Fraud and Abuse; Removal of Safe Harbor Protection for Rebates Involving Prescription Pharmaceuticals and Creation of New Safe Harbor Protection for Certain Point-of-Sale Reductions in Price on Prescription Pharmaceuticals and Certain Pharmacy Benefit Manager Service Fees, 76666-76731 [2020-25841]
Download as PDF
76666
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
Table of Contents
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Office of Inspector General
42 CFR Part 1001
RIN 0936–AA08
Fraud and Abuse; Removal of Safe
Harbor Protection for Rebates
Involving Prescription
Pharmaceuticals and Creation of New
Safe Harbor Protection for Certain
Point-of-Sale Reductions in Price on
Prescription Pharmaceuticals and
Certain Pharmacy Benefit Manager
Service Fees
Department of Health and
Human Services, Office of Inspector
General (OIG), HHS.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
Discounts for prescription
pharmaceutical products are central to
this final rule, in which the Department
of Health and Human Services
(Department or HHS) amends the safe
harbor regulation concerning discounts.
Amending this regulation changes the
definition of certain conduct that is
protected from liability under the
Federal anti-kickback statute of the
Social Security Act (the Act). New
regulatory text in the amendment
revises the discount safe harbor. By
excluding from the definition of a
discount eligible for safe harbor
protection certain reductions in price or
other remuneration from a manufacturer
of prescription pharmaceutical products
to plan sponsors under Medicare Part D
or pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs)
under contract with them, the
Department modifies the existing
discount safe harbor in particular
contexts. Existing safe harbors otherwise
remain unchanged. Safe harbors are also
created for two additional types of
arrangements. The first protects certain
point-of-sale reductions in price on
prescription pharmaceutical products,
and the second protects certain PBM
service fees.
DATES: This final rule is effective on
January 29, 2021, except for the
amendments to 42 CFR 1001.952(h)(5),
which are effective on January 1, 2022.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Aaron Zajic, (202) 619–0335.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
SUMMARY:
Social Security Act
citation
1128B ........................
1128D ........................
1102 ..........................
VerDate Sep<11>2014
United States Code
citation
42 U.S.C. 1320a–7b
42 U.S.C. 1320a–7d
42 U.S.C. 1302
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose and Need for Regulatory Action
as Determined by the Secretary
B. Summary of the Major Provisions
i. Discount Safe Harbor
ii. Point-of-Sale Reductions in Price for
Prescription Pharmaceutical Products
Safe Harbor
iii. PBM Service Fees Safe Harbor
II. Background
A. The Anti-Kickback Statute and Safe
Harbors
B. Summary of the Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking
III. Summary of Public Comments and
Responses
A. General
i. Antitrust
ii. Transparency
iii. Relationship to Part D
(a) Non-Interference
(b) Impact on Part D Program
iv. Medicaid
v. Commercial Market
vi. Value-Based Arrangements
vii. Enforcement Issues
viii. State Law Issues
ix. Other Legal Issues
x. Formularies
(a) Formulary Placement
(b) Impact on Formulary
xi. Impact on List Price
xii. Definitions
xiii. Comments Outside the Scope of
Rulemaking
B. Discount Safe Harbor Amendment
i. Statutory Exception
ii. Effective Dates
iii. Expand to other Federal Health Care
Programs
iv. Scope of Amendment
v. Impact on Volume or Prompt Pay
Discounts
vi. Impact on Beneficiary Access
vii. Additional Safeguards
viii. Alternative Recommendations
C. Safe Harbor for Certain Price Reductions
on Prescription Pharmaceutical Products
i. Point-of-Sale Chargebacks
ii. Reverse Engineering
iii. Common Ownership
iv. Incentives for Point-of-Sale Reduction
in Price
v. During 100 Percent Cost Sharing
vi. Additional Safeguards
D. Safe Harbor for Certain PBM Service
Fees
i. Scope of Protected Fees
ii. Fair Market Value
iii. Take Into Account Volume or Value
iv. Fixed Fees
v. Disclosure Requirement
vi. Scope of Agreement
vii. Statutory Exception and Safe Harbor
for Group Purchasing Organizations
viii. Additional Recommendations
E. Technical Comments
IV. Provisions of the Final Regulation
A. Revision to the Discount Safe Harbor
B. New Safe Harbors
C. Technical Corrections
V. Regulatory Impact Statement
A. Need for Regulation
B. Background on Costs, Benefits, and
Transfers
PO 00000
Frm 00002
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
C. Affected Entities
D. Costs
E. Benefits
F. Transfers
G. Accounting Statement
H. Regulatory Alternatives
I. Regulatory Flexibilities Analysis
VI. Paperwork Reduction Act
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose and Need for Regulatory
Action as Determined by the Secretary
On February 6, 2019, the Department
published a Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking in the Federal Register (84
FR 2340) (Proposed Rule). In that
Proposed Rule, the Secretary set forth
his concerns with the modern
prescription drug distribution model
and, in particular, how the current
rebate-based system may be increasing
financial burdens for beneficiaries. We
refer readers to and incorporate by
reference Section I of the Proposed Rule,
which sets forth in detail the Secretary’s
determination of the purpose and need
for this rulemaking.
The Trump Administration’s
American Patients First blueprint
described a new, more transparent drug
pricing system that would lower high
prescription drug prices and bring down
out-of-pocket costs.1 The blueprint
described four strategies: Boosting
competition, enhancing negotiation,
creating incentives for lower list prices,
and reducing out-of-pocket spending.
On July 24, 2020 the President signed
an Executive Order 2 directing the
Secretary of Health and Human Services
to complete the rulemaking process that
was commenced with the Proposed
Rule. Section 4 of this Executive Order
directs the Secretary of the Department
of Health and Human Services to
confirm—and make public such
confirmation—that the action is not
projected to increase Federal spending,
Medicare beneficiary premiums, or
patients’ total out-of-pocket costs. The
Secretary’s confirmation is available at:
https://www.hhs.gov/about/leadership/
secretary/priorities/drug-prices/
index.html.
This final rule is an important
element to achieving the goals of the
blueprint and the Executive Order and
1 American Patients First: The Trump
Administration Blueprint to Lower Drug Prices and
Reduce Out-of-Pocket Costs, Dep’t Health & Human
Servs. (May 2018), available at https://
www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/
AmericanPatientsFirst.pdf.
2 Executive Order on Lowering Prices for Patients
by Eliminating Kickbacks to Middlemen,
Whitehouse.gov (July 24, 2020), available at https://
www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/
executive-order-lowering-prices-patientseliminating-kickbacks-middlemen/. See 85 FR
45759 (July 29, 2020).
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
also works in concert with other
regulatory provisions finalized by the
Department. For example, this final rule
creates new safe harbor protection for
point-of-sale reductions in price, which
will directly reduce beneficiary out-ofpocket spending at the pharmacy
counter. It also increases price
transparency, which will enable
Medicare beneficiaries to better choose
a plan that best meets their needs. This
final rule addresses a practice that has
increased patient costs at the pharmacy
counter and will create incentives for
drug companies to lower the list prices
of their drugs.
This final rule is also important to
beneficiary and government spending in
Medicare Part D. Part D rebates and
other price concessions grew more than
three times faster than gross drug
expenditures from 2014–2016. Price
concessions, including rebates, have the
potential to reduce Part D costs for the
Federal government, because Part D
plan sponsors subtract their estimated
rebates from their plan bids. Lower plan
bids contribute to lower premiums, and
lower premiums contribute to lower
government spending on premium
subsidies. However, the Proposed Rule
described how rebates also may create a
perverse incentive that rewards
manufacturers for increasing their list
price, while subjecting consumers to
higher out-of-pocket costs. Since
beneficiary out-of-pocket costs are often
calculated based on the list price of the
drug (i.e., before rebates are paid),
beneficiaries pay higher cost-sharing
than they would if discounts were
reflected at the point of sale.
Furthermore, high list prices may result
in more beneficiaries more quickly
reaching the catastrophic phase, where
the Federal government bears 80 percent
of the drug costs and the Part D plans
only cover 15 percent of the drug costs.
The Department is issuing this final
rule to create incentives for
manufacturers to lower their list prices;
reduce the incentives for Part D plans to
choose high-cost, highly rebated drugs
over comparable drugs with lower
prices; lower beneficiary out-of-pocket
spending; and increase transparency to
improve plan choice and program
integrity.
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
B. Summary of the Major Provisions
i. Discount Safe Harbor
In this final rule, we amend 42 CFR
1001.952(h) to remove safe harbor
protection for reductions in price in
connection with the sale or purchase of
prescription pharmaceutical products
from manufacturers to plan sponsors
under Part D, either directly or through
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
PBMs acting under contract with them,
unless the reduction in price is required
by law. We note that reductions in price
negotiated between manufacturers and
plan sponsors under Part D (or through
PBMs under contract with the plan
sponsors) in the form of upfront
discounts, rather than after-sale rebates,
are eligible for protection under the new
safe harbor for point-of-sale reductions
in price for prescription pharmaceutical
products at § 1001.952(cc).
ii. Point-of-Sale Reductions in Price for
Prescription Pharmaceutical Products
Safe Harbor
We are finalizing a new safe harbor at
§ 1001.952(cc) for certain point-of-sale
reductions in price offered by
manufacturers on prescription
pharmaceutical products that are
payable under Medicare Part D or by
Medicaid managed care organizations
(MCOs) that meet certain criteria.
iii. PBM Service Fees Safe Harbor
In this final rule, we create a new safe
harbor at § § 1001.952(dd) for fixed fees
that manufacturers pay to PBMs for
services rendered to the manufacturers
that meet specified criteria.
II. Background
A. The Anti-Kickback Statute and Safe
Harbors
Section 1128B(b) of the Act, the antikickback statute, provides for criminal
penalties for whoever knowingly and
willfully offers, pays, solicits, or
receives remuneration to induce or
reward the referral of business
reimbursable under any of the Federal
health care programs, as defined in
section 1128B(f) of the Act. The offense
is classified as a felony and is
punishable by fines of up to $100,000
and imprisonment for up to 10 years.
Violations of the anti-kickback statute
may also result in the imposition of civil
monetary penalties (CMPs) under
section 1128A(a)(7) of the Act (42 U.S.C.
1320a–7a(a)(7)), program exclusion
under section 1128(b)(7) of the Act (42
U.S.C. 1320a–7(b)(7)), and liability
under the False Claims Act (31 U.S.C.
3729–33).
Congress’s intent in placing the term
‘‘remuneration’’ in the statute in 1977
was to cover the transfer of anything of
value in any form or manner
whatsoever. The statute’s language
makes clear that illegal payments are
prohibited beyond merely ‘‘bribes,’’
‘‘kickbacks,’’ and ‘‘rebates,’’ which were
the three terms used in the original 1972
statute. The illegal payments are
covered by the statute regardless of
whether they are made directly or
PO 00000
Frm 00003
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
76667
indirectly, overtly or covertly, in cash or
in kind, and regardless of the label that
parties may affix to the payment. In
addition, prohibited conduct includes
not only the payment of remuneration
intended to induce or reward referrals of
patients but also the payment of
remuneration intended to induce or
reward the purchasing, leasing, or
ordering of, or arranging for or
recommending the purchasing, leasing,
or ordering of, any good, facility,
service, or item reimbursable by any
Federal health care program.
Because of the broad reach of the
statute, concern was expressed that
some relatively innocuous commercial
arrangements were covered by the
statute and, therefore, potentially
subject to criminal prosecution.3 In
response, Congress enacted section 14 of
the Medicare and Medicaid Patient and
Program Protection Act of 1987, Public
Law 100–93, which specifically requires
the development and promulgation of
regulations, the so-called safe harbor
provisions, that would specify various
payment and business practices that
would not be subject to sanctions under
the anti-kickback statute, even though
they may potentially be capable of
incenting referrals of business for which
payment may be made under a Federal
health care program.
Section 205 of the Health Insurance
Portability and Accountability Act of
1996, Public Law 104–191, established
section 1128D of the Act, which
includes criteria for modifying and
establishing safe harbors. Specifically,
section 1128D(a)(2) of the Act provides
that, in modifying and establishing safe
harbors, the Secretary may consider
whether a specified payment practice
may result in:
• An increase or decrease in access to
health care services;
• an increase or decrease in the
quality of health care services;
• an increase or decrease in patient
freedom of choice among health care
providers;
• an increase or decrease in
competition among health care
providers;
• an increase or decrease in the
ability of health care facilities to provide
services in medically underserved areas
or to medically underserved
populations;
• an increase or decrease in the cost
to Federal health care programs;
• an increase or decrease in the
potential overutilization of health care
services;
3 See, e.g., Medicare and State Health Care
Programs: Fraud and Abuse; OIG Anti-Kickback
Provisions, 56 FR 35952 (July 29, 1991).
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
76668
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
• the existence or nonexistence of any
potential financial benefit to a health
care professional or provider, which
benefit may vary depending on whether
the health care professional or provider
decides to order a health care item or
service or arrange for a referral of health
care items or services to a particular
practitioner or provider; or
• any other factors the Secretary
deems appropriate in the interest of
preventing fraud and abuse in Federal
health care programs.4
Since July 29, 1991, there have been
a series of final regulations published in
the Federal Register establishing safe
harbors in various areas.5 These safe
harbor provisions have been developed
‘‘to limit the reach of the statute
somewhat by permitting certain nonabusive arrangements, while
encouraging beneficial or innocuous
arrangements.’’ 6
Healthcare providers and others may
voluntarily seek to comply with safe
harbors so that they have the assurance
that their business practices will not be
subject to any anti-kickback
enforcement action. In giving the
Department the authority to protect
certain arrangements and payment
practices under the anti-kickback
statute, Congress intended the safe
harbor regulations to be updated
periodically to reflect changing business
4 See also section 1102 of the Act (vesting the
Secretary with the authority to make and publish
rules and regulations, not inconsistent with the Act,
as may be necessary to the efficient administration
of his functions under the Act).
5 Medicare and State Health Care Programs: Fraud
and Abuse; OIG Anti-Kickback Provisions, 56 FR
35952 (July 29, 1991); Medicare and State Health
Care Programs: Fraud and Abuse; Safe Harbors for
Protecting Health Plans, 61 FR 2122 (Jan. 25, 1996);
Federal Health Care Programs: Fraud and Abuse;
Statutory Exception to the Anti-Kickback Statute for
Shared Risk Arrangements, 64 FR 63504 (Nov. 19,
1999); Medicare and State Health Care Programs:
Fraud and Abuse; Clarification of the Initial OIG
Safe Harbor Provisions and Establishment of
Additional Safe Harbor Provisions Under the AntiKickback Statute, 64 FR 63518 (Nov. 19, 1999);
Medicare and State Health Care Programs: Fraud
and Abuse; Ambulance Replenishing Safe Harbor
Under the Anti-Kickback Statute, 66 FR 62979 (Dec.
4, 2001); Medicare and State Health Care Programs:
Fraud and Abuse; Safe Harbors for Certain
Electronic Prescribing and Electronic Health
Records Arrangements Under the Anti-Kickback
Statute, 71 FR 45109 (Aug. 8, 2006); Medicare and
State Health Care Programs: Fraud and Abuse; Safe
Harbor for Federally Qualified Health Centers
Arrangements Under the Anti-Kickback Statute, 72
FR 56632 (Oct. 4, 2007); Medicare and State Health
Care Programs: Fraud and Abuse; Electronic Health
Records Safe Harbor Under the Anti-Kickback
Statute, 78 FR 79202 (Dec. 27, 2013); and Medicare
and State Health Care Programs: Fraud and Abuse;
Revisions to the Safe Harbors Under the AntiKickback Statute and Civil Monetary Penalty Rules
Regarding Beneficiary Inducements, 81 FR 88368
(Dec. 7, 2016).
6 Medicare and State Health Care Programs: Fraud
and Abuse; OIG Anti-Kickback Provisions, 56 FR at
35958.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
practices and technologies in the
healthcare industry.
B. Summary of the Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking
On February 6, 2019, we published
the Proposed Rule setting forth certain
proposed amendments to the safe
harbors under the anti-kickback statute.
The Proposed Rule also provided
substantial background information to
explain why the Department believes
these amendments are necessary.
With respect to the proposed
amendment to the existing discount safe
harbor, we explained that it was
designed to address evolving business
arrangements and align with the
statutory exception’s intent to encourage
price competition that benefits the
Medicare and Medicaid programs.7 We
also emphasized our longstanding
position that a discount must be in the
form of a reduction in the price of a
good or service based on an arms-length
transaction. With respect to rebates, we
explained the regulatory history
regarding our treatment of ‘‘rebates’’
under the discount safe harbor. Finally,
we noted that the discount safe harbor
was finalized in 1991 and has not been
updated since 2002, and we highlighted
that both the Medicare Part D program
and comprehensive regulations
governing Medicaid managed care
delivery systems were enacted in the
intervening years. For a more
comprehensive discussion of why these
amendments to the discount safe harbor
are necessary, we incorporate by
reference and refer readers to the
discussion in the Proposed Rule.8
The Proposed Rule also identified
certain specific harms that may be
caused by the current rebate framework.
First, some beneficiaries experience
increased financial burdens. For
example, if a beneficiary is paying
coinsurance on a drug subject to a
rebate, the beneficiary pays a percentage
of a price that more closely resembles
the list price than the net price. Second,
the Proposed Rule explained that
rebates may be harming Federal health
care programs by increasing list prices,
preventing competition to lower drug
prices, discouraging the use of lowercost brand or generic drugs, and
skewing formulas used to determine
pharmacy reimbursement or Medicaid
rebates.9 Finally, the Proposed Rule
expressed concerns about a lack of
transparency in the current system.
With respect to rebates, we explained
that OIG work showed that some Part D
7 54
FR 3092.
FR 2345–47.
9 84 FR 2343.
plan sponsors had limited information
about rebate contracts and rebate
amounts that their PBMs negotiated. A
lack of transparency could create a
potential program integrity vulnerability
because compliance with program rules
may be more difficult to verify. We also
sought to address a lack of transparency
to health plans when the health plans’
PBMs are being paid by manufacturers
for services that the PBMs render to
manufacturers related to pharmacy
benefit management services that the
PBM furnishes to the health plans.10
To address the Department’s concerns
with the current rebate system, the
Department proposed and solicited
comments on three revisions to the safe
harbors. First, the Department proposed
to amend the discount safe harbor at 42
CFR 1001.952(h) to exclude from the
definition of ‘‘discount’’ at
§ 1001.952(h)(5) all price reductions
from manufacturers on prescription
pharmaceutical products in connection
with their sale to or purchase by plan
sponsors under Medicare Part D,
Medicaid MCOs, or PBMs acting under
contract with plan sponsors under
Medicare Part D or Medicaid MCOs,
unless the reduction in price is required
by law (e.g., rebates under the Medicaid
Drug Rebate Program). The Proposed
Rule also proposed definitions at
§ 1001.952(h)(6)–(10) of the terms
‘‘manufacturer,’’ ‘‘wholesaler,’’
‘‘pharmacy benefit manager,’’
‘‘prescription pharmaceutical product,’’
and ‘‘Medicaid Managed Care
Organization.’’
Second, the Proposed Rule proposed
to add a new safe harbor at
§ 1001.952(cc) to protect reductions in
price between the entities that would be
removed from the discount safe harbor
at § 1001.952(h) if such reductions in
price are given at the point of sale and
meet certain other criteria. As proposed,
this safe harbor would protect
reductions in price on prescription
pharmaceutical products offered to plan
sponsors under Medicare Part D,
Medicaid MCOs, or through a PBM
acting under contract with either if: (1)
The reduction in price is set in advance;
(2) the reduction in price does not
involve a rebate, unless the full value of
the price reduction is accomplished
through chargebacks or is a rebate
required by law; and (3) the reduction
in price is completely reflected in the
price the pharmacy charges to the
beneficiary at the point of sale.
Finally, the Proposed Rule proposed
to add a second new safe harbor at
§ 1001.952(dd) specifically designed to
protect certain fees a pharmaceutical
8 84
PO 00000
Frm 00004
Fmt 4701
10 84
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
FR 2349–50.
30NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
manufacturer pays to a PBM for services
rendered to the manufacturer that relate
to the PBM’s arrangements to provide
pharmacy benefit management services
to health plans. As proposed, the safe
harbor would protect a payment a
pharmaceutical manufacturer makes to a
PBM for services the PBM provides to
the manufacturer, for the manufacturer’s
benefit, when those services relate to the
PBM’s arrangements to provide
pharmacy benefit management services
to health plans. To receive protection,
the proposed safe harbor would require
that: (1) The services and compensation
be set out in a written agreement; (2) the
compensation be consistent with fair
market value in an arm’s-length
transaction; be a fixed payment, not
based on a percentage of sales; and not
be determined in a manner that takes
into account the volume or value of any
referrals or business otherwise
generated between the parties, or
between the manufacturer and the
PBM’s health plans, for which payment
may be made in whole or in part under
Medicare, Medicaid, or other Federal
health care programs; and (3) the PBM
makes annual written disclosures to
each health plan with which it contracts
regarding the services rendered to each
pharmaceutical manufacturer related to
the PBM’s arrangements to furnish
pharmacy benefit management services
to the health plan, and make such
disclosures to the Secretary upon
request.
The Department solicited comments
on a range of topics in the course of
describing the new proposed safe
harbors. For instance, for the proposed
safe harbor for point-of-sale reductions
in price, the Proposed Rule solicited
comments on the sufficiency of the
proposed definitions as well as any
effects of the proposed safe harbor on
competition to the extent pharmacies
have sufficient data to reverse engineer
the manufacturer’s or the PBM’s
discount structure. For the proposed
safe harbor for certain PBM service fees,
the Proposed Rule solicited comments
on the interpretation of pharmacy
benefit management services and the
transparency-related requirements that
would be a condition of the safe harbor.
