of Health Economics
www.ohe.org
Agenda
1. The supply side – R&D
2. Demand for medicines
3. NICE – the cost-effectiveness ‘4th hurdle’
4. Regulating medicine prices
Characteristics of Medicines Markets
• Supply is R&D intensive, which implies:– Intellectual property rights (patents)– Long lead times– High risk– Dynamic competition as important as static– Generic competition after patent expiry
• Demand is regulated – governments and social insurers are major buyers of medicines
• Prices are regulated
Supply Side – Main Characteristics (1)
• Patents are an incentive for dynamic efficiency – by promising temporary monopoly if successful
• Patents last 20 years; first 9-11 of which are spent getting the medicine to market, i.e. research & development (R&D)
• Commercial success in R&D-based companies depends on finding ‘blockbusters’
Supply Side – Main Characteristics (2)
• Average R&D cost of a new medicine up to launch is $800 million
• Includes costs of failures
• Out of pocket costs ≈ 50%
• Opportunity cost of capital ≈ 50%
• Only ≈ 30% of launched medicines earn revenues that exceed their lifetime costs
Phase III
Development research
Discovery and Development of a New MedicineDiscovery and Development of a New Medicine
Final patent application
Marketing application
Attrition rates
Cost
Post-mktng devel
3000 + patients
Phase IV
5,000
8-15 4-8 2-3 1 1
$800M
0
Chemical development
Pharmaceutical development
Long-term animal testing
Toxicology and pharmacokinetic studies
Source: CMR International
1993
Discovery research
Investigational new drug
application
1990
Phase I
Phase II
SynthesisBiological testing
& pharmacological
screening
50-100 voluns
200-400 patients
1999
Marketing approval product launch
2001
Regulatory review
Regulations
Time (years)
Phases of drug
development
Basic researc
h
Clinical phases
Cash Flow for a Successful Medicine
Launch
Patent expiry
£ p.a. +
_
0Time
Supply Side – Main Characteristics (3)
• R&D costs are sunk (global) joint costs
• R&D costs ≈ 17% of pharmaceutical sales p.a.
But ≈ 31% of costs on net present value basis
• => (even long-run) marginal cost << average cost
• => Price discrimination (based on Ramsey rule?) if non-linear pricing is impractical
Parallel trade
Pharmaceutical Sales as % of GDP 1998-2002
0.74%
0.84%
0.88%
0.95%
1.02%
1.10%
1.12%
1.32%
1.34%
1.34%
1.88%
0.00% 0.50% 1.00% 1.50% 2.00%
Netherlands
Switzerland
United Kingdom
Australia
Sweden
Germany
Canada
Italy
J apan
Spain
France
USA *
1998 1999 2000 2001 2002
Types of Medicines
Original brand Branded Unbranded OTCs*
On-patent Off-patent generics generics
NHS
Private
* OTCs = over the counter (i.e. non-prescription) medicines
Demand Side Characteristics
Chooses Consumes Pays
Normal market
Consumer Consumer Consumer
Prescriptionmedicines market
Prescriber Patient Government / insurer
Measures Affecting Prescriber Price Sensitivity
• Primary Care Trust budgets
• Practice budgets and prescribing incentive schemes
• Provision of information (PACT, NICE guidance, pharmaceutical advisers, etc.)
• Generic prescribing targets
National Institute for Clinical Excellence
• Covers England & Wales
• Two main outputs:
1. Technology appraisals
2. Clinical guidelines
Technology Appraisal Criteria
• The Institute and Appraisal Committee will have regard to:
– the broad clinical priorities of the Secretary of State for Health and the Welsh Assembly Government
– the degree of clinical need of patients with the condition
– the broad balance of benefits and costs
– any guidance from the Secretary of State for Health and the Welsh Assembly Government on the resources likely to be available and on such other matters as they think fit
– the effective use of available resources
NICE’s Guide to Methods of Technology Appraisal
• Below a most plausible incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) of £20,000/QALY, judgments about the acceptability of a technology as an effective use of NHS resources are based primarily on the cost-effectiveness estimate.
