Health Insurers Study New Arthritis Drugs From Monsanto, Merck
Bloomberg News November 17, 1998, 4:10 p.m. ET
Health Insurers Study New Arthritis Drugs From Monsanto, Merck
San Diego, Nov. 17 (Bloomberg) -- Monsanto Co. and Merck & Co., working to bring new arthritis pills to market, face a challenge convincing health insurers that it's worth paying more for painkillers that could be free of dangerous side effects.
Their success in making that case will determine whether their drugs, the first two in a new class known as Cox-2 inhibitors, will meet analyst expectations for combined annual sales of as much as $5 billion.
The drugs, which promise relief from arthritis pain without the risk of dangerous gastric bleeding, are likely to be sold at much higher prices than existing painkillers such as Roche Holdings Ltd.'s Naprosyn and Novartis AG's Voltaren. Managed-care companies are already asking whether they are worth the money.
''They don't provide additional pain relief,'' said Robert Seidman, WellPoint Health Networks Inc.'s vice president for pharmacy. ''The majority of patients don't have a problem with gastric upset, so there's no reason to pay $4 a day when you can pay $4 a month.''
While the drugmakers say they've yet to decide how they will price the new treatments, they are already talking up the benefits of these medicines.
Researchers from Monsanto and Merck last week presented data on trials of the Cox-2s at a meeting of the American College of Rheumatology, the world's largest annual gathering of arthritis specialists.
The new drugs seek to target an enzyme linked to pain and swelling, cyclooxygenase-2, without hampering a related enzyme that helps protect the stomach from the acid it contains.
Older Patients
The drugs might be good for patients taking drugs that predispose them to bleeding, Seidman said. Many older people take such drugs, including DuPont's Coumadin, to prevent heart attacks.
''If you're over 65, you can get the drug. If you have rheumatoid arthritis, you can get the drug,'' Seidman said. ''If you're out playing softball and you hurt your knee, you don't get the drug.''
Brendan Healy, a health-care analyst at USAA Investment Management Company, said he does expect the Cox-2 drugs to raise costs for managed-care companies. USAA owns shares in both Merck and Monsanto.
The drugs are largely expected to be used in place of non- prescription medications for which managed-care companies don't pay, said Healy, who follows managed-care companies including Aetna Inc. and PacifiCare Health Systems Inc. and some drugmakers.
The effect will likely be most pronounced in managed-care companies with a heavy concentration of customers on Medicare, the government health program for the elderly, Healy said.
Cost vs Benefit
''My guess initially is that it's going to cost more than the benefits,'' Healy said. ''Arthritis isn't life threatening. It's more a lifestyle type of thing -- you don't want to be in pain all the time.''
Kaiser Permanente, the No. 1 U.S. operator of health maintenance organizations, is drafting general guidelines for the use of Celebrex and Merck's similar drug, called Vioxx.
Kaiser will likely only pay for the drugs for patients most at risk, said David Campen, a rheumatologist who heads Kaiser's formulary committee for Northern California.
''The issue is, to what degree do you spend to obtain a benefit,'' Campen said. ''If we did a head scan of everybody in
the program every year, we'd pick up brain tumors. Are employer groups that pay us willing to fund that sort of screening? Of course not.''
Monsanto, which is scheduled to appear Dec. 1 before a Food and Drug Administration panel studying its application for approval of its Cox-2, dubbed Celebrex, or celecoxib, may try to persuade insurers that they could save money by footing the bill for its new drug.
Risks of Existing Drugs
Though the company declined to discuss its plans for marketing the drug to insurers, a press release issued last week pointed out concerns about the safety of existing arthritis drugs -- known as non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, or NSAIDs.
NSAIDs include Roche's Toradol, American Home Products Corp.'s Orudis and SmithKline Beecham Plc's Relafen.
Recent research has found that upper gastrointestinal complications from NSAID use lead to some 107,000 hospitalizations and 16,500 deaths each year in the U.S., according to Monsanto.
Managed-care companies also are looking at whether to pay for new treatments for rheumatoid arthritis, a potentially crippling form of the disease. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration this month approved Enbrel, which was developed by Immunex Corp., a biotech company majority owned by American Home Products Corp.
Bioengineered Drugs
Bioengineered drugs are generally more expensive than traditional pharmaceuticals like the Cox-2s because they're tougher to develop and manufacture.
The wholesale cost of Immunex's Enbrel, which last week won U.S. approval, is about $11,700 a year, versus about $3,500 for the more toxic generic drug methotrexate, now the standard of care for the disease, the company said.
''You've got to balance the cost difference with therapies that are much more targeted -- giving them fewer side effects -- and are able to deliver much more than traditional pharmaceuticals,'' said Peggy Phillips, Immunex senior vice president for pharmaceutical development. ''It's all about value.''
--Jim Finkle in Washington, Marion Gammill and Kerry Dooley in |