III. Summary of Public Comments and
Responses
We received responsive comments
from approximately 26,000 distinct
commenters, including, but not limited
to, individuals, pharmaceutical
manufacturers, pharmacies, PBMs,
wholesalers, plan sponsors under Part
D, Medicaid MCOs, and trade
associations representing various
individuals and entities. Many of these
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
individuals and entities provided
comments on multiple topics.
Commenters generally agreed with the
Department on the need to lower out-ofpocket costs for consumers on
prescription drugs, but they diverged in
terms of whether they supported or
opposed the Proposed Rule. Comments
from both those who opposed the rule
and those who supported the rule
recommended certain changes or
requested certain clarifications. We
appreciate the robust feedback from the
commenters. We have divided the
public comment summaries and our
responses into discrete sections: The
first section covers general comments
and responses that may apply to more
than one of our proposals, and the
following sections summarize and
respond to the comments specific to our
proposed amendments to the discount
safe harbor and our two new proposed
safe harbors.
A. General
i. Antitrust
Comment: Several commenters were
supportive of the Proposed Rule and
contended that antitrust laws do not
affect the Proposed Rule or that the
Proposed Rule will not lead to anticompetitive discriminatory pricing. A
commenter explained that antitrust laws
related to differential pricing apply
equally to upfront discounts as they do
to retrospective rebates. Another
commenter explained that the Proposed
Rule will result in lower cost-sharing
amounts for beneficiaries at the point of
sale and will allow for the
reestablishment of the nexus between
price concessions on a product and the
actual price paid by consumers for that
product.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support for the Proposed
Rule.
Comment: Several commenters
addressed whether and how the policies
underlying the Proposed Rule intersect
with the Robinson-Patman Act. Some
commenters that opposed the proposal
suggested that the risk of liability under
the Robinson-Patman Act will hinder
manufacturers’ ability to negotiate upfront discounts. Several of these
commenters claimed that the current
rebate system resulted from a settlement
in the In re Brand Name Prescription
Drugs litigation, in which pharmacies
sued brand-name prescription drug
manufacturers and wholesalers for
discriminatory pricing practices that
favored large, institutional purchasers.
These commenters pointed out that
under the terms of the 1996 settlement,
manufacturers agreed to give
PO 00000
Frm 00005
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
76669
pharmacies the same opportunity to
earn the favorable discounts given to
institutional purchasers, provided that
the pharmacies can demonstrate an
ability to affect market share in the same
or similar manner as the institutional
purchasers. The commenters argued that
the Department failed to consider this
settlement, and stated that absent
Congressional action to amend or repeal
the Robinson-Patman Act,
manufacturers will move to offering
lower, unvaried discounts.
Other commenters, however,
contended that the antitrust laws do not
pose an obstacle to or hinder
implementation of the Proposed Rule
and that the Proposed Rule would, in
fact, further the ultimate goal of
antitrust law, which is to promote
competition. For instance, one
commenter pointed out that the
antitrust laws apply equally to up front
discounts and retrospective rebates, and
the In re Brand Name Prescription
Drugs litigation did not result in any
change in the ability of a prescription
drug manufacturer to offer an upfront
discount, or create any precedent
suggesting that upfront discounts are
illegal and retrospective rebates are
legal. Another comment similarly
questioned the conclusion that moving
from a world of PBM rebates to pointof-sale chargebacks would result in anticompetitive discriminatory pricing and
pointed out that the Proposed Rule
would result in individuals paying less
at the pharmacy counter. Yet another
commenter contended that transitioning
away from rebates to upfront discounts
achieves the intended goals of the 1996
settlement.
Response: The Department is not
persuaded that the threat of RobinsonPatman Act litigation will dissuade
manufacturers from offering procompetitive price concessions in the
form of upfront discounts. In fact,
comments submitted by the major
association representing pharmaceutical
manufacturers rejected the notion that
the Robinson-Patman Act prevents
prescription pharmaceutical
manufacturers from offering upfront
discounts and pointed out that rebates
do not occupy a unique position
insulated from antitrust scrutiny. The
Department agrees that neither the 1996
settlement nor the subsequent court
rulings made any distinction between
retrospective rebates and upfront
discounts and did not result in any
decision suggesting that the former are
less problematic than the latter. Both
retrospective rebates and upfront
discounts, to the extent that they are
true price concessions, could
theoretically be applied in a
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
76670
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
discriminatory fashion. The Department
does not administer antitrust law.
However, as the Department
understands its application, whether the
price discrimination is achieved by
something labeled a ‘‘rebate’’ versus
something labeled a ‘‘discount’’ would
not be relevant for purposes of
Robinson-Patman Act liability.
Comment: A commenter requested,
and believed it would be helpful for, the
Antitrust Division at the Federal Trade
Commission (FTC) or Department of
Justice (DOJ) to analyze the Proposed
Rule and provide a Competition
Advisory Opinion upon which
stakeholders could rely.
Response: Parties that want greater
certainty may request an advisory
opinion from the FTC.
ii. Transparency
Comment: Numerous commenters
reiterated the need for greater
transparency in our current rebate
system, with various commenters
asserting that the proposed point-of-sale
reduction in price safe harbor would
increase transparency and ensure that
patients benefit from price reductions. A
commenter stated that greater
transparency would enable independent
pharmacies to negotiate more favorable
terms with PBMs and health plan
sponsors and inform patients about their
drug coverage options, while another
commenter stated that greater
transparency may put plan sponsors in
a better position to exert more influence
to lower net drug spending and PBM
administrative fees. Another commenter
asserted that transparency surrounding
discounts would be likely to lower list
prices and reduce misaligned
incentives. This commenter also stated
that patients who know the amount of
a plan’s discount for a product would be
in a better position to select the right
plan. Another commenter asserted that
this increased transparency surrounding
the rebates provided to PBMs and plans
would place significant pressure on
pharmaceutical manufacturers to lower
list prices, stating that manufactures
would no longer be able to point to
rebates as the reason for high drug
prices.
Conversely, other commenters stated
that the changes reflected in the
Proposed Rule would not increase
transparency. Specifically, some
commenters asserted that
pharmaceutical manufacturers establish
drug prices, and that if the rule aims to
create transparency, then it should
apply to all parties, including
pharmaceutical manufacturers, instead
of only PBMs and health plans. Another
commenter asserted that health plans
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
already provide meaningful
transparency surrounding rebates
through mechanisms like direct and
indirect remuneration (DIR) reporting to
CMS, while pharmaceutical
manufacturers do not systematically
disclose their rebates. Another
commenter opposed the proposed pointof-sale reductions in price safe harbor
and stated that as long as rebates are a
part of our drug pricing system, there
will still be confusion among patients
and plan sponsors surrounding drug
prices.
Response: We appreciate support
from commenters who agree that
applying manufacturer reductions in
price to drug prices at the point of sale
would increase transparency.
Additionally, we concur that greater
transparency surrounding price
reductions can enable stakeholders in
the drug supply chain to support
patients in selecting drugs and plans
that minimize their out-of-pocket costs
and can lead to lower drug prices.
Many publications document that
many Medicare beneficiaries do not
make what might appear to be the best
decisions when choosing a Part D plan.
If the plan premium is the monthly cost
of having access to drugs that best meet
a beneficiary’s needs, then the
beneficiary should have visibility into
what kind of discounts are being
negotiated on their behalf.
While we understand that plan
sponsors under Part D already have DIR
reporting requirements, we believe that
by excluding certain rebates paid by
manufacturers from the discount safe
harbor and creating a new safe harbor
for point-of-sale reductions in price,
there will be enhanced transparency
regarding reductions in price that
pharmaceutical manufacturers negotiate
with plan sponsors under Medicare Part
D and PBMs under contract with these
plans, especially for the consumer, and
create new incentives for manufacturers
to lower drug prices.
Comment: Other commenters asserted
that blaming PBMs for the lack of
transparency in the rebate system is
misdirected. A PBM commenter stated
that its plan sponsors see their
respective drug costs at a unit cost level,
as well as the savings the PBM generates
for plan sponsors, including rebates,
and that its plan sponsors have full
audit rights to ensure complete
transparency. Another commenter noted
that PBMs already offer transparent
contracts that allow many large
employers to pull through some of the
value of negotiated rebates to reduce
enrollees’ drug-related costs, while
another commenter noted that the
Proposed Rule did not account for these
PO 00000
Frm 00006
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
innovative and transparent models that
are taking place within the PBM
industry.
Conversely, other commenters
claimed that the PBM market lacks
transparency. Some commenters
indicated that rather than excluding
certain rebates from the discount safe
harbor, OIG should focus on ensuring
that PBMs are completely transparent
with health plans regarding rebate
payments and pass through 100 percent
of all rebate payments to Part D plan
sponsors, with a commenter noting that
increased transparency with respect to
PBM rebates may enable plan sponsors
to retain some of these rebates that can
be used to benefit plan participants and
beneficiaries.
Other commenters discussed the
impact of increased transparency on the
PBM industry generally. Specifically, a
commenter advised OIG to ensure the
proposed transparency requirements on
top of the other regulations that apply
to Medicare and Medicaid will not
unintentionally stifle new entrants in
the PBM market, noting that more
choice in PBMs would benefit patients
and the government. Conversely,
another commenter asserted that greater
transparency will invite competition
from new PBM entrants, such as
nonprofit PBMs and employer selfadministered PBMs.
Response: We understand that some
programmatic mechanisms are already
in place to foster transparency of rebates
and drug prices between PBMs and plan
sponsors and to CMS. PBMs will need
to consider the new requirements in this
final rule and may need to adjust their
operations in order to comply with the
terms of the applicable safe harbor.
However, we are persuaded by the
comments suggesting that the additional
transparency provided by this final rule
would be useful. Further, as stated in
the Proposed Rule, a 2011 evaluation
indicated that certain Part D plan
sponsors had limited information
regarding rebate contracts and rebate
amounts negotiated by their PBMs.11 A
lack of transparency could contribute to
program integrity vulnerabilities by
making compliance with program rules
harder to verify and by allowing hidden
incentives that result in higher list
prices. We believe that excluding
certain rebates paid by manufacturers
from the discount safe harbor and
creating a new safe harbor for point-ofsale reductions in price will increase
transparency, including transparency to
plans and beneficiaries, and improve
alignment of incentives among parties
11 84
FR 2343.
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
that could result in lower list prices and
out-of-pocket costs.
Comment: A commenter
recommended restricting or banning
PBM spread pricing because spread
pricing detracts from the goals of
transparency and fair pricing by
enabling PBMs to profit by charging
plans a higher cost for drugs than they
reimburse to pharmacies and retaining
the difference. To this end, the
commenter recommended that OIG or
the Department implement penalties for
PBMs to discourage this practice and
ensure that the full value of price
reductions is passed on to plans.
Response: The scope of the changes
that we proposed to the discount safe
harbor was limited to remuneration
from pharmaceutical manufacturers to
plan sponsors under Part D, Medicaid
MCOs, and PBMs operating on their
behalf. Comments about profits that
PBMs may retain by negotiating a
difference between what they charge
plans and what they reimburse
pharmacies are beyond the scope of this
rulemaking.
Comment: A commenter suggested
that the healthcare system explore other
policy actions focused on high list
prices, such as prohibiting brand
pharmaceutical companies from
effectively preventing low-cost generic
medications from coming to market.
Other commenters noted that our
current drug pricing system can only be
transparent if beneficiaries are able to
predict their out-of-pocket costs and
recommended locking in the price of
prescription drugs that require
coinsurance or requiring at least one
drug in each class to be subject to a flat
copayment in order to create more
stability.
Response: While we appreciate
commenters’ suggestions for other
actions to address high list prices and
encourage stability in beneficiaries’ outof-pocket costs, such policy initiatives
are outside the scope of this rulemaking.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended various additional
measures to help promote transparency
in the prescription drug supply chain.
Specifically, a commenter’s
recommendations included:
Standardized contract terms relating to
PBM services and compensation;
requiring additional regular disclosures
by PBMs to health plans with which
they contract regarding their business
arrangements with drug manufacturers;
disclosure by PBMs to public programs
and private plans of discount amounts
and other revenue paid to the PBM or
related third parties based on the plan
sponsor’s drug utilization; and an
auditable structure that allows plan
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
sponsors to have a complete picture and
conduct more fulsome analyses of their
drug-related costs and contractual
relationships. Another commenter
emphasized the need for stakeholders in
the prescription drug supply chain to
disclose rebate and discount
information, financial incentive
information, and pharmacy and
therapeutics committee information,
which the commenter asserted would
further improve transparency in this
area. Another commenter stated that to
further transparency, CMS and OIG
should identify, collect, and
disseminate data and information that
would enable the evaluation of the
impact of changes under this rule on
beneficiaries.
Other commenters recommended
requiring prescription drug
manufacturers to be more transparent by
making list prices public, with a
commenter asserting that patient-level
information related to drug pricing must
be transparent, democratized, and open
source.
Another commenter noted that under
the current framework, Medicaid MCOs
may negotiate supplemental rebates
directly with pharmaceutical
manufacturers to minimize costs based
on the net cost to the MCO, but the
lowest net cost product for the MCO
may not always align with the lowest
net cost product for the Medicaid
program. This commenter
recommended mandating transparency
of the unit rebate amount (URA) and
unit rebate offset amount (UROA) to
Medicaid MCOs to help Medicaid MCOs
drive toward the lowest net costs to the
system.
Response: We appreciate these
commenters’ feedback. We note that the
new safe harbor for PBM service fees
requires PBMs to disclose in writing to
each health plan with which it contracts
at least annually the services rendered
to each manufacturer related to the
PBM’s arrangements to furnish
pharmacy benefit management services
to the plan. We are not adopting the
commenter’s recommendation to require
additional regular disclosures by PBMs
to health plans regarding business
arrangements with drug manufacturers.
We believe the requirements under the
PBM service fees safe harbor allow for
appropriate transparency between the
parties in order for the remuneration
protected under the safe harbor to be
sufficiently low risk. We also are not
adopting any of the commenters’ other
recommendations to increase
transparency because they are beyond
the scope of the Proposed Rule and, in
some cases, outside the authorities
under the anti-kickback statute. We are
PO 00000
Frm 00007
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
76671
mindful of the importance of monitoring
the impact of the final rule on
beneficiaries.
iii. Relationship to Part D
a. Non-Interference
Comment: A number of commenters
contended that the Proposed Rule was
an impermissible exercise of the
Secretary’s authority because it violates
the Medicare Part D noninterference
provision, section 1860D–11(i) of the
Act. These commenters asserted the
Proposed Rule seeks to interfere with
how manufacturers and Part D plan
sponsors negotiate and pay for
prescription drugs through the
elimination of rebates and the
prohibition on using formulary
placement as leverage to reduce prices,
which are well-established negotiating
tools. Commenters also asserted that, by
requiring that reductions in price be
applied at the point of sale and not
applied to premiums, the Proposed Rule
violates the prohibition on instituting a
price structure for the reimbursement of
covered Part D Drugs. A commenter
asserted that the proposal, if finalized,
also would interfere in Part D plan
sponsors’ negotiations with pharmacies
by mandating that Part D sponsors
ensure that pharmacy reimbursement is
reduced by the amount of any discounts
received by the pharmacy from the
manufacturer. In addition, multiple
commenters cited CMS rulemakings,
which they concluded previously
interpreted the non-interference clause
as prohibiting the agency from adopting
the policies proposed by this rule and
asserted that the changed statutory
interpretation would require notice and
comment.
Response: This rule does not interfere
in any negotiations between Part D
sponsors, manufacturers, and
pharmacies. This final rule changes the
circumstances under which certain
agreements that implicate the antikickback statute fall within the
protection of a safe harbor. The
parameters of the safe harbor do not
institute a price structure, nor do they
interfere with negotiations between
plans and pharmacies, because they do
not have any bearing on the ultimate
prices negotiated among the parties.
CMS’s longstanding position about the
non-interference provision is that all
aspects of the non-interference
provision must be considered in light of
other statutory requirements to
implement and oversee the Part D
program.12 It has always been the
12 See, e.g., 79 FR 29844, 29874–75 (May 23,
2014).
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
76672
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
Department’s view that the noninterference provision does not exist in
a vacuum and must be read in concert
with Part D statutory obligations in
connection with, for example, pharmacy
network adequacy, consistency in
treatment of drug costs, and the
provision of adequate formularies. It is
no different when one views the noninterference provision in the broader
context of the Secretary’s other statutory
obligations under the Act, including the
mandate to establish and modify safe
harbors. This rule, as it is being
finalized, does not change the
Department’s interpretation of the Part
D non-interference provision.
b. Impact on Part D Program
Comment: Some commenters made a
variety of recommendations to address
pharmacy DIR fees. Other commenters
recommended that OIG not finalize the
Proposed Rule because it would
eliminate DIR.
Response: The administration of
pharmacy DIR fees is outside the scope
of this rulemaking. Nothing in this final
rule changes CMS’s rules with respect to
DIR.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that HHS, CMS, and
Congress reform the Part D program by,
for example: Implementing a rebate
pass-through requirement as part of the
Part D program in lieu of the Proposed
Rule; allowing for greater flexibility in
calculating deductibles; redefining
Average Manufacturer Price (AMP) or
clarifying how point-of-sale price
concessions or chargebacks might apply
to AMP; making adjustments to certain
cost-sharing requirements for partial
point-of-sale rebate and formulary
design options; and permitting
manufacturers to offer copayment and
coinsurance assistance for single-source
drugs.
Response: Comments that request
Congressional action, pertain to changes
to the administration of the Part D
program, or ask for guidance with
respect to Medicaid pricing rules are
outside the scope of this rulemaking.
Manufacturer-sponsored copayment
assistance programs are also outside the
scope of this rulemaking.
Comment: A commenter
recommended that OIG work with the
Department to develop guidance and
procedures for how to identify and
avoid 340B and point-of-sale duplicate
discounts in Part D and Medicaid
managed care prior to implementation
of the proposed safe harbor. For
example, the commenter recommended
similar requirements that the
Department of Defense has
implemented, such as (1) requiring the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
use of a National Council for
Prescription Drug Programs (NCPDP)
modifier to identify 340B transactions
within the new system, or (2) requiring,
in the safe harbor text or otherwise, that
the PBM or other chargeback
administrator must exchange
information and cooperate as necessary
to enable manufacturers to determine
whether any 340B discounts are also
implicated in the transaction. Another
commenter requested confirmation that
manufacturers may continue traditional
duplicate discount avoidance
arrangements and that doing so will not
put the safe-harbored status of a pointof-sale reduction in price arrangement at
risk. The commenter noted that the new
point-of-sale reductions in price safe
harbor should not require that
manufacturers pay chargebacks for Part
D point-of-sale reductions in price when
doing so would generate 340B duplicate
discounts.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
feedback on 340B and the potential for
point-of-sale duplicate discounts in Part
D. Establishment of mechanisms for
avoiding duplicate discounts or
resolving disputes or errors regarding
rebates is outside the scope of this rule,
as is compliance with CMS
requirements relating to Prescription
Drug Event (PDE) reporting for when a
claim is re-processed as a result of such
mechanisms. The point-of-sale
reduction in price safe harbor requires,
as a condition of qualifying for the safe
harbor, that the reduction in price be
completely reflected at the time the
pharmacy dispenses the prescription
pharmaceutical product to the
beneficiary; it does not specifically
require chargebacks. In addition, we
note that a violation of the anti-kickback
statute must be knowing and willful.
Good faith efforts to avoid duplication
of discounts or resolve disputes or
errors, where such practices are not
intending to offer or pay remuneration
to induce or reward purchases of
federally payable goods or services,
likely would not constitute violations.
Comment: Some commenters
recommended that OIG review whether
and explain how the changes proposed
in its Proposed Rule are consistent with
a rule that CMS previously proposed,
‘‘Modernizing Part D and Medicare
Advantage to Lower Drug Prices and
Reduce Out-of-Pocket Expenses.’’ 13
Response: We thank commenters for
their recommendation and note that the
rule we are finalizing here makes certain
changes to the regulatory safe harbors to
the anti-kickback statute, which may
impact business arrangements of parties
13 See
PO 00000
83 FR 62152 (Nov. 30, 2018).
Frm 00008
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
participating in the Part D program but
do not amend any program
requirements.
Comment: A commenter urged CMS
and OIG to advance, in both the final
rule and corresponding CMS-issued
guidance, plan designs or financing
pathways for Medicare Advantage plans
that allow for the continuation of
Medicare Advantage supplemental
benefit programs by offsetting the
reduction in rebates that the commenter
predicted would result from this rule.
Response: This final rule amends the
discount safe harbor and adds two new
safe harbors to specify types of
arrangements that would be protected
from liability under the anti-kickback
statute. Additional guidance on plan
design or financing pathways for
Medicare Advantage plans are outside
the scope of this rule.
Comment: A number of commenters
identified issues related to beneficiary
rights that they asserted will require
rulemaking or guidance in order to
implement the Proposed Rule. These
issues include, but are not limited to:
How CMS would expect plans to apply
formulary and tiering exceptions
policies; how CMS will handle
beneficiary complaints, appeal rights,
and transition fills; application of
percentage price concessions to the
higher-tier drug; how CMS would
expect plans to apply formulary
exceptions when approving a no price
concession drug; what changes will be
reported in the language of the Evidence
of Coverage and model marketing
materials; whether enrollees will be told
the price concession amount at the
point of sale, and how it will be
accounted for in the cost component of
Medication Therapy Management
(MTM) (e.g., might previously qualified
enrollees no longer qualify as they no
longer meet the cost threshold?);
whether a plan’s Advance Notice of
Changes will have to be revised to
reflect changes in rebate status.