• Above a most plausible ICER of £20,000/QALY, judgments about the acceptability of the technology as an effective use of NHS resources are more likely to make more explicit reference to factors including:
– the degree of uncertainty surrounding the calculation of ICERs
– the innovative nature of the technology– the particular features of the condition and population
receiving the technology– where appropriate, the wider societal costs and benefits
• Above an ICER of £30,000/QALY, the case for supporting the technology on these factors has to be increasingly strong
Completed Appraisals (- Jan 2004)
• 75 (including re-appraisals), of which 52 have been of pharmaceuticals:
– restrictions in 32 appraisals e.g. Alzheimer’s drugs recommended in patients with mini
mental state examination>12 e.g. zanamivir, oseltamivir recommended in at-risk
patients with influenza
– a technology has been rejected in 13 appraisals e.g. MS drugs anakinra for rheumatoid arthritis (except in a controlled
long term clinical study)
• NICE has also issued 21 clinical guidelines (11 inherited)
Economic Evaluation Elsewhere
• Focused on pharmaceuticals
• Fourth hurdle i.e. reimbursement decisions:
– Public reimbursement: Australia, Baltic countries, Belgium, Canada (British Columbia, Ontario), Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Hungary, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, Russia, Slovenia, Sweden
– US managed care formularies
• Pricing negotiations– Australia, France, Italy, New Zealand
• Advice to health service– England and Wales (NICE), Scotland
• Risk sharing arrangements– Australia, New Zealand, UK (only MS drugs to date)
Why Regulate? - Market Failure
• Public goods and the free-rider problem (e.g. research)
• Externalities– E.g. your vaccination reduces my risk of
catching an infection – E.g. the caring externality: I’m happy if you’re
cared for
• Incomplete or asymmetric information– Moral hazard (= ‘hidden action’)– Selection problem (= ‘hidden information’)– Principal/agent problems
Monopoly Power
• Economies of scale and/or scope – but NB contestability
• Natural (local) monopoly
• Input constraints
• Patents: dynamic efficiency vs static monopoly
Net Value of the Pharmaceutical Industry– Economic Rent
Estimates for 2000:
£ million p.a.
Producer rents (exports & overseas) 500-1,500
Labour rents 80-160
R&D spillovers to other sectors 120-360
Total rent 700-2,000
Terms of trade effect ?
Source: Pharmaceutical Industry Competitiveness Task Force (2001) ‘Value of the Pharmaceutical Industry to the UK Economy’
Options: Types of Regulation
• ‘No regulation’ = Competition Act only
• Profit, i.e. rate of return, control:– Unbanded– Banded
• Price control:– Baskets of products, as with ‘RPI-X’ control of
utilities’ prices– Individual products, e.g. via reference prices, or
‘cost-plus’, or related to therapeutic benefit
1998 Competition Act
• Came into force March 2000• Based on EU Treaty - Articles 81 & 82
• Prohibitions:
– Chapter 1 – Agreements preventing, restricting or distorting competition
– Chapter 2 – Abuse of a dominant market position
• Fines up to 10% of turnover; 3rd parties may sue for damages
Banded Rate of Return Regulation
Target RoR
Outturn RoR > threshold => repay excess
Outturn RoR < threshold => may increase prices
%RoR
£ capital employed
0
▲
▲
▲
▲
▲
▲
RPI-X Regulation of a Basket of ‘n’ Products
w1p11 + w2p1
2 + w3p13 + …….. + wnp1
n
--------------------------------------------------- -1 x 100 ≤ ΔRPI - X
w1p01 + w2p0
2 + w3p03 + …….. + wnp0
n
Where:
wi = weight for product ‘i’ (e.g. quantity sold in period 0)
pti = price of product ‘i’ in period t = 0,1
ΔRPI = % change in retail price index between period 0 and period 1
X = efficiency factor
{
{
Regulation Criteria
• Static efficiency:– Productive efficiency– Allocative efficiency
• Dynamic efficiency
• Benefit to UK plc – economic rent
• Regulatory (administrative) burden
• Equity/other social policy objectives
Exercise
• What, if anything, to regulate?– On- and/or off-patent?– Branded and/or unbranded?– Prescribed and/or over-the-counter?– Sales to NHS only, or all UK sales?