Response: To the extent parties elect
to structure arrangements to fit into the
new point-of-sale reduction in price safe
harbor, questions may arise about
implementation. Questions related to
CMS’s administration of the Part D
program, however, are outside the scope
of OIG’s authority and this rulemaking.
We have coordinated with CMS in the
promulgation of this rule and are
informed that their formulary review
processes will continue to protect
beneficiary access and choice. CMS
provides Part D plan sponsors with
guidance related to bidding, formulary
submission, and Medicare Plan Finder
instructions, and will continue to work
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
with plan sponsors to ensure a smooth
transition and minimize disruption.
Comment: Commenters expressed
several concerns about formulary
structure and benefit design, which the
commenters asserted will require
rulemaking or guidance from CMS in
order to implement changes included in
the Proposed Rule, if finalized. For
example, a commenter identified
various issues related to formulary
structure, which the commenter
asserted will require rulemaking or
guidance by CMS in order to implement
the new or amended safe harbors, if
finalized. These included: Any potential
changes to CMS’s formulary review
process; what the potential effects will
be on formularies due to new
arrangements; manufacturers using
alternate National Drug Codes for
existing drugs (e.g., to allow for price
concessions or to reauthorize a branded
drug as generic or biosimilar); what
happens when an LIS enrollee is in
different phases of benefit or tiers of a
formulary; whether the de minimis
premium policy for LIS will be
increased. Commenters also suggested
that CMS finalize its proposal in the
2020 Draft Call Letter to restrict brand
and generic drugs to respective brand
and generic tiers and more actively track
formularies.
Response: As discussed above,
questions about CMS’s administration of
the Part D program (which includes
oversight of policies regarding LIS
beneficiaries) are outside the scope of
OIG’s authority.
Comment: A commenter asked if new
costs associated with the Proposed Rule
(e.g., to update systems, contracts, and
staff call centers) will be included in
administrative costs for purposes of
medical loss ratio compliance. The
commenter stated that plans will need
to collect higher premiums and make
larger claims payments if there is no
exception for new costs.
Response: Whether administrative
costs should be taken into account when
calculating medical loss ratios are
outside the scope of this rulemaking.
Comment: Other commenters
predicted that the proposal may result
in higher premiums for individuals in
self-insured plans. In particular, a
commenter asserted that self-funded
employer group waiver plans (EGWPs)
that enroll Medicare Advantage
beneficiaries use rebate dollars to
reduce premiums and that with fewer
rebate dollars, self-funded EGWPs
would have to increase premiums
substantially for all enrollees by the
amount received in rebates.
Response: The intent of the rule
includes the elimination of the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
distortions in the market that drive up
pharmaceutical list prices for EGWPs as
well as other MA and Part D plans. As
discussed elsewhere in this rule, list
prices have been rising to increase the
rebates. This change will bring
transparency to the plan design and
allow beneficiaries and employers
funding EGWPs to better understand
and negotiate, prior to the effective date
of this rule, the benefits they are paying
for.
Comment: A commenter stated that
MA and Part D plan sponsors should
have additional flexibility regarding
what drugs to exclude from coverage
formularies, what criteria and guidance
to follow for coverage decisions, and
what restrictions they should be subject
to. Because plan sponsors must certify
the accuracy, completeness, and
truthfulness of all data, another
commenter stated that CMS should
provide plan sponsors with an
alternative good faith compliance
approach.
Response: Comments requesting that
plan sponsors have increased flexibility
in the MA and Part D programs are
outside the scope of this rulemaking.
Comment: Commenters suggested that
the catastrophic phase of the Part D
benefit should be reformed or that a cap
should be placed on out-of-pocket costs
to beneficiaries.
Response: Comments recommending
policy changes to the Part D program or
amendments to the governing law are
outside the scope of this rulemaking.
Comment: A number of commenters
expressed concern about the impact of
the Proposed Rule on the Part D bid
process and stated that rulemaking or
guidance by CMS will be necessary to
implement the Proposed Rule,
including: How would CMS require
plan sponsor negotiated price
concessions to be allocated in the bid
and when would the Bid Pricing Tool be
updated for such price concessions;
how would CMS revise the out-ofpocket cost values and Total Beneficiary
Cost metrics; how will changes in Part
D bid amounts be incorporated into
MA–PD submission; will CMS adjust
the bidding schedule and beneficiary
enrollment period to allow entities to
bring their arrangements into
compliance; and would CMS require
other plan types (e.g., EGWPs) to follow
its lead on the bid process? A
commenter also recommended certain
protections for the 2020 bid submission
to limit program disruption and
instability such as: Adjust the de
minimis threshold, rebate reallocation
process, supporting documentation
requirements for bids, and risk corridor
protections; waive the Total Beneficiary
PO 00000
Frm 00009
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
76673
Cost and Medicare Part D out-of-pocket
cost rules; allow more flexibility in
aggregate and product margin tests as
well as the desk review and bid audits;
and give consideration to the impact of
change on EGWP plans.
Response: Comments related to CMS’s
administration of the Part D program are
outside the scope of this rulemaking.
We consulted with CMS in the
promulgation of this final rule and
anticipate that by finalizing this rule
with a January 1, 2022 implementation
date for the amendments to the discount
safe harbor at § 1001.952(h)(5), we have
addressed concerns related to the 2020
bid submission.
Comment: A commenter stated that
CMS should oversee plan actuarial
equivalence determinations to ensure
that beneficiaries with copayments
receive the intended benefits of the rule
through reduced cost sharing. The
commenter further stated that CMS
should ensure that plan sponsors and
PBMs ‘‘reduce copayments for the tier
on which the prescribed medicine is
placed that maintains actuarial
equivalence with the standard benefit
design.’’
Response: Comments related to CMS’s
administration of the Part D program are
outside the scope of this rulemaking.
However, we are aware that actuarial
equivalence requirements in the Part D
program may require that plans adjust
copayment amounts to reflect discounts
that are protected under the point-ofsale safe harbor. Specifically, if the
negotiated prices change, the benefit
(i.e., cost-sharing structure) must be
adjusted to meet actuarial equivalence.
Under the defined standard benefit
design, lower negotiated prices would
result in beneficiaries paying less cost
sharing, in absolute terms, in each
benefit phase. Under a tiered benefit
design, the copayment or coinsurance
amounts for the different tiers in each
phase could be changed in various
ways, as long as the overall cost-sharing
structure results in beneficiaries being
projected to pay no more in each phase
than the beneficiaries’ share required
under the defined standard for that
phase.
Comment: Commenters raised
concerns about the impact that changes
included in the Proposed Rule could
have on data reporting. Specifically, the
commenter identified the following
issues that the commenter asserted will
require rulemaking or guidance by CMS
in order to implement the Proposed
Rule, citing Medicare Part D reporting
requirements: Whether there would be
changes to the PDE report, and how
claims would be reported where a rebate
was provided; what the Proposed Rule’s
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
76674
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
effect is on PDE data reporting
procedures; whether point-of-sale price
concessions would be reported on the
estimated rebate fields, how they would
be used on market shares, or what
process would be used to reconcile
over- or under-payments of point-of-sale
price concessions to enrollees; how
PDEs would be reported when
wholesalers are involved; how claims
would be reported when a rebate was
provided that was later determined to be
ineligible (e.g., due to 340B, denial,
patient recoupment or duplicate
claims); how point-of-sale price
concessions or rebates would be
reflected in DIR reports, and whether
DIR reporting procedures would be
revised, including to account for new
requirements for PBM service fees; and
would CMS need to create an agreement
to allow for information to be shared by
manufacturers to CMS since
confidential data are being collected and
reported.
Response: Establishment of
mechanisms for avoiding duplicate
discounts or resolving disputes or errors
regarding rebates is outside the scope of
this rule. Comments about CMS’s
administration of the Part D program,
including compliance with CMS
requirements relating to PDE reporting
for when a claim is re-processed as a
result of such mechanisms, are outside
the scope of this rulemaking.
Comment: A commenter asked
whether CMS will adopt the same
definitions as OIG, including the
definition of a rebated or discounted
drug.
Response: Comments about CMS’s
administration of the Part D program are
outside the scope of this rulemaking.
This question would be best addressed
by CMS.
Comment: Several commenters stated
that D–SNP beneficiaries 14 qualify for
low income subsidies that reduce their
cost-sharing responsibilities for brand
and generic drugs to nominal amounts,
so the Proposed Rule will most likely
not result in a material change in their
experience. These commenters are
concerned that if premiums increase it
could impact coverage affordability for
D–SNP beneficiaries. Other commenters
requested adopting a broad
interpretation of the term ‘‘plan sponsor
under Medicare Part D.’’
Response: We are finalizing the
revisions to the safe harbors as they
apply to reductions in price or other
remuneration in connection with the
sale or purchase of a prescription
14 Dual Eligible Special Needs Plans (D–SNPs)
enroll beneficiaries who are entitled to both
Medicare and Medicaid.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
pharmaceutical product from a
manufacturer to a plan sponsor under
Medicare Part D, without distinguishing
among Part D plan types.
Comment: Several commenters sought
guidance on the interaction of the
changes in the Proposed Rule with the
Part D definition of ‘‘negotiated price.’’
A commenter stated that CMS should
update its cost-sharing rules to align
with the proposed point-of-sale
reductions in price safe harbor. The
commenter urged CMS to finalize its
definition of negotiated price in the MA
and Part D proposed rule, ‘‘Modernizing
Part D and Medicare Advantage to
Lower Drug Prices and Reduce Out-ofPocket Expenses,’’ and to provide
additional guidance. Some commenters
stated that the definition of ‘‘negotiated
price’’ at 42 CFR 423.100 would need to
be revised for several reasons,
including: To incorporate price
reductions processed via chargebacks
itemized at the point of sale, because
changes to the Proposed Rule would
eliminate a portion of the DIR currently
negotiated, or to ensure stakeholders
can comply with not only the new safe
harbors, if finalized, but also applicable
Part D regulations.
Another commenter stated that CMS
should clarify the definition of
negotiated price to clearly reflect the
discounts protected by the new safe
harbor. The commenter also stated that
CMS should adjust the Part D benefit
design to accommodate the reduced
negotiated prices. The commenter
further asserted that CMS should
recalculate the portion of the overall
program cost that beneficiaries are
responsible for paying by using the
reduced negotiated prices. This
adjustment, the commenter stated,
would lower the deductible, the initial
coverage limit, and the catastrophic
threshold to reflect the reduced cost of
the standard benefit package. The
commenter stated that this adjustment
also would likely result in Part D plans
lowering copayment amounts on
specific formulary tiers, since those are
also calculated based on the portion of
the negotiated price for drugs placed on
those tiers.
Response: Comments related to CMS’s
administration of the Part D program,
including the definition of negotiated
price, are outside the scope of this
rulemaking. However, we are aware that
actuarial equivalence requirements in
the Part D program may require that
plans adjust copayment amounts to
reflect discounts that are protected
under the point-of-sale safe harbor. This
rule does not change the definition of
‘‘negotiated price’’ at 42 CFR 423.100.
PO 00000
Frm 00010
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Comment: A commenter requested
guidance on the application of the
provisions of the Proposed Rule to
various kinds of pharmacies that the
commenter indicated will have different
applications and expectations,
including LTC, mail-order, and
specialty pharmacies.
Response: As the commenter did not
provide information on which
provisions included in the Proposed
Rule would affect categories of
pharmacies differently, we are unable to
respond more fully to this comment. We
note that the amendment to the discount
safe harbor does not affect discounts on
prescription pharmaceutical products
offered to entities such as pharmacies,15
as long as the arrangement meets all the
existing requirements of the safe harbor;
the amendment only impacts discounts
from a manufacturer directly to a plan
sponsor under Medicare Part D or
indirectly to the plan sponsor, through
a PBM acting under contract with it.
Comment: A commenter
recommended that independent
community pharmacies should assume
no liability for implementation of the
changes included in the Proposed Rule.
For example, if the system required fees,
the commenter stated, the fees should
not be paid by pharmacies. The
commenter also suggested that
independent community pharmacies’
reimbursements should not be affected
by price reductions that are agreed upon
between the plan or PBM and the
manufacturer.
Response: The final rule does not
require fees, but only provides a safe
harbor from liability under the antikickback statute for certain fees or other
remuneration, under certain conditions.
Whether pharmacy reimbursements are
affected by price reductions agreed to
between manufacturers and PBMs or
plans for purposes of compliance under
this rule will depend on the particulars
of private contracting between the
parties.
Comment: Commenters raised
questions about implementing the new
safe harbor for point-of-sale reductions
in price in light of Part D requirements.
A commenter stated that CMS should
provide guidance on how point-of-sale
discounts apply to Medicare Secondary
Payer claims, how point-of-sale
discounts will impact vaccine
administration fees, and whether pointof-sale discounts would change
enrollment eligibility for MTM
programs based on exceeding a set
annual out-of-pocket cost.
Response: We have coordinated with
CMS on the promulgation of the point15 84
FR 2348.
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
of-sale safe harbor to ensure that this
rule can operate effectively in
conjunction with the Part D program
rules. Requests for CMS to issue
guidance regarding the Part D program
matters raised by the commenters are
outside the scope of this rule.
Comment: A commenter
recommended amending the proposed
safe harbor for point-of-sale reductions
in price to require plans’ compliance
with tiering and coverage requirements
for generic and biosimilar products,
including automatic coverage of generic
and biosimilar medicines immediately
after launch, placement of generic-only
tiers, and a dedicated specialty tier for
specialty generics and biologics.
Response: We do not believe we can
make the suggested changes to the
proposed point-of-sale safe harbor
because we did not propose them.
Moreover, even had we proposed them,
we do not believe it would be necessary
to include compliance with Part D
tiering and coverage requirements for
generic and biosimilar products in the
safe harbor. We believe the conditions
in the final safe harbor are sufficient to
address program integrity risk with
respect to the specific remuneration
being protected. Nothing in the final
rule changes any requirement of the Part
D program, and parties are required to
comply with all applicable CMS rules.
iv. Medicaid
Comment: The majority of
commenters who addressed Medicaid in
their comments strongly opposed
including Medicaid MCOs in the scope
of the proposed changes to the discount
safe harbor, with commenters positing
that the change could harm state
Medicaid programs, could impose
unnecessary costs on states, and could
lead states to make significant cuts to
other parts of their Medicaid programs.
A commenter highlighted that the
changes we proposed would introduce
significant uncertainties to states
without any clear benefit. Another
commenter requested that the
Department instead focus on reforming
the Medicaid Drug Rebate Program
(MDRP).
Several commenters also objected to,
or did not understand, the inclusion of
Medicaid in the proposed revisions to
the discount safe harbor because,
according to the commenters, the
changes would not achieve the
Department’s goal of lowering
beneficiaries’ out-of-pocket spending.
Per the commenters, beneficiaries are
charged only nominal copayments in
Medicaid and, except for a few plans, do
not have coinsurance obligations.
According to various commenters,
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
because of the limited role of rebates in
Medicaid managed care, passing
through reductions in price for
Medicaid beneficiaries will benefit only
a few enrollees by a marginal amount or
will be irrelevant. These commenters
further questioned whether there would
be any incentive for manufacturers to
provide point-of-sale price reductions in
Medicaid at a level equal to or similar
to the savings leveraged through the
current framework.
Response: Upon consideration of the
comments received, we are persuaded
that we should not move forward with
our proposal to revise the discount safe
harbor to exclude rebates offered to
Medicaid MCOs. In the Proposed Rule,
the Department articulated its concern
that ‘‘rebates are often not applied at the
point of sale to offset the beneficiary’s
deductible or coinsurance or otherwise
reduce the price paid at the pharmacy
counter,’’ which the Department
hypothesized could be increasing
financial burdens for beneficiaries.16
For these reasons, the Department
proposed to eliminate protection for
rebates provided to Medicaid MCOs and
to offer protection for point-of-sale
reductions in price for a prescription
pharmaceutical product payable, in
whole or in part, by a Medicaid MCO.
As noted by commenters, however,
Medicaid beneficiaries generally have
nominal cost-sharing obligations for
prescription pharmaceutical products.
Additionally, although State Medicaid
agencies have flexibility to design
alternative cost-sharing arrangements
for Medicaid beneficiaries, generally
Medicaid MCO contracts must meet
cost-sharing requirements for drugs in
42 CFR 447.53. See 42 CFR 438.108.
These requirements set maximum
allowable cost-sharing amounts for
preferred and non-preferred drugs.
Given these circumstances and existing
regulatory requirements, we believe that
eliminating discount safe harbor
protection for reductions in price
offered to a Medicaid MCO would have
minimal, if any, effect on the amount a
Medicaid beneficiary pays when he or
she purchases prescription
pharmaceutical products at the
pharmacy.
Under this final rule, Medicaid MCOs
seeking safe harbor protection for
discounts have the option to use either
the discount safe harbor or the new safe
harbor for point-of-sale reductions in
price at § 1001.952(cc). As discussed in
more detail below, however, we note
that neither the discount safe harbor nor
the new safe harbor protects rebates or
other reductions in price from a
16 84
PO 00000
FR 2341–42.
Frm 00011
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
76675
manufacturer that are retained by a
PBM, even if that PBM is operating on
behalf of a Medicaid MCO.
Comment: Some commenters
supported application of the changes to
the discount safe harbor to Medicaid as
well as to Medicare, other Federal
health care programs, and the
commercial markets.
Response: For the reasons stated
above, we have decided not to move
forward with our proposal to revise the
discount safe harbor as it applies to
Medicaid MCOs.
Comment: Several commenters stated
that the changes in the Proposed Rule,
if finalized, would create an unlevel
playing field in Medicaid programs
because they would eliminate safe
harbor protection for supplemental
rebates negotiated by Medicaid MCOs
(or PBMs with which they have
contracted) while continuing to protect
supplemental rebates received by states
directly under Medicaid fee-for-service
programs. According to several
commenters, because states would be
able to negotiate supplemental rebates
even if the Proposed Rule were
finalized, the changes in the Proposed
Rule would incentivize states to carve
out the outpatient prescription drug
benefit or to adopt a state-mandated
preferred prescription drug list to
maximize supplemental rebates. A
commenter also stated that states may
seek larger supplemental rebates, which
a commenter noted do not count
towards Best Price. Commenters that
raised this issue listed several concerns
with this result. For example, they
noted that carve-out arrangements
inhibit Medicaid MCOs’ ability to
manage the full range of healthcare
items and services for beneficiaries
under their care.
Response: We are not finalizing the
changes to the discount safe harbor with
respect to Medicaid MCOs, which
addresses the commenters’ concerns.
Comment: Multiple commenters
discussed the importance of
supplemental rebates to the Medicaid
program and Medicaid MCOs.
Numerous commenters noted that
Medicaid supplemental rebates are an
important tool for states in controlling
drug spending, with a commenter
noting that 46 states and the District of
Columbia have supplemental rebate
agreements and collected about $1.2
billion in supplemental rebates during
fiscal year 2017.
Additionally, various commenters
requested clarification relating to the
treatment of supplemental rebates paid
by manufacturers to Medicaid MCOs
and supplemental rebates paid by
manufacturers to state Medicaid
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
76676
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
agencies. Specifically, several
commenters sought clarification as to
how Medicaid drug payment provisions
in section 1927 of the Act relate to
protection for supplemental rebates
under the Proposed Rule and, in
particular, whether such supplemental
rebates are ‘‘required by law,’’ which
was a carve out to our exception in our
proposal to eliminate discount safe
harbor protection for reductions in price
from manufacturers to Medicaid MCOs.
Certain commenters asserted that
manufacturers’ legal obligations under
the MDRP also extend to Medicaid
supplemental rebates, which the
commenters used to support the
position that the discount safe harbor
would continue to protect supplemental
rebates negotiated between states and
manufacturers. Other commenters
recommended that, if OIG moves
forward with including Medicaid MCOs
in the changes to the discount safe
harbor, OIG should clarify that
supplemental rebates negotiated by
Medicaid MCOs but received directly by
state Medicaid agencies are protected.
In addition, several commenters noted
that Medicaid MCOs often retain full
risk in connection with prescription
drug coverage and use supplemental
rebates to lower overall costs for state
Medicaid programs or to defray
capitation costs. Another health plan
commenter asserted that with reduced
flexibilities to manage drug costs
through Medicaid supplemental rebates,
the Medicaid program may become less
attractive to MCOs, which may decrease
health insurance choices for consumers.
In the alternative, a commenter
recommended that OIG prohibit all
supplemental rebates negotiated across
Medicaid fee-for-service and Medicaid
managed care.
Commenters noted their concerns
about the potential for state Medicaid
program drug expenditures to increase if
the changes in the Proposed Rule limit
the existing ability of Medicaid
programs to negotiate supplemental
rebates. Other commenters estimated
that Medicaid costs may rise because of
the loss of safe harbor protection for
supplemental rebates to Medicaid
MCOs, which could lead states to
decrease other benefits, cut provider
payments, or make other cuts to state
Medicaid programs to make up for these
higher costs. Another commenter raised
concerns that in the absence of PBMs,
states will not be able to adapt and
negotiate directly with manufacturers
for supplemental rebates. Another
commenter noted that many PBMs
operating on behalf of Medicaid MCOs
already pass through the entire
supplemental rebate to health plans
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
they contract with, which are bound by
federal and state rate setting and
reporting requirements, so eliminating
supplemental rebates to Medicaid MCOs
will not create any additional
transparency in this area. However,
another commenter stated that more
transparency regarding supplemental
Medicaid rebates collected by PBMs and
Medicaid MCOs is still needed for states
to completely capture the value of
Medicaid supplemental rebates paid to
PBMs.
Response: As discussed in detail
above, we are not finalizing the changes
to the discount safe harbor with respect
to Medicaid MCOs, which addresses
many of the commenters’ concerns. We
reiterate that this final rule does not
alter obligations under the statutory
provisions for Medicaid prescription
drug rebates under section 1927 of the
Act, including without limitation the
provisions related to best price, the
additional rebate amounts required for
certain drugs based on the rate of
increase in AMP and the increase in the
consumer price index for all urban
consumers (CPI–U), or provisions
regarding supplemental rebates
negotiated between states and
manufacturers.
Comment: Several commenters raised
a number of concerns about
administrative burdens that would be
imposed on states and Medicaid MCOs
with respect to implementing and
operationalizing this rule; for example,
a commenter noted that states would be
required to set and certify new Medicaid
MCO rates. Another commenter stated
that affected entities (e.g., Medicaid
MCOs, states, PBMs, pharmacies) will
all need to renegotiate their contracts,
some of which may require state
legislative or agency approval. Another
commenter explained that Medicaid
managed care contracts are generally
effective for several years and states
often operate on a fiscal year that differs
from the calendar year. The commenter
believes that providing states limited
time to renegotiate multi-year contracts,
or to make midyear adjustments, would
be potentially unfeasible.
Response: We are not finalizing the
changes to the discount safe harbor with
respect to Medicaid MCOs, which
addresses the commenters’ concerns.
Comment: A number of commenters
raised various questions or concerns
with respect to the implications of the
changes included in the Proposed Rule
for calculations of AMP, Best Price, and
Federal Upper Limits. For example,
several commenters stated that the
Proposed Rule would result in increased
costs to taxpayers because of changes to
AMP calculations. According to a
PO 00000
Frm 00012
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
number of commenters, if changes in
the Proposed Rule lower the AMP, it
will result in reductions to drug rebate
revenue under the MDRP, which will
increase Medicaid program costs.
Similarly, commenters expressed
concern that a lower AMP might reduce
Federal Upper Limits or the National
Average Drug Acquisition Cost invoice
pricing data and, in turn, could reduce
Medicaid reimbursement to pharmacies.
A commenter contended that it is
critical that the change to point-of-sale
discounts not affect AMP.
As a result of these concerns and
questions, a number of commenters
requested that CMS issue guidance
regarding whether point-of-sale
chargebacks are included in calculations
of AMP. Commenters who did not want
these chargebacks to be included in
AMP calculations generally
recommended that such guidance
explain that point-of-sale chargebacks fit
into one of several types of statutorily
excluded discounts to AMP. Another
commenter posited that the Proposed
Rule was ambiguous and could allow a
point-of-sale discount to be construed as
a PBM or payor concession, a pharmacy
concession, or a direct-to-patient
concession, which could have AMP and
Best Price implications.
With respect to the calculation of Best
Price, a commenter stated its position
that point-of-sale chargebacks fall
within an exemption to Best Price.
Other commenters raised concerns that
removing the protection for Medicaid
supplemental rebates and moving
toward point-of-sale discounts would
raise Best Price, which the commenters
posited would ultimately reduce the
amount manufacturers pay in rebates
under the MDRP. Another commenter
requested that OIG or HHS confirm
whether, and how, the final rule may
affect existing regulations regarding the
calculations for the Medicaid fee-forservice program Federal Upper Limit
calculations as it relates to the formula
for the National Average Drug
Acquisition Cost and the Cost to
Dispense pharmacy dispensing fee.
Response: The Department recognizes
that the final rule has the potential to
affect calculations of AMP, Best Price,
and Federal Upper Limits in ways and
to an extent that may be difficult to
anticipate. However, we are not
finalizing the changes to the discount
safe harbor with respect to Medicaid
MCOs. We reiterate that the final rule
does not alter obligations under the
statutory provisions for Medicaid
prescription drug rebates under section
1927 of the Act, including AMP, Best
Price, and Federal Upper Limits.
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
Comment: A commenter asserted that
brand-name manufacturers launch
authorized generics to lower a brand
drug’s AMP (and thus lower the
manufacturer’s statutorily required
discounts under the MDRP).
Response: We did not propose to alter
obligations under the MDRP and the
issue raised by the commenters is out of
scope of this final rule.
Comment: Commenters raised
concerns about the potential effects on
value-based arrangements in several
Medicaid programs if the Proposed Rule
were to be finalized. Several
commenters highlighted three valuebased contracting models that allow
states to align supplemental rebates
with outcomes-based and value-based
measures.
Response: We believe our decision
not to finalize the changes to the
discount safe harbor with respect to
Medicaid MCOs addresses the
commenters’ concern.
Comment: A commenter requested
that the Department clarify in the final
rule that entities that operate under
contract with a state are protected under
the revised discount safe harbor. The
commenter provided an example of
multi-state purchasing organizations
that create preferred drug lists, and the
commenter explained that it is not clear
whether these entities would be
protected under the revised discount
safe harbor because they are not
‘‘states.’’
Response: Because we are not moving
forward with the proposed changes to
the discount safe harbor with respect to
Medicaid MCOs, we believe the
commenter’s concerns are addressed.
Comment: A commenter specifically
requested that OIG clarify whether the
final rule would explicitly exclude
Puerto Rico’s Medicaid rebate system
from the amendment to the discount
safe harbor, because Puerto Rico’s
Medicaid program does not currently
participate in the MDRP.
Response: Because we are not moving
forward with the proposed changes to
the discount safe harbor with respect to
Medicaid MCOs, we believe the
commenter’s concerns are addressed.
v. Commercial Market
Comment: Numerous commenters
supported the extension of this proposal
to the commercial market, stating that
plans and drug companies will be
motivated to maintain high list prices if
rebate arrangements continue to
permeate the commercial market.
According to the commenters, the
benefits associated with the proposal,
such as reduced out-of-pocket costs and
improved access to medication, will be
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
limited if the proposal is not extended
to the commercial market. For example,
a pharmaceutical-manufacturer
commenter in favor of eliminating
rebates in the commercial sector
explained that rebates and discounts for
its products have increased in Part D
and the commercial sector, even though
the affordability of drugs continues to be
a public health issue. Another
commenter was opposed to extending
the provisions of the Proposed Rule to
the commercial market and stated that
rebates are an important tool used by
PBMs to negotiate lower prices from
drug companies on behalf of employers
and private health plans.
Response: The scope of the antikickback statute is limited to
remuneration that is offered, paid,
solicited, or received in order to induce
or reward Federal health care program
business. Commercial, private pay, or
self-pay arrangements that do not touch
Federal health care program
beneficiaries in any manner do not
implicate the Federal anti-kickback
statute (except in the context of
swapping arrangements or pull-through
type arrangements in which discounts
might be given only on private pay
business to induce the referral of
Federal health care program business).
In other words, the anti-kickback statute
generally does not extend to
arrangements involving purely
commercial business; as a result, it is
beyond the scope of this rulemaking to
extend such safe harbors to the
commercial market.
Comment: Several commenters
supported future efforts to extend this
proposal to the commercial market but
recommended ensuring successful
implementation of the rule in Medicare
Part D before addressing rebates in the
commercial market. A commenter noted
that the wholesale conversion of both
Federal health care programs and the
commercial market could cause
confusion in the marketplace and
disrupt patient access to medications.
Specifically, the commenter noted there
would be many new operational and
system requirements for applying the
point-of-sale discount. In addition, the
commenter explained that it is vital to
see how health plans may change their
benefit designs in response to the rule,
which could include changes to
formularies and greater cost sharing,
before this proposal is extended to the
commercial market.
Response: Extension of the revised
discount safe harbor and the two new
safe harbors to the commercial market is
beyond the scope of this rulemaking.
Comment: Several commenters
asserted that if the Proposed Rule is
PO 00000
Frm 00013
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
76677
finalized, drug-related costs will shift to
the commercial market, with a
commenter noting that employers may
change plan offerings for prescription
drugs as a result of these increased
costs, which could harm individuals in
private plans.
Response: Since the changes under
the final rule may result in a range of
market responses, the Department
respectfully disagrees that drug-related
costs will necessarily shift to the
commercial market and result in harm
to individuals in private plans. Instead,
the Department expects that
manufacturers will lower list prices,
which could result in lower costs across
both the Part D and the commercial
markets.
Comment: A commenter requested
guidance on when rebates that are
offered to commercial plans, but not to
Medicare or Medicaid, may implicate
the anti-kickback statute. Specifically,
the commenter requests
acknowledgement that OIG rules
relating to ‘‘swapping’’ do not apply as
long as there is no quid pro quo between
a manufacturer price concession offered
on a plan’s or PBM’s commercial
utilization and a price concession
offered on such a plan’s or PBM’s
Federal health care program utilization.
Another commenter raised concerns
about the statements in the Proposed
Rule that indicated commercial rebates
outside of Federal health care programs
tied to formulary placement across all
plans, including Federal health care
programs, may not be protected by the
current discount safe harbor or
proposed revisions. The commenter
claimed that this statement could have
a chilling effect on negotiations between
private health plans and employers or
individuals.
Other commenters expressed concern
that if the conditions of safe harbors
included the Proposed Rule do not
apply to the commercial market, rebates
in the commercial market could still be
used to induce the purchase of products
reimbursed by Federal health care
programs. To address this concern,
commenters recommended that the
Department clearly indicate that rebates
in the commercial market will be
scrutinized to ensure that they are not
being offered to influence the purchase
of products by Federal health care
programs.
Response: While the anti-kickback
statute is not implicated in
arrangements that involve only
commercial, private pay, or self-pay
arrangements, we noted in the Proposed
Rule that we have ‘‘a long-standing
concern about arrangements that ‘carve
out’ referrals of Federal health care
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
76678
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
program beneficiaries or business
generated by Federal health care
programs from otherwise questionable
financial arrangements.’’ 17 We would
have similar concerns with
arrangements that involve remuneration
offered under the guise of an
arrangement limited to commercial-pay
or private-pay patients but is, in reality,
part of a broader arrangement to induce
referrals of Federal health care program
business or patients. As we noted in our
final rule published in 1999, ‘‘such
‘swapping’ arrangements, which
essentially shift costs to the Federal
health care programs, continue to be of
concern to this office.’’ 18 In any of these
circumstances, arrangements would
need to be reviewed for compliance
with the anti-kickback statute, but
whether a specific arrangement
constitutes a problematic swapping
arrangement depends on the facts and
circumstances, and we decline to adopt
the quid pro quo standard suggested by
a commenter. Individuals or entities are
free to request protection from sanctions
under the anti-kickback statute for
specific arrangements through our
advisory opinion process.
Comment: A commenter asserted that
the Department should not attempt to
reform the current commercial market
rebate system through the anti-kickback
statute and noted that due to the
complexity of the commercial market,
any changes to the commercial market
rebate system should be undertaken
carefully and incorporate feedback from
a range of stakeholders.
Response: As discussed above, the
anti-kickback statute only prohibits
remuneration that is offered, paid,
solicited, or received to induce or
reward Federal health care program
business. The statute generally is not
implicated when the arrangements
involve purely private-pay business.
Comment: Several commenters noted
that certain PBMs and insurers have
recently announced point-of-sale rebate
sharing in the commercial market,
which may signify that the
infrastructure and capacity to adopt
these reforms in the commercial market
already exist. However, a commenter
indicated that these point-of-sale rebate
benefit designs are being offered at a
higher premium than standard designs
and that it is too early to determine if
enrollment in these options will be
robust or limited.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ insights into the dynamics
of this market. As we discuss above, we
understand that some commercial plans
17 84
18 64
FR 2347.
FR 63528.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
may be operationalizing point-of-sale
benefit designs and, as the commenters
suggest, we believe that some industry
stakeholders have the capabilities to
operationalize point-of-sale reductions
in price that would be protected under
the new safe harbor.
vi. Value-Based Arrangements
Comment: Some commenters stated
that value-based arrangements would
not neatly fit into the new safe harbor
for point-of-sale reductions in price
because they typically rely on gathering
data after the point of sale and making
payments after the point of sale.
Commenters expressed an interest in
allowing value-based arrangements to be
protected by a safe harbor, stating that
value-based arrangements provide an
important opportunity to address drug
prices by paying the value of a drug if
it achieves the desired outcome, while
paying a lower price if it does not work.
Other commenters expressed concern
that if the changes to the discount safe
harbor are finalized but an exception is
made so that value-based arrangements
continue to receive protection under the
discount safe harbor, parties might
recast rebate arrangements that
otherwise would be prohibited as
‘‘value-based arrangements’’ in order to
continue to receive protection under the
discount safe harbor.
Response: The Department recognizes
the importance of value-based
contracting for prescription
pharmaceutical products as an evolving
tool to improve quality of care and
potentially reduce costs.19 Upon
reflection, we agree that not all valuebased pharmaceutical arrangements for
Part D prescription drugs would fit into
the revised discount safe harbor or the
new safe harbor for point-of-sale
reductions in price. We believe that
some value-based arrangements
involving prescription pharmaceutical
products might qualify for protection
under the new point-of-sale safe harbor
but also could qualify under other safe
harbors (e.g., the personal services and
management contracts safe harbor,
warranties safe harbor). To the extent
manufacturers wish to use the new
point-of-sale safe harbor for value-based
arrangements, the reduction in price on
prescription pharmaceutical products
must be in the form of a point-of-sale
discount. Any value-based arrangement
(whether under Part D or another
Federal health care program) must be
analyzed on a case-by-case basis under
the statute and with respect to available
safe harbor protection. With respect to
the concern about recasting rebate
19 See,
Jkt 253001
PO 00000
e.g., 84 FR 55694, 55704 (Oct. 17, 2019).
Frm 00014
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
arrangements as value-based
arrangements, we note that labeling an
arrangement as ‘‘value-based’’ does not
necessarily make it so, and any
arrangement (whether labeled as valuebased or otherwise) must still comply
with all conditions of a safe harbor.
Comment: Some commenters
expressed concern that excluding valuebased arrangements from the discount
safe harbor may limit the effectiveness
of PBMs, plan sponsors, or other third
parties that play, or could play, a
valuable role in designing effective
prescription drug programs, treatments,
and therapies, and in ensuring drug
manufacturers are held accountable for
certain outcomes-based metrics.
Response: We thank the commenters
for raising these concerns. As described
above, the Department remains
committed to promoting value-based
arrangements that have the potential to
improve the quality of care provided to
beneficiaries while lowering overall
costs to Federal health care programs.
The final rule does not prohibit those
entities highlighted by the commenters,
including but not limited to PBMs and
plan sponsors under Part D, from being
able to continue to negotiate valuebased arrangements with manufacturers
that aim to achieve these goals.
Comment: A commenter suggested
that, because value-based arrangements
would remain within the safe harbor,
value-based arrangements will expand.
Response: As described above, we
recognize that the changes to the
discount safe harbor may result in
certain value-based arrangements no
longer being eligible for protection
under the discount safe harbor.
However, the Department continues to
encourage the development and
implementation of arrangements that
work to transform the health care
system into one that better pays for
value.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed concern that the proposed
revision to the discount safe harbor,
without further guidance from OIG on
its applicability to value-based
arrangements, may deter, chill, or
impede drug manufacturers, PBMs, or
plans from entering into, developing,
implementing, negotiating, or
continuing under value-based
arrangements. Several commenters
expressed concern about and described
examples of value-based arrangements
that may implicate the anti-kickback
statute and not be protected under the
safe harbors set forth in the Proposed
Rule. For example, under an outcomesbased arrangement, drug manufacturers
may or must, contractually, provide
rebates or refunds if a specific
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
medication is not effective—or not as
effective as indicated—after an
individual has used the specific
medication. The commenter then
posited that a point-of-sale discount
would not be practical or possible
because the rebate or refund is
contingent upon or influenced by a
specific outcome and is provided after
the point of sale has already occurred.
Other commenters requested that OIG
allow flexibility or sufficient time after
the effective date of the final rule for
drug manufacturers, PBMs, and plans to
re-negotiate or terminate value-based
arrangements that may not satisfy the
conditions of the proposed revisions to
the existing discount safe harbor or the
new safe harbor at 42 CFR 1001.952(cc).
Another commenter expressed concern
that, even if value-based arrangements
are protected under the proposed
amendments to the discount safe harbor
and the proposed new safe harbor for
point-of-sale reductions in price, drug
manufacturers may be deterred from
offering certain discounts if competitors
know or can determine each other’s
discount values.
Response: Value-based arrangements,
like all arrangements that implicate the
anti-kickback statute, must be analyzed
on a case-by-case basis. We agree with
commenters that not all value-based
pharmaceutical arrangements for Part D
prescription drugs may qualify for
protection under the revised discount
safe harbor or the new safe harbor for
point-of-sale reductions in price. As we
note above, other safe harbors could
apply, such as the personal services and
management contracts safe harbor or
warranties safe harbor. The fact that an
arrangement does not fit in a safe harbor
does not mean it is necessarily
unlawful. The terms of a particular
arrangement would drive whether the
anti-kickback statute is implicated and
any safe harbor that might apply. We
remind stakeholders seeking protection
for value-based arrangements that the
advisory opinion process remains
available. Concerns about the effective
date and transparency are addressed
elsewhere in this preamble.
Comment: Another commenter
requested that OIG clarify whether the
revised discount safe harbor and/or the
safe harbor for GPOs would, in
appropriate circumstances, protect
value-based contracting between
manufacturers and healthcare
institutions or wholesalers/distributors,
such as contractual arrangements with
hospitals and integrated delivery
networks.
Response: Whether the GPO safe
harbor is appropriate for value-based
contracting is beyond the scope of this
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
rulemaking. Whether a value-based
arrangement could use the GPO safe
harbor would be a fact-specific
determination.
vii. Enforcement Issues
Comment: In discussing the
operational challenges of implementing
the Proposed Rule, several commenters
noted that it would create a new
regulatory structure and that any
mistakes are subject to criminal
penalties under the anti-kickback
statute. According to a commenter, this
risk may prevent stakeholders from
proceeding with implementation. As an
example, the commenter explained that
pharmacies may not operationalize the
chargeback proposal because of
potential liability under the antikickback statute.
Response: Compliance with a safe
harbor is voluntary, and arrangements
that do not comply with a safe harbor—
because of mistakes or otherwise—are
analyzed based on their facts and
circumstances. The failure to meet the
conditions of a new safe harbor does not
automatically subject one to criminal
penalties. The anti-kickback statute is
an intent-based statute; mere errors or
mistakes would not trigger concerns
absent other facts evidencing unlawful
intent to induce referrals. In addition, as
with our other safe harbors, the advisory
opinion process remains available for
parties that seek to determine if an
arrangement or proposed arrangement
satisfies the criteria of the safe harbor.
Comment: A commenter
recommended that OIG work with
several agencies, including the DOJ and
the FTC, to develop guidance for the
industry with respect to a final rule. The
commenter explained that this guidance
is particularly important as it
renegotiates contracts in order to avoid
possible civil and criminal penalties. As
one example, the commenter requested
guidance on various types of swapping
arrangements. Another commenter
asked for affirmative guidance from OIG
on a number of enforcement-related
topics. For example, the commenter
requested that OIG declare in the final
rule that it expects industry-wide
compliance with the anti-kickback
statute with respect to the reductions in
price and service fee arrangements
covered under the new safe harbors. The
commenter also asked OIG to state that
it will subject PBMs to heightened
scrutiny for any arrangements
conditioned on formulary placement
that do not fit within the new safe
harbors.
Response: The Department regularly
collaborates with our government
partners, as appropriate. Any requests
PO 00000
Frm 00015
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
76679
for the Secretary to issue sub-regulatory
guidance jointly with other agencies or
to issue affirmative guidance is outside
the scope of this safe harbor rulemaking.
OIG publishes guidance from time to
time on its web page.
OIG agrees with the commenter that
the proper question is whether entities
are in compliance with the antikickback statute; we reiterate, however,
that compliance with a safe harbor is
voluntary. Any arrangement that
implicates the anti-kickback statute and
does not satisfy an exception or safe
harbor would be subject to scrutiny; as
discussed in more detail below, we
reiterate our concern about any kind of
payment to buy or provide
remuneration tied to formulary
placement that is not a safe harbored
reduction in price.
Comment: Several pharmaceutical
manufacturer commenters raised
concerns with respect to PBMs’
response to the new safe harbor, stating
that PBMs may take aggressive positions
on interpretations of the anti-kickback
statute or the new safe harbors and
require manufacturers to accept that
legal position to access the PBMs’
beneficiaries. For example, the
commenters stated that a PBM might
interpret the anti-kickback statute to
permit rebates to PBMs or might take
the position that safe harbor compliance
is not required.
Response: With respect to the
commenters’ concerns surrounding
PBMs’ interpretation of changes to the
safe harbor provisions, we emphasize
that, while compliance with the terms of
a safe harbor is voluntary, an
arrangement is protected only if all
conditions of a safe harbor are met. We
want to take this opportunity to confirm
our position, as stated in the preamble
to the Proposed Rule, that any portion
of a payment (whether it is called a
‘‘rebate’’ or something else) that a
manufacturer pays to a PBM that is
retained by the PBM and not passed
through to the buyer never was
protected under the discount safe
harbor.20 The discount safe harbor
protects a reduction in price to a buyer.
A PBM is not a buyer, and the portion
of a payment from a manufacturer to a
payor that is retained by a PBM is not
a reduction in price. Dating back to the
1991 Final Rule,21 we have made a
distinction between (i) fees that would
fall under personal services contracts
and (ii) discounts; a discount is a
reduction in price, not payment for a
service. Payments to a PBM for services
could be protected under other safe
20 84
21 56
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
FR 2343 n.36.
FR 35952.
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
76680
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
harbors if all relevant safe harbor
conditions are met.
PBMs can provide valuable services
for health plans and manufacturers and
can be compensated for those services.