• If so, how?– Rate of return control, unbanded– Rate of return control, banded– Price control – basket, RPI-X– Price control – individual products, reference prices
• From 3 perspectives:– General public: patients & taxpayers– Government– Industry
Key Questions
1. How price-sensitive are the people making the consumption choices?
2. How much competition is there between one medicine and another, or between medicines and alternative treatments?
3. Do producers have incentives to keep costs down?
4. Will production and consumption choices become increasingly distorted over time?
5. Do producers have incentives to invest in the UK, especially in R&D?
6. Would the regulatory system be costly for the regulator to administer and the companies to comply with?
Pharmaceutical Price Regulation Scheme 1999
• Have been variants of PPRS since 1960s• Department of Health acts as regulator for whole UK• Objectives of 1999 PPRS:
– Secure the provision of safe and effective medicines for the NHS at reasonable prices
– Promote a strong and profitable R&D-based pharmaceutical industry
– Encourage efficient and competitive development and supply of medicines
• Voluntary – but (unspecified) statutory alternative scheme for firms that opt out
PPRS 1999 (continued)
• Covers all branded medicine sales – on-patent & branded generics – to NHS by companies selling > £1m p.a. to NHS (≈80% of total sales to NHS)
• Return on capital ≥ 29.4% => repay excess to DoH• Return on capital ≤ 8.5% => may apply for price
increase(s) to take RoC to 13.6%• R&D costs allowed up to 20% of sales• Promotion costs allowed up to 7% of sales• Free pricing at launch but no increases then
allowed unless company’ RoC falls to ≤ 8.5%
Multilateral, Ex-manufacturer, Price Comparisonsat Market Exchange Rates
Index UK=100
1998 2000 2002 2002 at 5-yr av ex rates
France 85 83 83 83
Germany 109 94 94 94
Italy 88 82 86 86
Spain 77 70 77 77
UK 100 100 100 100
USA 188 241 194 197
Source: Department of Health (2003) PPRS 7th Report to Parliament
Understanding the methodological issues
• Manufacturers’ prices or final selling price to the payer?• Brands or generics or molecules?• Sample size and selection (value versus volume, degree
of market coverage)• Bilateral versus multilateral• Match single pack, match product form or price per unit
(tablet, DDD, IMS SUs, Kg)?• Volume weights: unweighted, own country (Paasche) or
foreign weights (Laspeyres)?• Choice of exchange rate
• What exactly is the question you are trying to answer?
Pharmaceutical Price Regulation Scheme 1999
• Have been variants of PPRS since 1960s• Department of Health acts as regulator for whole UK• Objectives of 1999 PPRS:
– Secure the provision of safe and effective medicines for the NHS at reasonable prices
– Promote a strong and profitable R&D-based pharmaceutical industry
– Encourage efficient and competitive development and supply of medicines
• Voluntary – but (unspecified) statutory alternative scheme for firms that opt out
PPRS 1999 (continued)
• Covers all branded medicine sales – on-patent & branded generics – to NHS by companies selling > £1m p.a. to NHS (≈80% of total sales to NHS)
• Return on capital ≥ 29.4% => repay excess to DoH• Return on capital ≤ 8.5% => may apply for price
increase(s) to take RoC to 13.6%• R&D costs allowed up to 20% of sales• Promotion costs allowed up to 7% of sales• Free pricing at launch but no increases then
allowed unless company’ RoC falls to ≤ 8.5%