To the extent such compensation
implicates the anti-kickback statute, it
can be structured to comply with a safe
harbor (such as the personal services
and management contracts safe harbor
or new PBM service fee safe harbor).
However, we note generally that we
would have significant concerns with
arrangements for services that are not
necessary, are worthless, or are
duplicative and that operate as shams
designed to reward a party for referrals
of Federal health care program items or
services; these concerns apply with
equal force to both the payor and the
recipient of remuneration, and our
approach to enforcement has and will,
as business practices and incentives
evolve, continue to reflect that. Such
arrangements would not be protected
under any safe harbor.
Comment: Several commenters
requested that OIG engage in some type
of enforcement discretion during
implementation of a final rule, with a
commenter citing to the final rules in
1991 and 1999 as examples of instances
where the Department has considered
enforcement discretion. A commenter
suggested that, if the rule is finalized,
OIG should issue a statement of nonenforcement for a period of two years
because Part D bids will be based on
safe harbor rules in effect at the time of
the bids, while the plans may operate
under different safe harbors in the plan
year. A commenter requested that OIG
publish a policy statement that it will
not enforce the anti-kickback statute
where PBMs serve as point-of-sale
chargeback administrators that
implement the point-of-sale discounts.
Another commenter asked that the
Department permit the distribution of
rebates where the terms of the rebate
arrangement were set prior to January 1,
2020.
Response: As explained elsewhere in
this final rule, the amendments to the
discount safe harbor at § 1001.952(h)(5)
do not take effect until January 1, 2022.
We recognize that many parties have
previously structured their
arrangements based on the advice of an
attorney and in good-faith belief that
their arrangements were legal under the
discount safe harbor, and any
arrangements that comply with that safe
harbor remain protected until that
effective date. The new safe harbor for
point-of-sale reductions in price will be
effective and available for use 60 days
after publication of this final rule. The
Department encourages parties to use
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
the new safe harbor as rapidly as
possible. We are not issuing an
enforcement discretion policy given the
length of time parties have under the
final rule to come into compliance with
the amended safe harbor. We also
decline to adopt the commenter’s
suggestion to exercise enforcement
discretion where PBMs serve as pointof-sale chargeback administrators that
implement the point-of-sale discounts.
viii. State Law Issues
Comment: Several commenters raised
concerns about various state laws, such
as state trade secrets or privacy laws,
that could be implicated by the
Proposed Rule.
Response: We are not in a position to
respond to comments on state laws. As
we stated in our 1991 rulemaking,
‘‘[i]ssues of state law are completely
independent of the federal anti-kickback
statute and these [safe harbors]. . . .
Thus, conduct that is lawful under the
federal anti-kickback statute or [safe
harbors] may still be illegal under State
law.’’ 22 Similarly, state laws governing
trade secrets or privacy issues are
outside the scope of this rulemaking.
ix. Other Legal Issues
Comment: Some commenters raised
Administrative Procedure Act (APA)
concerns. For example, a commenter
urged the Department to adhere to the
duty to review and take into account
public comments received. Another
commenter stated that the Proposed
Rule fails to provide clear examples of
the harm that it would remediate. In
particular, the commenter claimed that
the rule describes a policy rationale, but
it does not explain what type of
‘‘inducement’’ the Proposed Rule would
prevent. A commenter suggested that
aspects of the Proposed Rule do not
meet the APA’s requirement to include
sufficient detail to allow for meaningful
comment. For example, the commenter
stated that the preamble does not
provide enough detail to explain how
chargebacks would work so that
industry stakeholders can meaningfully
comment.
Response: The Department reviewed
all comment letters, took into account
all relevant public comments, and
considered relevant impacts and
program integrity concerns in
developing this final rule. With respect
to the questions set forth by commenters
about the substantive sufficiency of the
Proposed Rule, we respectfully disagree.
Discounts of any kind serve as an
inducement to purchase an item or
service, and the anti-kickback statute
specifies that a ‘‘rebate’’ is a form of
inducement. The Proposed Rule sets
forth the authority from Congress for
establishing or modifying safe harbors,
two of which include an increase or
decrease in access to healthcare services
and any other factors that the Secretary
deems appropriate in the interest of
preventing fraud and abuse in Federal
health care programs.23 The Proposed
Rule extensively describes the
problematic incentives with the current
rebate system, including, but not limited
to, the incentive to include higherpriced prescription drugs on formularies
to capture larger rebates and the impact
of higher list prices on beneficiaries.24
In other sections of the Proposed Rule,
such as the discussion of ‘‘chargebacks’’
that a commenter referenced, we not
only made specific proposals but we
also solicited comments on a number of
issues. In fact, we received detailed and
meaningful comments on chargebacks
from almost 50 commenters, to which
we respond elsewhere in this final rule.
We did not include in the proposed safe
harbor overly technical requirements
about the administration of the
chargeback process in order to provide
private parties with the flexibility to
design these systems, while offering
numerous opportunities to comment.
Comment: Some commenters alleged
that the Proposed Rule is arbitrary and
capricious for a variety of reasons. For
example, a commenter asserted that the
Proposed Rule is arbitrary and
capricious because it treats similar
situations differently by continuing to
protect rebates in Medicare Parts A and
B without an adequate explanation. A
commenter also asserted that there is
not a rational connection between the
concerns identified in the Proposed
Rule and the proposed changes to the
safe harbors. In support of this claim,
the commenter asserted that a stated
objective of the Proposed Rule is to
reduce government program costs, but
the regulatory impact analysis shows
that costs will rise and noted that the
rule expresses concern for beneficiary
out-of-pocket costs while the impact
analysis predicts increased beneficiary
premiums. This commenter also
claimed the proposed rule was asserting
contradictory purposes in seeking to
reduce the spread between list and net
prices while also seeking to replace
rebates from manufacturers to PBMs
with discounts provided to beneficiaries
at the point of sale. Another commenter
expressed concern that the Proposed
Rule may be arbitrary and capricious
because, in the commenter’s view,
23 84
22 56
PO 00000
FR 35957.
Frm 00016
Fmt 4701
FR 2345.
e.g., 84 FR 2340–44.
24 See,
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
significant impacts, consequences, and
results were overlooked or discarded in
developing the Proposed Rule, such as
potential effects on future enrollment in
Part D and Medicaid MCOs, possible
impacts on MCO-negotiated
supplemental rebates and the antitrust
implications of up-front discount
negotiations. A commenter suggested
that estimates of the time entities will
spend updating systems to comply with
the rule was underestimated.
Response: We believe the changes to
the safe harbor protections that we are
finalizing here are a reasonable and
appropriate response to address harmful
effects of rebates on beneficiaries in
Medicare Part D and other Federal
health care programs and will help to
ensure that safe harbor protection is
available only for non-abusive
arrangements that are transparent and
reflect an alignment of incentives among
plan sponsors, manufacturers,
beneficiaries, and the government. We
appreciate the concern that the changes
we proposed could be construed as
treating similar situations differently by
removing protection for rebates in some
Federal health care programs but not
others. However, this characterization
disregards the fact that many safe
harbors, including the discount safe
harbor, differentiate between the
protection afforded to arrangements
involving different Federal health care
programs in order to target protection to
non-abusive arrangements. The
Proposed Rule was developed in
response to certain abusive rebate
arrangements that have been identified
in the specific context of Medicare Part
D, and therefore the proposal was
structured to remove protection for
those abusive arrangements. Moreover,
we solicited comments on whether the
amendment also should apply to
prescription pharmaceutical products
payable under other Federal health care
programs.25 As we discuss elsewhere in
this final rule, commenters agreed that
the amendment should not be expanded
to other programs. Accordingly, we
concluded that the amendment should
not be expanded to other programs. In
particular, as explained above, we are
not finalizing our proposal to apply the
amendment to Medicaid MCOs.
Similarly, we believe the final rule
rationally and effectively advances the
regulatory goals of transparency and
‘‘alignment of incentives.’’ 26
Specifically, the rule addresses the
problem that rebate arrangements
among Part D plan sponsors, pharmacy
benefit managers, and pharmaceutical
25 84
26 84
FR 2347.
FR 2343–44.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
manufacturers are not transparent to the
government or beneficiaries and
incentivize higher list prices for drugs
contrary to the interests of the Federal
health care programs or beneficiaries.
Accordingly, we proposed to eliminate
the existing safe harbor protection for
those abusive arrangements. We
disagree that there is any conflict
between seeking to lower list prices and
concurrently working to ensure that any
negotiated reductions to the list prices
of drugs are provided in the form of
discounts to beneficiaries at the point of
sale. As discussed in the Proposed Rule,
the current rebate framework for
prescription pharmaceutical products
does not appear to translate into lower
Medicare per beneficiary spending on
prescription drugs, when age and
inflation are accounted for. The existing
structure may be one of the factors
driving list prices higher, which harms
patients and Federal health care
programs. The final rule directly
addresses these issues.
Likewise, we disagree with the
commenter who suggested that we
ignored or disregarded certain impacts
of the proposed changes to safe harbor
protection for rebates. In the Proposed
Rule, we expressly identified and
solicited comment on the potential
impacts of our proposals in the areas the
commenter alleged we overlooked,
including potential effects on future
enrollment in Part D and Medicaid
MCOs, possible impacts on MCOnegotiated supplemental rebates, and
the antitrust implications of up-front
discount negotiations. Furthermore, as
discussed elsewhere in this final rule,
we have taken commenters’ feedback
into account and have made
adjustments to our proposals to ensure
that in each of these areas, the impact
of the policies adopted in this final rule
is not inconsistent with the
Department’s policy goals, including by
narrowing the scope of the amendment
to the existing discount safe harbor to
allow for continued safe harbor
protection of rebate arrangements
between manufacturers and Medicaid
MCOs.
Comment: Some commenters
questioned OIG’s authority to
promulgate this rule because
commenters suggested that the resulting
rule would conflict with other Federal
laws. For example, a commenter
asserted that the Secretary is proposing
a rule under one section of the Act that
the commenter contends conflicts with
another section of the Act, and in doing
so it violates a tenet of administrative
law (that an agency exceeds its authority
when it promulgates a regulation that
conflicts with a Federal statute).
PO 00000
Frm 00017
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
76681
Another commenter asserted that even if
section 1102 of the Act allows the
Secretary to interpret terms in a
criminal statute, such authority is
limited to establishing rules consistent
with the Act. This commenter stated
that the Proposed Rule is inconsistent
with the statutory discount exception
and with statutory provisions governing
Part D that are within the Act.
Response: We respond to comments
highlighting differences between the
Proposed Rule and specific statutes
elsewhere in this rule. In general,
however, we note that the safe harbor
regulations are voluntary. Individuals
and entities that choose to comply with
a particular safe harbor have assurance
that their business practice will not be
subject to an anti-kickback enforcement
action. However, the safe harbor
regulations ‘‘impose[] no requirements
on anyone’’ and therefore do not put
stakeholders in a position where they
cannot comply with both a safe harbor
and a Federal law.
Comment: Certain commenters
highlighted specific Federal statutes
with which they claim the proposed
changes conflict and suggested that the
statutes would control. For example, a
commenter stated that Congress
recognized when enacting the Medicare
Prescription Drug, Improvement, and
Modernization Act of 2003 (MMA) that
‘‘price concessions, such as discounts,
. . . [and] rebates’’ were important
factors with respect to providing Part D
coverage. Because the MMA specifically
allows for different types of price
concessions, the commenter asserted
that the Department does not have the
authority to require that all
manufacturer price concessions be
passed on at the point of sale. Another
commenter noted that the MMA was
enacted decades after the anti-kickback
statute and includes several references
to rebates in the Part D program and, as
such, if there was a conflict in the Part
D statute and the anti-kickback statute,
then Part D’s approval of rebates would
control, both because it is more specific
and because it was later-enacted.
Several commenters stated that the
proposed changes to the discount safe
harbor directly conflict with the Part D
program’s statutory definition of
‘‘negotiated price.’’ Commenters stated
that CMS has consistently interpreted
the definition of ‘‘negotiated price’’ and
related Part D disclosure requirements
as permitting Part D sponsors to choose
how much of the price concessions they
negotiate with manufacturers would be
passed through to beneficiaries. A
commenter stated that Congress
confirmed CMS’s interpretation in the
Patient Protection and Affordable Care
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
76682
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
Act (PPACA) when it established the
Coverage Gap Discount Program, which
defines ‘‘negotiated price’’ to include
rebates that the Part D sponsor has
elected to pass through at the point of
sale.
Response: For reasons stated
elsewhere in this final rule, we disagree
that the amendment of the safe harbor
regulations conflicts with other Federal
statutes. As stated previously, the safe
harbor regulations impose no
requirements and do not mandate any
particular behavior, and thus do not
conflict with other laws. The
Department acknowledges that the Part
D statute references manufacturer
rebates and that CMS has viewed
manufacturer rebates as an important
factor in Part D sponsors’ provision of
the Part D benefit. However, it does not
follow that because the Part D statute
contemplates, and the Part D program
historically has involved, manufacturer
rebates, such rebates are always
legitimate. Similarly, neither the
statutory definition of ‘‘negotiated
price’’ enacted in the MMA nor the
subsequent adoption of another
definition of ‘‘negotiated price’’ in the
PPACA have any bearing on whether
manufacturer rebates pose a risk of
program abuse. As noted elsewhere in
this rule, in recent years manufacturer
rebates have become problematic.
It would be unreasonable to construe
the Part D statute to permit under the
anti-kickback statute rebates that the
Secretary has determined pose a risk of
program abuse pursuant to authority
under the anti-kickback statute simply
because they are mentioned in the Part
D statute. Therefore, comments
contending that the Part D statute
‘‘controls’’ are unpersuasive. The Part D
statute does not—either expressly or by
implication—limit the Secretary’s
authority to establish and revise safe
harbors to curb rebating practices that
the Secretary determines are abusive to
Federal health care programs and
beneficiaries.
Comment: Certain commenters claim
that aspects of the Proposed Rule
conflict with OIG guidance documents.
For example, a commenter was
concerned that the language in the
point-of-sale reduction in price safe
harbor requiring that the reduction in
price must be completely applied to the
price of the prescription pharmaceutical
product charged to the beneficiary at the
point of sale could lead manufacturers
to apply the entire rebate to a
beneficiary’s cost sharing, which is
contrary to OIG guidance on the use of
coupons. Similarly, a commenter
requested that the final rule preserve
certain pricing exclusions, for example,
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
the value of manufacturer-sponsored
drug discount card programs,
manufacturer coupons, manufacturer
copayment assistance programs, and
manufacturer-sponsored programs
providing free goods if the benefit is not
contingent on other purchases, which
are excluded from AMP, Average Sales
Price, and Best Price reporting. Other
commenters cited the 2003 Compliance
Program Guidance for Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers,27 noting that this
guidance implicitly acknowledges that
price reductions can be contingent on
formulary placement by explicitly
stating that lump sum payments for
formulary placement would be subject
to scrutiny. A commenter also stated
that OIG has not previously challenged
the practice of conditioning discounts
on formulary placement. Another
commenter noted that the use of
formulary position to negotiate
reductions in price is a long-recognized
practice by plans.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their insights. In this final rule we
have revised the language of the safe
harbor to clarify what we meant in the
Proposed Rule when we said that the
reduction in price must be completely
reflected in the price the pharmacy
charges the beneficiary at the point of
sale. As we further explain elsewhere,
this language was not intended to
permit a beneficiary to have cost sharing
waived or for the beneficiary to receive
the entire dollar value of a discount
(unless the beneficiary is in the
deductible phase and responsible for
paying the full cost of the drug). Our
intent was for the reduction in price to
be applied to the price of the drug upon
which any beneficiary cost sharing is
calculated. The issues related to AMP,
ASP, and Best Price, and linking
reductions in price to formulary
placement are addressed elsewhere in
this preamble.
Comment: Certain commenters cited
to fundamental rules of fairness or
generally urged OIG to acknowledge
that the principles set out in the
Proposed Rule are a change in law and
would apply only prospectively. A
commenter noted that OIG states in the
Proposed Rule that many financial
arrangements would ‘‘no longer’’ meet
the discount safe harbor and that OIG
has well-documented its awareness of
rebates paid to PBMs. Another
commenter stated that the Proposed
Rule is an abrupt change in our
longstanding interpretation of the
statutory exception.
Response: We agree with commenters
and acknowledge that the revisions to
27 68
PO 00000
FR 23731 (May 5, 2003).
Frm 00018
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
the discount safe harbor are a change
with respect to certain rebates that the
discount safe harbor at § 1001.952(h)
will no longer protect. Enforcement of
these changes would be prospective.
However, as explained elsewhere in this
final rule, not all payments labeled
‘‘rebates’’ are (or ever were) reductions
in price. We address the statutory
exception in section III.B.i below.
Comment: A commenter asserted that
an agency’s narrowing of protected
conduct, resulting in expansion of
criminal conduct, is not authorized and
is impermissible. To the extent there is
ambiguity, the commenter noted that
the Rule of Lenity should apply and
resolve ambiguity in favor of a
defendant. The commenter cited to a
Supreme Court case that held that
‘‘criminal laws are for courts, not for the
Government, to construe.’’
Response: Revisions to the discount
safe harbor at § 1001.952(h) do not
expand the scope of the anti-kickback
statute or remove protections offered
under the statutory exceptions.
Comment: A commenter suggested
that the Proposed Rule requires
disclosure of rebates and price
information and that such disclosure
and potential for the public to access the
information eliminates the value of
these trade secrets, thus extinguishing a
property right. Therefore, compliance
with the Proposed Rule without
compensation would violate the Takings
Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
Similarly, a commenter stated that any
proposal that requires even a specific
portion of manufacturer rebates to be
passed through at the point of sale
would expose confidential information
in direct violation of the Trade Secrets
Act.
Response: As a threshold matter, we
reiterate that safe harbors were intended
to evolve with changes in the health
care industry, are voluntary, and do not
require any party to take any action,
including any disclosure of rebate or
pricing information. Therefore, no
property right is being extinguished and
this final rule does not implicate the
Takings Clause. Moreover, even for
parties seeking to comply with the
point-of-sale reduction in price safe
harbor, we fail to see how the Trade
Secrets Act at 18 U.S.C. 1905 would be
implicated. That law prohibits certain
Federal officers or employees from
disclosing certain types of information
received through the course of their
employment or official duties, except
where authorized by law. Nothing about
this safe harbor requires disclosure of
rebates or pricing information to a
Federal agency, so the law would not be
implicated.
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
Comment: A commenter expressed
concern that the chargeback system set
forth in the Proposed Rule might
incentivize manufacturers to deal only
with a subset of pharmacies who agree
to contract terms that are more stringent
than what safe harbor compliance
would require. The commenter noted
that this would limit the effect of the
any willing pharmacy provisions of the
Part D program.
Response: Nothing about this final
rule exempts any party from complying
with other legal obligations, including
any willing pharmacy provisions. We
further note the point-of-sale reduction
in price safe harbor requires that the
reduction in price be completely
reflected at the time the pharmacy
dispenses it to the beneficiary.
Comment: Some commenters
requested that we implement
procedures outside of the advisory
opinion process where parties can
request interpretive guidance regarding
the new safe harbors.
Response: We decline to implement
procedures for parties to request
individualized interpretive guidance
related to the new safe harbors. OIG
periodically issues materials (e.g.,
special advisory bulletins, special fraud
alerts) that provide guidance on
compliance with Federal health care
program standards to relevant
stakeholders.
x. Formularies
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
c. Formulary Placement
Comment: We received a number of
comments related in some way to the
Proposed Rule’s statement that
‘‘[r]ebates paid by drug manufacturers to
or through PBMs to buy formulary
position are not reductions in price.’’ 28
Several commenters stated that OIG’s
assertion that rebates negotiated in
exchange for formulary position do not
qualify as ‘‘a discount or other reduction
in price’’ under the statutory exception
conflicts with the statutory exception
and is inconsistent with Federal price
reporting rules and the agency’s own
past statements. Commenters requested
clear guidance on the extent to which
manufacturers and plans may consider
formulary positioning and other
utilization management techniques in
negotiating discounts under the
proposed point-of-sale reduction in
price safe harbor, asserting that
negotiating point-of-sale discounts that
are contingent on formulary placement
is an important tool for plans, or their
PBMs, under the new point-of-sale
reduction in price safe harbor and
28 84
FR 2340.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
would provide an opportunity to lower
patients’ out-of-pocket expenses. A
commenter further requested that OIG
clarify whether a reduction in price for
one drug contingent on formulary
placement or other condition related to
another drug would be protected under
the proposed safe harbor, so long as the
price reduction to patients applied at
the point-of-sale is consistent with, for
example, the allocation methodology
used for price reporting purposes.
In contrast, other commenters
recommended that OIG eliminate safe
harbor protection for point-of-sale
reductions in price conditioned on
exclusive or preferred formulary
placement when there are generic or
biosimilar competitors and for multiyear formulary arrangements that
preclude a plan sponsor or PBM from
adding a generic or biosimilar to a
formulary. In particular, commenters
requested that OIG preclude point-ofsale discounts on a branded product in
exchange for a plan not covering a
competing generic or biosimilar product
or placing the generic or biosimilar on
the same or higher cost-sharing tier
compared to the brand.
Response: We recognize that some
statements in the Proposed Rule may
have been misinterpreted, and we are
taking this opportunity to clarify that
reductions in price given to Part D plan
sponsors or Medicaid MCOs that are
conditioned on formulary placement of
a particular drug can qualify for
protection under the new safe harbor for
point-of-sale reductions in price (and
could have been protected for Part D
plan sponsors under the discount safe
harbor, and can continue to be protected
under the discount safe harbor for
Medicaid MCOs if all safe harbor
conditions are met). As noted by
commenters, we believe reductions in
price contingent on formulary
placement can foster competition among
manufacturers to the ultimate benefit of
beneficiaries and Federal health care
programs, provided that safety and
efficacy considerations are not
disregarded. Accordingly, under this
final rule, we confirm that point-of-sale
reductions in price can be conditioned
on formulary placement and
nonetheless qualify for protection under
the new safe harbor at § 1001.952(cc),
provided that there are no required
services (e.g., marketing or switching),
and all conditions of the safe harbor are
met. Whether other arrangements would
be considered a ‘‘service’’ that would
not be protected, such as the scenario
suggested by a commenter (conditioning
a reduction in price on a formulary not
covering a competing drug), would be
subject to a case-by-case analysis.
PO 00000
Frm 00019
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
76683
Comment: Some commenters
recommended prohibiting, through
additional safeguards in the proposed
safe harbor for PBM Service Fees or
otherwise, drug manufacturers from
tying any service fees or other
compensation paid to PBMs to
formulary placement. A commenter
recommended this prohibition unless
the compensation is paid by the
manufacturer in exchange for services a
PBM performs on a manufacturer’s
behalf to support the safe and effective
use of medicines, for example, through
risk evaluation or mitigation strategies.
Another commenter recommended that
OIG ensure payments for chargeback
processing related to point-of-sale
reductions in price are not disguised
kickbacks related to formulary
placement or exclusive arrangements.
Response: We agree with the
commenters’ concern about linking
PBM service fees or point-of-sale
chargeback administration fees to
formulary placement. As we stated in
the 2003 Compliance Program Guidance
for Pharmaceutical Manufacturers (2003
CPG), ‘‘[l]ump sum payments for
inclusion in a formulary or for exclusive
or restricted formulary status are
problematic and should be carefully
scrutinized.’’ 29 We reiterate here that
any type of a ‘‘fee’’ (which would
include any payment retained by a
PBM) is not a discount or other
reduction in price and therefore will not
meet the discount safe harbor at
§ 1001.952(h) or the new safe harbor for
point-of-sale price reductions at
§ 1001.952(cc) if it is tied to formulary
placement. Similarly, the PBM service
fee safe harbor protects fees for services
that PBMs provide to manufacturers;
developing a formulary is a service that
a PBM provides to a plan. Therefore,
those fees cannot be tied to formulary
placement.
d. Impact on Formulary
Comment: Several commenters raised
concerns relating to narrow formularies,
with a commenter noting that plans may
look for ways to minimize some of the
cost increases caused by the loss of
rebates by moving to exclusive contracts
with manufacturers where only one
manufacturer will be on the formulary
in exchange for keeping discount levels
stable. Another commenter posited that
higher-cost prescription drugs may be
placed on higher tiers or removed from
formularies altogether.
29 Office of Inspector General, OIG Compliance
Program Guidance for Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers, 68 FR 23726, 23731 (May 5, 2003),
available at https://oig.hhs.gov/authorities/docs/03/
050503FRCPGPharmac.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
76684
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
Several commenters predicted that it
could take several years following the
rule’s implementation before
formularies stabilize, while other
commenters noted that the possibility of
major formulary changes should be an
essential aspect of any impact analysis
and considered before the rule is
finalized.
Response: OIG does not administer
the Part D program; this responsibility
lies with CMS. We are informed by CMS
that they have and will diligently
oversee a robust formulary review
process to ensure sufficient inclusion of
all necessary Part D drug categories or
classes for Medicare beneficiaries. As
part of this review, CMS assesses the
adequacy of a Part D sponsor’s
formulary drug categories and classes
along with the plan’s formulary drug list
to ensure that the formulary offers an
appropriate range of Part D drugs.30
Comment: Another commenter
asserted that the forced application of
point-of-sale reductions in price to
brand drugs may lead beneficiaries to
use more expensive brand drugs instead
of generics. The commenter indicated
that not only will this increase overall
program costs and disrupt efforts to
promote the use of generics, but it may
incentivize plans to minimize the
opportunity for brand drugs to
capitalize on this circumstance by
developing narrower formularies with
fewer brand drugs.
Response: First, we reiterate that safe
harbors are voluntary and do not
mandate any conduct. In particular, the
new safe harbor for point-of-sale
reductions in price provides a pathway
to protect certain types of price
reductions, but it does not require price
reductions. Second, the final rule does
not affect other drug utilization tools
that plans have at their disposal, such
as moving generics to a lower tier or
moving brands to higher tiers.
Furthermore, sponsors have an
incentive to promote utilization of the
lower net cost drug, regardless of
whether the drug is a generic or brand.
Reductions in price applied at the pointof-sale will remove an incentive for plan
sponsors to game rebates in their
bidding, as well as create an incentive
for plans to include more generic drugs
of equal safety and efficacy on their
formularies.
Comment: A commenter indicated
that under the Proposed Rule, Part D
plans could further reduce or even
eliminate their use of fixed copayments
since simply converting all of their cost
sharing to coinsurance may make it
considerably easier to pass through
30 79
FR 1918, 1939 (Jan. 10, 2014).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
rebates at the point of sale and ensure
compliance with the changes included
in the Proposed Rule. This shift, the
commenter further contended, would
directly expose beneficiaries to drug
manufacturers’ pricing and be
particularly problematic for
beneficiaries taking brand drugs without
a rebate.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
concern that there could be a transition
to coinsurance for more drugs. Nothing
in this final rule compels plans to
discontinue their use of copayments,
which many consumers prefer; further,
upfront discounts on drugs subject to
copayments can comply with the final
point-of-sale safe harbor, so long as the
discounts are reflected in the point-ofsale price the beneficiary is paying and
accounted for when setting the
copayment amount at the time of
bidding. Comments related to CMS’s
administration of the Part D program are
outside the scope of this rulemaking.
However, CMS has indicated that
actuarial equivalence requirements in
the Part D program may require that
plans adjust copayment amounts when
setting them at the time bids are
submitted to reflect discounts under the
point-of-sale safe harbor. Additionally,
for beneficiaries taking brand drugs with
a rebate, it is possible that the
coinsurance amount for some highly
rebated drugs may be very close to the
current copayment amount and that
even patients in plans with no
deductibles and paying only
copayments could save as a result of
this final rule. When accounting for the
trends in utilization and costs by phase
for Part D beneficiaries taking high-cost
drugs with high rebates, these analyses
also suggest it is likely that beneficiaries
taking high-cost, high-rebate drugs in
copayment-based plans will see a
decrease in their overall out-of-pocket
costs.
Comment: Another commenter
discussed the impact of the Proposed
Rule on those with rare diseases. Noting
that manufacturers have less of an
incentive to offer rebates to secure
placement on a formulary for therapies
for rare diseases since these treatments
have fewer competing products, and
that within the context of Medicare,
many rare disease therapies fall within
the six protected classes that must be
included on a formulary, the commenter
asserted that as a result, there is limited
use of rebates for rare disease therapies,
so any benefits expected under the
Proposed Rule would be diluted for
patients on these treatments.
Response: As stated in the Proposed
Rule, we understand that beneficiaries
using high-cost drugs in protected
PO 00000
Frm 00020
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
classes may be less likely to benefit from
a reduced pharmacy purchase price,
because manufacturers generally offer
low or no rebates to plans for these
drugs, since drugs in protected classes
must be included on Part D plan
formularies.31 While we also recognize
that manufacturers generally do not
offer rebates on drugs where there are
no competing products, the Proposed
Rule was only intended to address
circumstances where rebates are used.
Furthermore, the Department believes
that reductions in price that are
completely reflected in the price of the
prescription pharmaceutical product at
the time the pharmacy dispenses it to
the beneficiary may also benefit
consumers in poorer health or with
higher drug costs who are on treatments
where rebates are used by decreasing
their out-of-pocket spending at the
pharmacy. The Department also believes
that the enhanced transparency of
premiums and out-of-pocket costs that
the safe harbor encourages will support
beneficiaries in making more actuarially
sound decisions.32 Thus, while the final
rule may have a differing impact on
certain patient groups, the Department
believes many patients will experience
benefits.
Comment: A health plan commenter
requested that Medicare Advantage and
Medicare Part D plan sponsors have the
ability to temporarily exclude all new,
high-cost medications from coverage
formularies for at least six months.
According to the commenter, this
approach prevents pharmaceutical
manufacturers from driving any
utilization before appropriate price
concessions are negotiated to better
reflect the new drug’s actual clinical
value.
Response: Recommendations to
change Part D program rules are beyond
the scope of this rulemaking.
Comment: Various commenters
recommended that following the
implementation of the final rule, CMS
actively monitor formulary changes and
utilization management protocols in
order to prevent patient discrimination
and to ensure patients are able to access
needed treatments. Several commenters
noted that the Proposed Rule, in
conjunction with previously proposed
changes to allow greater utilization
management for the six protected
classes of drugs within Medicare Part D,
could result in restrictions that would
interrupt care regimens for those with
certain diseases.
A commenter noted that as a
requirement for formulary approval, the
31 84
32 84
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
FR 2358 (Feb. 6, 2019).
FR 2355 (Feb. 6, 2019).
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
MMA requires that the Secretary of HHS
cannot find that a plan’s categorization
system discourages enrollment by a
group of beneficiaries. This commenter
also recommended various guardrails
that CMS should consider when
evaluating formularies under this
proposal, including tracking formularies
for increases in product exclusions due
to the heightened potential for adverse
selection, aligning formularies to
existing clinical guidelines, including a
wide range of drug treatments on
formularies, and monitoring formularies
for significant changes from copay to
coinsurance.
Response: We have coordinated with
CMS, which administers the Part D
program, in promulgating this rule. We
agree that it is critically important that
patients’ access to needed treatments be
protected, that patients not be
discriminated against, that patients
receive critical care uninterrupted, and
that plans not discourage enrollment
impermissibly. Plans should comply
with all Part D rules and take
appropriate actions to guard their
enrollees against these harms. We are
informed by CMS that they have and
will diligently use a robust formulary
review and approval process, which
entails in-depth checks to ensure
sufficient inclusion of all necessary Part
D drug categories or classes for
Medicare beneficiaries, preventing
discriminatory benefit designs. As part
of this review, CMS assesses the
adequacy of a Part D sponsor’s
formulary drug categories and classes
along with the plan’s formulary drug list
to ensure that the formulary offers an
appropriate range of Part D drugs.33 The
formulary review and approval process,
risk adjustment, and anti-discrimination
rules each serve to mitigate the
incentive for health plans and PBMs to
narrow prescription benefits for
vulnerable populations and to
discourage enrollment among high-cost
patients.
Comment: In order to prevent
narrower formularies and increased cost
sharing, a commenter recommended
that in the next payment notice for
Medicare Part D plans, CMS include
discussion of cost-sharing and
utilization management rules to ensure
the changes included in the final rule do
not lead to violations of existing
protections or result in decreased access
to necessary medicines.
Response: Suggestions for CMS to
issue guidance in the next payment
notice are outside the scope of this
rulemaking.
33 79
FR 1918, 1939 (Jan. 10, 2014).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
Comment: Other commenters
discussed the influence of rebates on
formulary placement. A health plan
commenter indicated that while net
prices factor into the overall value
proposition of a drug, review of clinical
evidence is the essential first step of
formulary development, and a drug’s
clinical performance relates in this way
to the potential magnitude of a rebate,
if any. Another health plan commenter
stated that rebates are only considered
for drugs that are in competitive classes,
where two or more therapeutically
similar or equivalent drugs exist, and
that in the overwhelming number of
cases, plan determinations regarding
drug formulary treatment are welljustified by the underlying drug
characteristics and economics.
However, other commenters asserted
our current rebate system may result in
PBMs placing more expensive products
in a preferred formulary position over
less expensive equivalents and that
eliminating rebates would correct their
impact on formulary design.
Other commenters discussed the
influence of rebates on the placement of
biosimilars on formularies and asserted
that PBMs generally give preferred
formulary placement not to the product
with the lowest list price, or to the
product that provides the lowest cost to
the patients, but to the product that will
provide the PBM with the greatest
rebate. These commenters stated that
because of a biosimilar’s lower price, it
may not have preferred placement on a
formulary, which can be particularly
harmful to patients with chronic
illnesses that rely on biosimilars.
Another commenter was concerned that
the absence of rebates, combined with
the impacts of beneficiary cost-sharing
differences and Part D subsidies/
program design, may make generic or
biosimilar drugs less lucrative to PBMs
or plan sponsors, which could result in
Part D plans giving preferential or
equivalent-tier placement to higher-cost
brand drugs.
Another commenter emphasized that
decisions about which drugs are chosen
for formulary inclusion should be based
upon the drug’s effectiveness, safety,
and ease of administration, rather than
financial arrangements like rebates.
Other commenters raised concerns that
PBMs lead to formulary disruptions.
Response: The Department agrees
with commenters asserting that clinical
factors should be paramount in
formulary development and with
commenters asserting that the current
rebate system may result in more
expensive products or products offering
PBMs the largest rebates receiving
preferred formulary placement, rather
PO 00000
Frm 00021
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
76685
than products with lower list prices or
lower costs to beneficiaries. This
concern about inappropriate financial
influence on formulary placement is an
important element of the Secretary’s
decision to finalize the Proposed Rule.
Nothing in this rule changes any Part D
requirements with respect to
formularies, including which types of
drugs should be included in a formulary
and criteria for including the drugs on
the formulary. These are matters for
CMS under the Part D program.
However, as we clarify throughout this
final rule, we agree with commenters’
suggestion that formulary placement
may be a factor in determining the type
or extent of a reduction in price that
may be available for a particular drug.
As we also clarify throughout this rule,
any portion of a so-called ‘‘rebate’’ that
was retained by a PBM was not and is
not protected under the discount safe
harbor, nor will it be protected under
the safe harbor for point-of-sale
reductions in price; such remuneration
is a payment for a service, not a
reduction in price, for purposes of the
discount safe harbor.
Comment: Other commenters raised
concerns relating to chargeback services
and formulary placement. A few
commenters asked OIG to clarify that
when a third-party unrelated to a PBM
is being paid to perform point-of-sale
chargeback administration services,
PBMs cannot require pharmaceutical
manufacturers to pay chargeback
administration fees, chargeback
adjudication fees, or similar service fees
as a condition for formulary placement
or position, due to the potential chilling
effect on third-party chargeback
administrators entering into the market.
Response: Point-of-sale chargeback
administration fees or similar service
fees would not be covered under the
new safe harbor for point-of-sale
reductions in price at § 1001.952(cc),
regardless of whether such fees are fair
market value; however, payment for
these services might, depending on the
facts and circumstances, be covered by
another safe harbor. We agree with the
commenter that only the party
performing the point-of-sale chargeback
administration should be paid for that
service. As explained elsewhere in this
rule, payments to PBMs for formulary
placement, or any kind of payment for
a service, are not covered by either the
discount safe harbor or the safe harbor
for point-of-sale reductions in price.
xi. Impact on List Price
Comment: Many commenters believed
that removing rebates would correct
distorted incentives and lower list
prices. These commenters expect that
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
76686
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
removing rebates and moving to upfront
discounts will consolidate the
procurement process and lead to
reduced costs, which could be passed
on to customers. These commenters also
expected that manufacturers would
respond to added competitive pressures
from plan sponsors with more
competitive pricing, and potentially
introduce new drugs at lower price
points.
Response: We agree with commenters’
suggestion that removing the existing
safe harbor and creating the two new
safe harbors should promote a more
transparent and rational pharmaceutical
market that may reduce drug prices
through competition.
Comment: Many commenters
expressed concern that the rule would
be unlikely to lower list prices for new
drugs or limit price increases for
existing drugs. These commenters felt
that the rule would be more likely to
either increase drug prices or not
significantly affect list prices at all.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
concern that the rule may not lower list
prices. There are a wide range of
potential behavioral changes from all
parts of the prescription pharmaceutical
product supply chain. The amendment
to the discount safe harbor removes the
positive incentives that come with
higher list prices for manufacturers,
PBMs, and payors. With these
incentives removed, and with the
incentive to get the drug for the lowest
possible net price retained, the
Department believes it is likely that list
prices will decrease and price increases
for existing drugs may be more limited.
Comment: Many other commenters
expressed concern that the expectation
that the rule would result in lower list
prices is not supported by historical,
economic, or competitive market
analysis. These commenters noted that
there was not enough support for the
conclusion that rebates are the primary
cause of high list prices and that drug
manufacturers have given no indication
that they would lower drug prices if the
rule were finalized.
Response: We disagree with
commenters’ feedback that there is no
evidence that rebates are a primary
cause of high list prices. Rebate
arrangements in the prescription drug
supply chain have been cited as a
barrier to lowering drug costs.34 We also
disagree that manufacturers have given
no indication that they would lower
34 See,
e.g., A perspective from our CEO: Gilead
Subsidiary to Launch Authorized Generics to Treat
HCV. Gilead Pharmaceuticals, available at https://
www.gilead.com/news-and-press/
companystatements/authorized-generics-for-hcv.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
drug prices if the rule were finalized.35
Finally, while we acknowledge that
there are a range of potential behavioral
changes that could result from the rule,
we do not agree with the assumption
that PBMs will start paying a higher net
price simply because of the transition
from rebates to point-of-sale discounts.
PBMs and manufacturers already know
the current net prices that they have
negotiated for drugs and PBMs have
proven to be extremely effective
negotiators over the past 15 years.
Therefore, the Department expects
PBMs to continue to work to get the best
possible deals for their customers, with
one likely result being lower list prices.
Comment: Several commenters
asserted that not only would the
Proposed Rule fail to lower list prices,
but rebates do not contribute to high list
prices nor do they prevent
manufacturers from lowering prices.
These commenters specifically argued
that list price increases are primarily
driven by drug manufacturers’ revenue
and profit goals and that rebates assist
in keeping list prices from being even
higher. These commenters noted that
list prices are increasing at a faster rate
for drugs with small rebates than for
drugs with larger rebates.
Response: The Department believes
rebates are an important driver of
increased list prices. Rebates and price
protection payments increase when list
prices increase.36
Comment: Many commenters
remarked that the Proposed Rule
contains no mechanism to bring down
list prices, and that absent additional
rulemaking, the changes included in the
Proposed Rule would further embolden
manufacturers to keep prices high.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
concern that the rule does not have a
mechanism to lower list prices. As
discussed above, the Department
believes that rebates are a major driver
of high list prices, and that, by removing
the incentives of the rebate system,
PBMs and payors will have a strong
incentive to negotiate lower net prices
and manufacturers will lower list prices.
The Department agrees with the many
commenters that commend the existing
competitive market and praise the
effectiveness of PBMs as negotiators that
have carefully managed net prices. The
amendment to the discount safe harbor
should add transparency to an
35 See Drug Pricing in America: A Prescription for
Change, Part II, Hearing Before the U.S. Senate
Comm. on Finance (Feb. 26, 2019), available at
https://www.finance.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/
37143.pdf.
36 Pharmacy manufacturer rebate negotiation
strategies: A common ground for a common
purpose. Milliman. Nov. 17, 2015.
PO 00000
Frm 00022
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
extremely competitive market, which
will translate into lower list and net
prices.
Comment: Several commenters
suggested that high list prices and drug
costs would be better addressed through
increased competition among drug
manufacturers. These commenters noted
that most of the most expensive drugs
have no competition from other
manufacturers and offer no rebates. The
commenters also noted that there are
few meaningful legal or economic
restrictions on drug manufacturers’
ability to set and increase prices,
arguing that drug manufacturers
frequently engage in anti-competitive
behavior that must be addressed for list
prices to come down, such as securing
longer periods of patent exclusivity and
pay-for-delay settlements.
Response: We agree with commenters
that high list prices and drug costs are
an important issue that requires a
multifaceted response. We further agree
that action taken to promote
competition in the prescription
pharmaceutical product space has the
potential to curb rising drug prices. This
final rule is one of many Department
initiatives that build on each other to
lower list prices and reduce out of
pocket costs, as outlined in the
American Patients First blueprint.37
Comment: Several other commenters
remarked that because the safe harbors
and amendments included in the
Proposed Rule would not apply to
commercial markets, list prices are not
likely to be lowered. These commenters
noted that commercial markets
represent a majority of the U.S. drug
market, and therefore, drug
manufacturers have little incentive to
lower list prices where a majority of the
industry would remain unchanged.
Response: We acknowledge that the
commercial market is not covered by
this final rule, and that there are a range
of potential behavioral responses as a
result of this rule. While it is possible
that the market will respond by keeping
rebates in the commercial market, as
commenters suggest, it is also possible
that the commercial market will follow
the Medicare market without direct
action. It may be difficult to maintain a
bifurcated market between commercial
and Medicare Part D, so plans may
prefer to negotiate based on the same
discount mechanism for efficiency. We
note that some commercial plans have
already begun to pass discounts on to
37 American Patients First: The Trump
Administration Blueprint to Lower Drug Prices and
Reduce Out-of-Pocket Costs, Dep’t Health & Human
Servs. (May 2018), available at https://
www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/
AmericanPatientsFirst.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
patients at the point of sale. While the
commercial market is a larger portion of
U.S. spending on prescription
pharmaceutical products than Medicare,
Medicare is an important part of the
market and the commercial market often
tracks policies implemented in the
Medicare program. The Department
believes it is likely that as parties
change their operating practices to
comply with the safe harbors with
respect to Medicare Part D business,
there may be a spillover effect on their
practices in the commercial market, and
that list prices would decline as a result.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed skepticism that switching to
point-of-sale reductions in price would
not translate to lower list prices for
various reasons, including: There is lack
of meaningful competition; intellectual
property and Food and Drug
Administration laws empower
monopolistic pricing; clinicians have a
strong influence over prescribing;
coverage and reimbursement laws create
price floors; and the healthcare industry
as a whole generally fails to assess
effective lower-cost alternative drugs.
Response: We agree with the
commenters that there are a number of
complex factors that have led to high
list prices for prescription
pharmaceutical products, and that the
Department will have to use a
multifaceted approach that addresses
many of these issues to meaningfully
lower list prices and reduce out-ofpocket costs for patients. This final rule
is addressing the incentives in the
existing rebate framework that drive up
list prices while net prices stay neutral
or increase only slightly. The
Department believes this is an important
and foundational step for other reforms
that can help to lower list prices and
reduce out-of-pocket costs, as outlined
in the American Patients First blueprint.
The Department will continue to
consider further reforms to address
issues described by the commenters.
Comment: A commenter argued that
the Proposed Rule seems to suggest that
HHS would prefer a lower list price
drug with a net higher cost over a drug
with a lower net cost and that such a
situation would increase costs for both
beneficiaries and taxpayers.
Response: We disagree. The
Department expects that the net price of
prescription pharmaceutical products
would largely be the same with pointof-sale discounts as it has been through
the use of rebates. The Department
expects that PBMs will continue to be
effective negotiators in a competitive
market and does not see any reason why
PBMs would accept higher net prices.
Instead, the Department expects that the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
rule will result in lower list prices and
lower out-of-pocket costs for patients
through point-of-sale reductions in
price.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed concern that because the
MDRP calculates mandatory rebates
using the AMP of a product (which is
impacted by a product’s list price),
lower list prices could reduce rebates
states receive under this program.
Response: The Department recognizes
that the final rule has the potential to
affect calculations of AMP in ways and
to an extent that may be difficult to
anticipate. We reiterate that the final
rule does not alter obligations under the
statutory provisions for Medicaid
prescription drug rebates under section
1927 of the Act, including AMP.
xii. Definitions
In the Proposed Rule, we asked for
comments on the definitions that are
necessary to implement the new safe
harbors. We received several comments
that we discuss below.
General Comments on Definitions
Comment: Many commenters suggest
that a number of terms introduced in the
Proposed Rule, such as ‘‘affiliate,’’
‘‘negotiated price,’’ ‘‘pharmacy
negotiated price,’’ ‘‘fair market value,’’
‘‘chargeback administrators,’’
‘‘administrative fees,’’ and
‘‘manufacturer reporting requirements,’’
must be more fully defined by the
Administration to ensure that
operational changes that will be
required by the Proposed Rule are
reflected in the common understanding
of the rules for these programs.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
feedback on the terms that require a
definition to implement this final rule
regulation. We provide the definitions
of the terms that are within the scope of
this rule below. We provide additional
information on terms such as ‘‘point-ofsale chargebacks’’ and ‘‘value-based
arrangements’’ in other parts of this
rule. We believe this rule includes the
necessary definitions for affected
entities to comply with the new safe
harbors.
Pharmacy Benefit Manager
The Proposed Rule proposed to define
‘‘pharmacy benefit manager’’ as ‘‘any
entity that provides pharmacy benefits
management on behalf of a health
benefits plan that manages prescription
drug coverage.’’ A number of
commenters provided feedback on the
definition.
Comment: One commenter noted that
health benefits plans may engage PBMs
to provide a limited suite of pharmacy
PO 00000
Frm 00023
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
76687
benefits management services, such as a
limited authorization to provide rebate
contracting services on behalf of the
plan. In addition, PBMs may be engaged
to provide services with regard to
prescription drugs dispensed under the
medical benefit, such as physician
administered drugs where a POS
discount could not be implemented, and
thus, such engagements should continue
to be covered by the existing discount
safe harbor. The commenter
recommended the following definition:
‘‘For purposes of this paragraph (h), the
term pharmacy benefit manager or PBM
means any entity that provides
pharmacy benefit management services,
or a subset thereof, to a prescription
benefit plan.’’
Response: The definition of a PBM
requires that the PBM provide
‘‘pharmacy benefit management.’’ This
definition does not require that a PBM
provide a full range of pharmacy benefit
management services; it might provide a
subset of such services. This is
consistent with the definition we are
finalizing, and we are not making a
change to the regulatory text.
Comment: Many commenters
recommended that we use a functional
definition of ‘‘PBM.’’ While some of
these commenters agreed that the role of
a PBM may evolve over time, they
suggested that if we do not use a more
detailed definition, the scope of the safe
harbor would be unclear and PBMs
would structure their arrangements to
fall within or outside of the safe harbor
based on their preferences. To develop
the more detailed definition,
commenters recommended including a
non-exhaustive list of PBMs services.
Many commenters specifically
referenced the definition proposed by a
trade association:
‘‘Pharmacy Benefit Manager’’ means any
person, business, or other entity that,
pursuant to a written agreement with plan
sponsors under Medicare Part D, either
directly or through an intermediary, acts as
a price negotiator on behalf of plan sponsors
under Medicare Part D or manages the
prescription drug benefits provided by plan
sponsors under Medicare Part D, including
but not limited to, the processing and
payment of claims for prescription drugs, the
performance of drug utilization review, the
processing of drug prior authorization
requests, the adjudication of appeals or
grievances related to the prescription drug
benefit, contracting with network
pharmacies, controlling the cost of covered
prescription drugs, or the provision of
services related thereto. Under this
definition, any person, business, or other
entity that carries out one or more of the
activities above or any entity that is owned,
affiliated, or related under a common
ownership structure with such a person,
business, or entity is a ‘‘pharmacy benefit
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
76688
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
manager.’’ Such entity is not a purchasing
agent and therefore is not a GPO as defined
in paragraph (j) of this section.
Other commenters recommended
additional services (discussed below) be
included in the definition. Commenters
notes that the list should not include
‘‘services’’ such as ‘‘negotiating rebate
arrangements,’’ that are core functions
of a PBM’s job for its plan customers,
because the new safe harbor should
protect only fees that are paid for a
specific service that the manufacturer
legitimately needs and that are provided
to the manufacturer, independent of
services a PBM provides to its plan
customers.
Response: We decline to define
‘‘pharmacy benefit manager’’ with the
level of specificity suggested by the
commenter, e.g., by defining a PBM
through a list of pharmacy benefit
management services, by incorporating
a common ownership element, or by
referencing the definition of ‘‘GPO.’’ We
do not see value in including a list of
services in the regulatory text, given the
variety of potential services; we believe
the term ‘‘pharmacy benefit
management’’ is clear and commonly
understood, and would include both
price negotiation and management of
benefits. We separately provide a nonexhaustive list of potential pharmacy
benefit management services in this
preamble that PBMs provide to health
plans, and we are adopting some of the
commenters’ suggestions for the
preamble list. The list may be useful to
parties determining whether they are a
PBM, and particularly, whether the
services they provide to a manufacturer
for purposes of the PBM services fee
safe harbor are related to the pharmacy
benefit management services that the
PBM furnishes to one or more health
plans, which is a requirement of that
safe harbor. As commenters
acknowledge, the role of PBMs may
evolve over time, which could make it
problematic to use a functional
definition. We address common
ownership elsewhere in this preamble.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that the PBM definition
should further distinguish between the
functions of PBMs and GPOs to
foreclose protection of PBM services
arrangements under the GPO safe
harbor.
Response: We are not prohibiting
PBMs from potentially qualifying for the
GPO safe harbor protection. As we
explain in greater detail in section
III.D.vii below, if a PBM otherwise
meets the qualifications, and follows the
limitations, for the GPO safe harbor,
then it may be able to use that safe
harbor.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
Comment: Some commenters noted
that the Proposed Rule may lead entities
to vertically integrate. These
commenters expressed concern that as
PBMs continue to evolve in the market,
e.g., by vertical integration, merging
with other entities, and/or spinning off
certain business units, there could be
new entities that fall outside the
Proposed Rule’s definition for ‘‘PBM,’’
but that influence the PBM negotiation
process.
Response: This final rule relates only
to safe harbor protection under the antikickback statute; safe harbors protect
specified arrangements that implicate
the anti-kickback statute. Any entity
seeking protection for an arrangement
must meet all conditions of a safe
harbor, including any applicable
definitions. If an arrangement does not
fit in a safe harbor, it would be subject
to case-by-case review under the antikickback statute. It strikes us as unlikely
that this final rule itself would lead
parties to favor arrangements that do not
qualify for safe harbor protection.
Pharmacy Benefit Management Services
Under the Proposed Rule, the services
provided to the manufacturer must
relate to the ‘‘pharmacy benefit
management services’’ that the PBM
furnishes to one or more health plans.
The Proposed Rule proposed a nonexhaustive preamble list of examples of
pharmacy benefit management services
furnished to plans, such as contracting
with a network of pharmacies;
establishing payment levels for network
pharmacies; negotiating rebate
arrangements; developing and managing
formularies, preferred drug lists, and
prior authorization programs;
performing drug utilization review; and
operating disease management
programs. In the Proposed Rule, we
proposed that we would not create a
definition for ‘‘pharmacy benefit
management services’’ with the
understanding that these services could
evolve over time. We did not propose a
definition for the term ‘‘pharmacy
benefit management services.’’ In the
Proposed Rule, we solicited comments
on the approach of providing examples,
but not providing a definition.
Comment: Many commenters
recommended including the list of the
pharmacy benefit management services
in the definition. Services
recommended for the definition in
addition to those listed in the Proposed
Rule include processing claims for
prescription drugs, adjudication of
appeals or grievances related to the
prescription drug benefit, controlling
the costs of covered prescription drugs,
and provision of services related to the
PO 00000
Frm 00024
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
services listed. These commenters stated
that ‘‘negotiating rebate arrangements’’
should not be included in the list of
services, since they are prohibited by
the new safe harbor.
Response: We accept, with a
modification explained below, the
commenters’ recommendations for
additions to the preamble list of
potential pharmacy benefit management
services that PBMs furnish to plans and
to change the listed service related to
negotiation of rebate arrangements to
negotiation of discount arrangements.
Accordingly, the following is a nonexhaustive list of pharmacy benefit
management services that PBMs furnish
to plans for purposes of this final rule:
Contracting with a network of
pharmacies; establishing payment levels
for network pharmacies; negotiating
rebates and discount arrangements;
developing and managing formularies,
preferred drug lists, and prior
authorization programs; performing
drug utilization review; operating
disease management programs;
processing and payment of claims for
prescription drugs; adjudication of
appeals or grievances related to the
prescription drug benefit; and
controlling the costs of covered
prescription drugs. To be clear: This is
not a list of services PBMs furnish to
manufacturers, but a list of examples of
pharmacy benefit management services
that PBMs furnish to any type of health
plan. For the purposes of this rule, we
are listing ‘‘negotiate rebate or discount
arrangements’’ in recognition that PBMs
may negotiate both discounts and some
types of rebates.
Comment: Some commenters noted
that it is unclear how the PBM service
fee amounts compare with the current
definitions of ‘‘Bona Fide Service Fees’’
(BFSFs) under the Medicare Part D and
the MDRP. One commenter noted that
the definition of BFSFs includes
additional conditions, meaning that it is
not entirely consistent with the terms of
the safe harbor, which creates questions
regarding the reporting of these fees by
Part D sponsors under Part D as well as
by drug manufacturers in regards to
their determinations of best price and
AMP under the MDRP. Likewise, PBMs
are required to account for BFSFs in
reporting the aggregate amount of price
concessions they negotiate that are
attributable to patient utilization under
a Part D or MA–PD plan. This
commenter asked that CMS issue
guidance regarding any differences
between these two types of fees and the
reporting and FMV implications under
Part D and the MDRP.
Response: These comments are
outside of the scope of this rule, which
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
does not address compliance with CMS
requirements relating to DIR reporting
for when a payment may be considered
within the point-of-sale safe harbor but
not a bona fide service fee for purposes
of DIR reporting.
Comment: One commenter noted that
PBMs do not conduct many of the
services outlined in the examples for
pharmacy benefit management services,
listed in the Proposed Rule, on behalf of
manufacturers. In fact, some of the
activities attributed to PBMs involve the
practice of pharmacy which is overseen
by state boards of pharmacy.
Specifically, the commenter noted that
negotiating pharmacy networks is an
activity that is typically done by PBMs
on behalf of plans and for which
community pharmacies pay a type of
pharmacy DIR fee to participate in such
a network (known as a pay-to-play fee).
In the PBM-manufacturer relationship,
PBMs typically receive administration
fees from manufacturers for acting as a
purchasing agent for the underlying
plans to which PBMs provide services
(and also for the provision of data). The
commenter recommends revising
definition of ‘‘pharmacy benefit
management services’’ and narrowing
any further description of PBM services
to the actual services PBMs provide to
manufacturers so that PBMs do not
create a de facto rebate composed of
new classes of fees charged to
manufacturers.
Response: We clarify that term
‘‘pharmacy benefit management
services’’ as used in the safe harbor at
42 CFR 1001.952(dd), and the nonexhaustive list of such services provided
above, refers to services furnished to
health plans, not manufacturers. We
agree that we do not want to create de
facto rebates composed of new classes of
fees charged to manufacturers. We
believe that the condition in the new
safe harbor for PBM service fees that
requires predetermined flat fees that are
not tied to volume provides a necessary
safeguard to prevent abuse of these fees.
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
Manufacturer
The Proposed Rule proposed to define
‘‘manufacturer’’ with the meaning
ascribed to it in Social Security Act
section 1927(k)(5), which defines
manufacturer as any entity which is
engaged in the production, preparation,
propagation, compounding, conversion,
or processing of prescription drug
products, either directly or indirectly by
extraction from substances of natural
origin, or independently by means of
chemical synthesis, or by a combination
of extraction and chemical synthesis, or
in the packaging, repackaging, labeling,
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
relabeling, or distribution of
prescription drug products.
We did not receive any comments on
the definition of manufacturer, and we
are finalizing the definition of
‘‘manufacturer’’ as proposed.
Wholesaler/Distributor
The Proposed Rule proposed to define
the terms ‘‘wholesaler’’ and
‘‘distributor’’ as terms that are used
interchangeably and carry the same
meaning as the term ‘‘wholesaler’’ as
defined in Social Security Act section
1927(k)(11). Section 1927(k)(11) defines
‘‘wholesaler’’ as a drug wholesaler that
is engaged in wholesale distribution of
prescription drugs to retail community
pharmacies, including (but not limited
to) manufacturers, repackers,
distributors, own-label distributors,
private-label distributors, jobbers,
brokers, warehouses (including
manufacturer’s and distributor’s
warehouses, chain drug warehouses,
and wholesale drug warehouses)
independent wholesale drug traders,
and retail community pharmacies that
conduct wholesale distributions.
We did not receive any comments on
the definition of ‘‘wholesaler’’ and
‘‘distributor,’’ and we are finalizing the
definitions of ‘‘wholesaler’’ and
‘‘distributor’’ as proposed.
Medicaid Managed Care Organization
The Proposed Rule proposed to define
‘‘Medicaid managed care organization’’
or ‘‘Medicaid MCO’’ with the same
meaning ascribed to these terms in
section 1903(m) of the Social Security
Act. We did not receive any comments
on the definition of Medicaid MCOs in
the Proposed Rule. While we are
moving this definition to § 1001.952(cc),
we are otherwise finalizing this
definition as proposed.
Prescription Pharmaceutical Product
The Proposed Rule proposed to define
‘‘prescription pharmaceutical product’’
as either a drug or a biological as those
terms are defined in sections
1927(k)(2)(A), (B), and (C) of the Act.
Comment: One commenter noted that
the definition of prescription
pharmaceutical product states that the
terms ‘‘drug’’ and ‘‘biological’’ are
defined at Section 1927(k)(2) of the
Social Security Act, but this is not the
case. A commenter recommended that
this definition be revised to read as
follows: ‘‘For purposes of this paragraph
(h), a prescription pharmaceutical
product means any drug, biological or
insulin product that falls within the
scope of Social Security Act section
1927(k)(2).’’
PO 00000
Frm 00025
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
76689
Response: We agree that ‘‘defined’’ is
inaccurate. We are updating the
definition to use the word ‘‘described’’
instead of ‘‘defined.’’ In addition,
because insulin is considered to be a
biological product, we are not adopting
the commenter’s recommendation to list
that term in this definition.
‘‘Fair Market Value’’ and ‘‘Arm’s-Length
Transactions’’
In the Proposed Rule, we stated that
the new safe harbor for certain PBM
service fees would be available for fees
if they are consistent with ‘‘fair market
value in an arm’s-length transaction.’’
Many commenters provided feedback
on the definition of ‘‘fair market value’’
and ‘‘arm’s-length transaction.’’
Comment: Multiple commenters
recommended that OIG provide
guidance on certain issues related to fair
market value compensation in an arm’slength transaction. At least one of these
commenters recommended that OIG (i)
clarify that PBMs are obligated to
negotiate services arrangements in good
faith based on the bona fide needs of
manufacturers, (ii) clarify the scope of
safe harbor protection available for
arrangements in which a PBM provides
services on behalf of an affiliated health
plan, and (iii) clarify that individual
health plans that do not provide
pharmacy benefits management services
to plan sponsors under Part D may not
attempt to use the safe harbor to
negotiate administrative fees from
manufacturers.
Another commenter recommended
definitions of ‘‘fair market value’’ and
‘‘arm’s-length’’ that would set guardrails
for purposes of negotiations between
manufacturers, PBMs, Part D plans, and
chargeback administrators and would
provide further transparency on how
HHS intends these fees to be
determined. Specifically, the
commenter recommended that OIG
clarify that the fair market value
standard is neither intended to allow
free rein for third-party entities to
continue to keep a disproportionate
share of pricing concessions that should
be used to reduce beneficiary costsharing nor to tie fees to the list price
of a medication.
Response: We decline to provide
further guidance on fair market value
compensation in an arm’s-length
transaction. The safe harbor is an
affirmative defense for criminal
violations of the anti-kickback statute,
so it is the entity’s obligation to prove
that the remuneration meets the
conditions of the safe harbor based on
the terms outlined in this final rule.
Moreover, these terms are used in
several existing safe harbors.
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
76690
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
Comment: One commenter
recommended that OIG clarify the
requirement that payments be
‘‘consistent with fair market value in an
arm’s-length transaction’’ by providing a
non-exhaustive list of examples of
valuation approaches that meet this
standard and specify that PBMs must
negotiate in good faith based on
manufacturers’ bona fide needs,
refraining from tactics that would be
inconsistent with an arm’s-length
transaction. The commenter asserted
that OIG should require that PBMs
inform manufacturers when seeking
manufacturer compensation for services
also compensated by health plans. This
disclosure would enable manufacturers
to evaluate whether to pay for the
services and what a fair market value
rate might be.
Response: We decline to provide a
non-exhaustive list of examples of
valuation approaches. We expect that
parties seeking protection under this
safe harbor have experience with the
fair market value standard and would
use generally accepted valuation
methodologies and principles in any
determination of ‘‘fair market value.’’
We also decline to include a
requirement that the PBM inform a
manufacturer when the PBM is
receiving compensation from a health
plan for a service. This safe harbor
protects only payment by a
pharmaceutical manufacturer for
services the PBM provides to the
manufacturer, not payment for services
a PBM provides to a health plan;
because we have included additional
conditions in the safe harbor aimed at
clarifying that only payment for
legitimate services would be protected,
we do not believe this requirement is
necessary.
xiii. Comments Outside the Scope of
Rulemaking
Above we respond to certain
comments addressing matters outside
the scope of this safe harbor rulemaking.
We received additional comments that
are outside the scope of this rulemaking.
For instance, several commenters
recommended that Congress pass
legislation or the Department create new
regulations related to certain issues the
Proposed Rule appears to address, such
as lowering cost-sharing and out-ofpocket costs for consumers; promoting
competition of generics and biosimilars;
and ensuring beneficiaries have access
to negotiated prices through point-ofsale rebates. Requests for Congress to
pass legislation are outside the
rulemaking authority; the other matters
raised by commenters are programmatic
and outside the safe harbor authority.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
Another suggestion involved extending
safe harbor protection to the commercial
market; as noted above, purely
commercial arrangements generally do
not implicate the Federal anti-kickback
statute. Commenters requested that OIG
or CMS establish certain programs or
other forms of guidance, including
creating a rebate index that would
provide parties with data on the range
of rebates currently used in the market
for each drug receiving rebates under
Part D. Another commenter
recommended focusing on the lack of
competition in the drug market and
restrictions on beneficiary choice rather
than trying to reform the rebate system;
as noted above, this rule is part of a
larger set of Department actions
undertaken and under consideration
with respect to lowering drug prices.
Other commenters requested that OIG
create a new safe harbor protecting
value-based arrangements or proposed
specifically including value-based
arrangements in existing safe harbors.
OIG has proposed safe harbors for
certain value-based arrangements in
separate rulemaking.38
B. Discount Safe Harbor Amendment
i. Statutory Exception
Comment: Several commenters stated
that, under the terms of a rebate
arrangement, a manufacturer offers
remuneration to a Part D plan sponsor
or Medicaid MCO to induce the
purchase of federally reimbursable
products, thus implicating the antikickback statute. However, commenters
further asserted that, although the
statutory discount exception does not
explicitly refer to rebates, the language
encompasses any reduction in price as
long as it is properly documented,
which would include rebates
administered by PBMs. Because a rebate
is a ‘‘reduction in price’’ obtained by
Part D plan sponsor ‘‘under a Federal
health care program,’’ and they are
‘‘properly disclosed’’ to CMS and
‘‘appropriately reflected’’ in costs
submitted to CMS, including through
statutorily required and CMSestablished processes for reporting DIR,
commenters assert that they are
protected under the statutory discount
exception. Similarly, a commenter
alleged that the Proposed Rule was
based on incorrect and incomplete
assumptions regarding the conduct
protected by the statutory discount
exception.
Response: The legislative history of
the statutory exception states that the
exception is intended to protect
38 42
PO 00000
FR 55694 (Oct. 17, 2019).
Frm 00026
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
discounts that are properly disclosed
and appropriately reflected, and notes
that providers are encouraged to ‘‘seek
discounts as a good business practice
which results in savings to [M]edicare
and [M]edicaid program costs.’’ 39 As
explained elsewhere, as the market has
evolved in recent years, we do not
believe that the way many types of
rebates have been used in the Part D
program function as reductions in price.
While we believe that the changes that
we are finalizing to the safe harbors
reflect statutory intent and provide a
clear pathway to protection, we reiterate
our longstanding guidance that safe
harbors are voluntary. If a party believes
in good faith that a particular
arrangement does not implicate the antikickback statute or meets the terms of a
statutory exception, there is no mandate
to comply with a safe harbor.
Comment: A commenter noted that
the Department has acknowledged that
Congressional intent was to protect
price reductions in the normal course of
business and that post-point-of-sale
manufacturer price reductions are
precisely the type of discounting that
occurs in the normal course of business.
Another commenter noted that Congress
did not give the Department authority to
transform practices that are protected
under the statutory discount exception
into a crime; the Secretary’s regulatory
authority is limited to protecting
conduct that would otherwise be illegal.
Response: We agree with the
commenter that Congress gave the
Department authority to protect certain
practices that occur in the normal
course of business. We further agree that
the Department does not have authority
to narrow the reach of the statutory
discount exception, and that is not our
intent. We note, however, that the mere
fact that a certain practice is performed
in the normal course of business does
not make it legal. As a threshold matter,
to be protected under the discount
exception, an arrangement must involve
a reduction in price. For example, an
arrangement between a manufacturer
and a plan sponsor to increase the
amount of the rebate to the plan sponsor
by increasing the list price of the drug
would be suspect and subject to
scrutiny under the statute. Given the
variety of ‘‘rebate’’ arrangements that
have been created over the past several
years between pharmaceutical
manufactures and Part D plan sponsors
(directly or through PBMs), many of
which are not reductions in price, the
Secretary has determined that rebates to
Part D plan sponsors do not pose a low
39 See H.R. Rep. No. 95–393, pt. 2, at 53 (1977)
(emphasis added).
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
risk of fraud and abuse and should not
be protected by a regulatory safe harbor.
We reiterate that falling outside of a safe
harbor does not make an arrangement
criminal; each arrangement would need
to be examined on a case-by-case basis.
Comment: A commenter stated that
the Proposed Rule impermissibly
infringes on protections afforded by the
statutory discount exception because,
taking together the changes to the
discount safe harbor and the addition of
the new safe harbor for point-of-sale
reductions in price, the Proposed Rule
effectively eliminates post-point-of-sale
manufacturer price reductions, which
limits the types of price reductions a
Part D plan sponsor, a Medicaid MCO,
or a PBM could accept from a
manufacturer. The commenter stated
that the new safe harbor for point-of-sale
reductions in price imposes
requirements beyond those in the
discount exception’s text.
Response: In this final rule, we are
carving out a narrow class of
arrangements that the Secretary believes
poses a higher risk of fraud and abuse
and the potential for increased costs to
both beneficiaries and Federal health
care programs, and we are creating a
new safe harbor to protect certain
reductions in price that pose lower risk.
This new safe harbor has its own
conditions, specific to the particular
arrangements that are the subject of the
safe harbor, and it is not intended to
mirror the discount exception or safe
harbor. As noted above, this final rule
has no impact on the statutory
exception.
Comment: Other commenters asserted
that rebates or other payments by drug
manufacturers to PBMs may be
structured to fit under the GPO safe
harbor, 42 CFR 1001.952(j), as well as
the managed care safe harbors 42 CFR
1001.952(m),(t), and (u), and noted that
these safe harbors have corollary
statutory exceptions under the antikickback statute (the statutory GPO
exception, and the statutory shared risk
exception). Commenters asserted that
the elimination of these statutory
protections through revisions to the
regulatory discount safe harbor
inappropriately reads out of the antikickback statute the multiple
protections available to MCOs under
other relevant statutory exceptions.
Another commenter asked OIG to
issue guidance or revise the managed
care safe harbors 42 CFR 1001.952(m),
(t), and (u) to ensure they do not protect
reductions in price or other
remuneration that is excluded under the
discount safe harbor.
Response: As a threshold matter, and
as we discuss in detail above, rebates
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
from manufacturers to PBMs were not
protected by the discount safe harbor. If
a payment arrangement can be
structured to fit within any one safe
harbor, it would be protected by that
safe harbor regardless of any changes to
a different safe harbor. Amendments to
the managed care safe harbors, 42 CFR
1001.952(m),(t), and (u), are beyond the
scope of this rulemaking.
ii. Effective Dates
We received many comments on the
proposed January 1, 2020 effective date
for the revisions to the discount safe
harbor.
Comment: Various commenters
supported the proposed effective date.
Some of these commenters noted that it
would be challenging to make all
necessary updates to systems and
agreements and that significant
resources would be required across the
industry to meet a January 1, 2020
effective date, but that the proposed
effective date is attainable. Some
commenters noted that guidance from
OIG and CMS and cooperation from
stakeholders would be required to meet
that timeline and minimize patient,
pharmacy, and supply chain
disruptions.
Response: Based on the comments
received and further consideration of
the appropriate timeframe for
implementation, we have modified our
proposal, and the changes to
§ 1001.952(h)(5) of the discount safe
harbor will be effective January 1, 2022,
which should provide adequate time for
parties to come into compliance and to
minimize any disruption.
Comment: A commenter strongly
supported a January 1, 2020 effective
date, but the commenter recommended
that it be coupled with both a flexible
36-month transition process to facilitate
implementation and guidance issued
before the effective date on chargebacks
and other issues. Other commenters
suggested delaying the effective date
and testing efforts to reform the rebate
system before the Proposed Rule is
implemented across Medicare Part D.
Other commenters that did not support
a January 1, 2020, effective date noted
that the April 5, 2019 Memorandum
from CMS provided some guidance, but
not enough to submit an actuarially
sound bid. Another commenter urged
OIG to delay the effective date of the
final rule until 2022 or, alternatively, to
issue a statement that it will not begin
to enforce the new safe harbors until
after the period of the announced CMS
demonstration. A commenter also noted
that the demonstration program would
need to be expanded, for example, to
account for enhanced benefits to EGWP
PO 00000
Frm 00027
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
76691
plans. This commenter further stated
that if CMS does not expand the
demonstration program, CMS would
have to require plans to submit two bids
(one to account for rebates, one to
account for POS discounts). Another
noted that this effective date would
place an enormous burden on CMS to
issue required guidance, which could
lead to beneficiary disruption if key
events leading to the open enrollment
period are delayed. A commenter
requested that OIG clarify whether
manufacturers, PBMs, and pharmacies
can leverage existing mechanisms for
exchanging data to support point-of-sale
reductions in price, noting that the
January 1, 2020 effective date is more
feasible if extensive systems changes are
not necessary.
Response: Based on the comments
received and further consideration of
the appropriate time frame for
implementation, we are finalizing our
proposal for the changes to
§ 1001.952(h)(5) of the discount safe
harbor to be effective January 1, 2022.
The CMS demonstration referenced by
the commenter was contingent on a
change in the safe harbor rules effective
in 2020; because our changes to
§ 1001.952(h)(5) of the discount safe
harbor will be effective January 1, 2022,
requests for modifications to that
demonstration are no longer
applicable.40 Additionally, we confirm
that the safe harbor does not mandate
any particular system or process for
implementing point-of-sale reductions
in price.
Comment: Several commenters noted
that the proposed January 1, 2020
effective date is particularly problematic
for Medicaid MCOs because many
states’ contracts are not renewed
annually and often work on a July 1June 30 fiscal year. A January 1 change
could require mid-year rate adjustments
to ensure that capitated payments to
managed care plans are actuarially
sound. Other commenters noted that the
proposed January 1, 2020, effective date
would not give states enough time to
substitute directly negotiated
supplemental rebates for current
Medicaid MCO rebates. Additionally, a
state health department commenter
indicated that a January 1, 2020,
effective date would make it challenging
to prospectively set Medicaid Managed
Care capitation rates that appropriately
account for anticipated price reductions
for prescription pharmaceutical
40 Letter from Seema Verma, Administrator, CMS,
to Part D Plan Sponsors (Apr. 5, 2019), available at
https://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-andSystems/Computer-Data-and-Systems/HPMS/
Downloads/HPMS-Memos/Weekly/SysHPMSMemo-2019-Apr-5th.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
76692
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
products, while another commenter
stated that the proposed January 1,
2020, effective date would significantly
disrupt current arrangements among
manufacturers, PBMs, Medicaid MCOs,
and pharmacies.
Response: Based on the feedback we
have received from commenters and
further consideration of the appropriate
timeframe for implementation, we are
finalizing the modifications to
§ 1001.952(h)(5) of the discount safe
harbor to be effective on January 1,
2022. Additionally, we are not finalizing
our proposal with respect to Medicaid
MCOs, which we believe addresses the
commenters’ concerns.
Comment: Various commenters stated
that the effective date should be delayed
for some period of time (e.g., at least
until 2022) to give plan sponsors time
to understand the impact of the rule. A
commenter noted that the changes set
forth in the Proposed Rule would occur
simultaneously with many other
changes being proposed to or
implemented in the Part D benefit,
including new indication-based
formularies. The commenter stated that
other pending rules would impact Part
D protected classes, pharmacy DIR
changes, shifting drugs from Part B to
Part D, and others, all of which would
make a January 1, 2020, effective date
more challenging. Commenters noted
that, depending on what is finalized,
plans may need to adjust bids,
renegotiate contracts, and make systems
changes. Another commenter noted that
both PBMs and plans will have to
contract with vendors, who will have to
develop, test, sell, and have operational
products, which the commenter asserts
cannot happen by 2020. Another
commenter indicated that the safe
harbor changes proposed in the
Proposed Rule would require
fundamental changes to the way drugs
are negotiated, reimbursed, and
adjudicated at the point of sale, which
would include new NCPDP electronic
health care transaction codes for
pharmacy claims.
Commenters suggested that both the
proposed January 1, 2020, effective date
and alternative effective date of January
1, 2021, were unreasonable, indicating
additional time would be needed to
implement the point-of-sale reduction
in price structure, and that the
chargeback system referenced in the
Proposed Rule would be far more
complex and require more coordination
than what currently exists. Others
suggested that the same changes would
take one year and recommended an
implementation date of 2021, with a
commenter noting that an additional
year would help protect patients from
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
the negative consequences of market
disruption and allow more time to
educate beneficiaries on any finalized
changes. Another commenter asserted
that the proposed effective date of
January 1, 2020 should be delayed to
allow the market to have an opportunity
to respond to the new rule. A health
plan commenter also recommended
delaying the effective date of the rule
beyond January 1, 2020, noting that
even with CMS’s risk corridor
assurances, there is still too much
uncertainty, which will lead to
disparities in 2020 bid pricing.
Response: The final rule is one of
many complementary initiatives
targeted around lowering list prices and
reducing out-of-pocket costs, as outlined
in the American Patients First blueprint.
These initiatives are meant to build on
each other to create a more rational and
competitive prescription
pharmaceutical product market. Based
on the comments received and further
consideration of the appropriate
timeframe for implementation, we are
finalizing the changes to
§ 1001.952(h)(5) of the discount safe
harbor to be effective January 1, 2022.
Comment: Several commenters
objected to the proposed effective date
because of the statutory Part D bid
deadline. Commenters stated that plans
expected all final guidance for the
upcoming year to be released by CMS in
early April 2019 because Part D bid
submissions for calendar year 2020 were
due by June 3, 2019. If a final rule were
released without sufficient lead time,
the commenter cautioned that there will
be large financial losses for plans and
for CMS (who would have to make
substantial payments when plans enter
the risk corridor). A commenter
expressed concern about the ability to
submit an actuarially sound bid by the
bid deadline.
An effective date of January 1, 2020,
does not provide a reasonable amount of
time after issuing a final rule for renegotiating agreements involving
pharmaceutical manufacturers,
pharmacies, health plans, and PBMs.
Several commenters raised concerns
that a January 1, 2020, effective date
would make it difficult for the online
Medicare Plan Finder tool to reflect
accurate information about premiums,
deductibles, and cost-sharing and
requested that CMS prioritize updates to
the Medicare Plan Finder and other
notices to patients. Some commenters
also noted that a January 1, 2020,
effective date could cause significant
disruptions in coverage or benefits and
confusion for beneficiaries. This
confusion, a commenter argued, may
make it difficult for patients to
PO 00000
Frm 00028
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
understand and utilize their
prescription drug benefits or could
cause patients to search for new plans.
Other commenters noted that
formularies for Medicare Part D plans
must be complete by early May for the
June bid submission, and that given the
timing of the rule, an effective date of
January 1, 2020, would make it
extremely challenging to meet the bid
requirements.
Response: Comments related to CMS’s
administration of the Part D program are
outside the scope of this rulemaking.
We are finalizing the changes to
§ 1001.952(h)(5) of the discount safe
harbor to be effective January 1, 2022.
Comment: A commenter stated that a
2020 effective date would harm
beneficiaries enrolled in MA–PD plans,
especially if the rule is finalized after
bids are submitted on June 3, 2019. The
commenter suggested that, in order to
mitigate losses from the change in
rebates after premiums and bids have
been set, MA–PD plans would have to
reduce costs in other areas. The
commenter stated that it would take
years for plan sponsors to recover from
these losses, threatening improvements
in quality performance, Star measures,
and the benefits of care coordination
over an extended period.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
feedback and note that we are now
finalizing an effective date of January 1,
2022, for the amendments to
§ 1001.952(h)(5) of the discount safe
harbor, which should avoid the
disruptions and potential harm
described by the commenters. Under the
final rule, parties are not being asked to
change their practices after bids and
premiums have been set for the 2022
plan year.
Comment: A health plan commenter
indicated that if OIG requires point-ofsale reductions in price, health plans
will have to determine benefit
configuration, and there will likely be
several formulary configuration
changes. A PBM commenter indicated
that significant system development and
testing would be required, including
system modifications to apply formulary
exceptions, and that PBMs would need
to make dramatic formulary changes just
prior to the 2020 plan year which,
according to the commenter, may result
in member disruption and
dissatisfaction.
Response: We thank the commenter
for sharing this concern and note that
the effective date of the modifications to
§ 1001.952(h)(5) of the discount safe
harbor will be January 1, 2022,
providing additional time for
stakeholders to address these and other
potential implementation concerns.
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
Comment: A commenter noted that
employers, including state employers,
would not receive any benefits from the
changes we proposed, and they would
face additional costs if premiums
increase. The commenter indicated that
this is particularly unfair for public
employers such as state governments
that rely upon taxpayers to help fund
public employee and retiree health
benefit coverage. The commenter
requested either an exemption from the
proposed rule for governmental
employee benefit plans, which are not
subject to ERISA, or if an exemption is
not granted, then a delay in the effective
date specifically for non-ERISA plans to
January 1, 2021.
Response: We thank the commenter
for sharing this concern and note that
the finalized effective date of January 1,
2022 for modifications to
§ 1001.952(h)(5) of the discount safe
harbor should provide sufficient time to
address these and other implementation
concerns. We do, however, disagree
with the commenter’s suggestion to
remove employee benefit plans from the
final rule. The Department believes that
the transition from rebates to point-ofsale reductions in price can happen
based on existing infrastructure, and
these plans will benefit from the lower
list prices that may result from the final
rule.
iii. Expand to Other Federal Health Care
Programs
The Proposed Rule stated that the
changes proposed were intended to
exclude from discount safe harbor
protection rebates from manufacturers
to plan sponsors under Medicare Part D
and Medicaid MCOs, whether
negotiated by the plan or by a PBM or
paid through a PBM to the plan or
Medicaid MCO. The Proposed Rule
clarified that the Department intended
for the discount safe harbor to continue
to protect discounts on prescription
pharmaceutical products offered to
other entities, including, but not limited
to, wholesalers, hospitals, physicians,
pharmacies, and third-party payers in
other Federal health care programs.
Commenters provided feedback about
whether payments for prescription
pharmaceuticals paid for by other
Federal health care programs should be
excluded from the safe harbor.
Comment: Some commenters noted
that if Medicaid MCOs, but not
Medicaid fee-for-service, are excluded
from the existing safe harbor, the
Department would be treating these
programs differently and would
potentially put Medicaid MCOs at a
disadvantage. Most of these commenters
recommended removing Medicaid
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
MCOs from the proposed exclusion of
the existing safe harbor. A few
commenters were indifferent on
whether or not Medicaid MCOs were
excluded from the existing safe harbor
or not, but they recommended that
Medicaid MCOs and Medicaid fee for
service be treated the same way.
Response: As discussed above, the
final rule removes Medicaid MCOs from
the exclusion of the existing safe harbor,
which addresses these comments.
Comment: Several commenters agreed
with our proposal that the amendment
to the discount safe harbor should not
apply to prescription pharmaceutical
products payable under Medicare Part
B. These commenters noted that Part B
drugs are reimbursed under Medicare
fee-for-service based on the average
sales price (ASP), which already
accounts for rebates and other price
concessions. There were no comments
recommending that payment for drugs
billed by Part B fee-for-service providers
be excluded from existing safe harbors.
Response: We are finalizing our
proposal that the amendment to the
discount safe harbor should not apply to
prescription pharmaceutical products
payable under Medicare Part B for the
reason noted by the commenters.
Comment: A commenter
recommended that OIG remove the safe
harbor protection for rebates paid to
Medicare Advantage plans with respect
to their coverage of Part B drugs because
an increasing number of Medicare
beneficiaries are covered by Medicare
Advantage plans, and these plans can
use rebates, similar to Part D plans, to
manage Part B drug costs. Additionally,
according to the commenter, many of
the most expensive, high-spend drugs
are physician-administered biologics.
Another commenter noted that
Medicare Advantage generally pays for
Part B drugs as part of the medical
benefit, and because of underlying
Medicare rules, these drugs are
generally not subject to the same type of
formulary placement negotiations and
patient cost-sharing patterns as in the
Part D prescription drug benefit.
Finally, additional commenters stated
that there are differing levels of costsharing in Medicare Advantage for Part
B drugs and that it is likely not
necessary to extend the proposed
changes to Part B drugs. However, they
recommend that OIG evaluate how
Medicare Advantage plans are reflecting
potential savings on Part B covered
medicines in beneficiary cost-sharing.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their recommendations. We are
finalizing our proposal that the
amendment to the discount safe harbor
should not apply to prescription
PO 00000
Frm 00029
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
76693
pharmaceutical products payable under
Medicare Part B for the reasons noted by
the commenters.
Comment: One commenter noted that
the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA)
could use this rule as an opportunity to
assert a self-serving interpretation of the
definition of the non-Federal average
manufacturer price (non-FAMP). The
commenter would like OIG to clarify
that any transactions governed by the
final rule would constitute ‘‘Federal’’
prices and should thus be excluded
from the determination of a ‘‘nonFederal’’ average manufacture price. For
the VA to determine that these are not
‘‘Federal’’ sales would be inconsistent
with the Veterans Health Care Act.
Response: In the Proposed Rule, we
noted that the VA, Department of
Defense, Coast Guard, and the Public
Health Service (including the Indian
Health Service) are eligible to purchase
drugs under the Federal Ceiling Price
(FCP) Program. The FCP is calculated as
a percentage of non-FAMP. Eligible
programs can purchase drugs using the
lesser of the Federal Supply Schedule
(FSS) Price and FCP. Although it is
difficult to determine the operation of
the Proposed Rule on FSS users or
entities entitled to FCPs, if the overall
effect of lowering list pricing is
achieved and that results in lower prices
to commercial customers (and
wholesalers) or pricing components of
non-FAMP, it is possible the VA may
realize some additional savings. This
final rule does not change the
requirements of the FCP and whether
Federal programs, such as the VA, count
transactions governed by this final rule
as ‘‘Federal’’ prices is outside the scope
of this rulemaking.
iv. Scope of Amendment
Comment: A commenter asserted that,
as written, the proposed amendment to
the discount safe harbor would apply
not only to rebates on prescription drugs
dispensed by a community pharmacy
but also to physician-administered
drugs covered in the Medicaid program.
According to the commenter, Medicaid
MCOs would no longer be able to collect
rebates on these drugs as there is no
avenue to pass the rebate on at the point
of sale. The commenter explained that
the change could lead to ‘‘whitebagging’’ (i.e., where providers purchase
a pharmaceutical product from a
specialty pharmacy in order to receive
a discount), which the commenter
believes raises a number of operational
and program-integrity concerns. The
commenter also noted this change could
create an access issue for members in
rural locations.
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
76694
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
Response: As discussed in detail
elsewhere in this final rule, we are not
finalizing the changes to the discount
safe harbor with respect to Medicaid
MCOs, which we believe addresses the
commenter’s concerns.
Comment: A number of commenters
requested clarification regarding what
specific types of rebates and discounts
would still be protected under the
discount safe harbor. According to these
commenters, the Proposed Rule, as
drafted, could be read to remove
protection for common purchase
discounts that manufacturers provide to
wholesalers or pharmacies, if those
discounted products are later dispensed
by the pharmacy to a Part D or Medicaid
MCO enrollee. A commenter requested
that the final rule clarify that discounts
to wholesalers are protected.
Another commenter requested
clarification that pharmacy purchase
discounts received by any mail-order
pharmacy, specialty pharmacy, or retail
pharmacy owned by a plan sponsor
under Part D, Medicaid MCO, or a PBM
operating on behalf of either, regardless
of whether these discounts are
dependent on formulary placement, are
protected, as the proposed language
could be read to exclude such
discounts.
Response: We note initially that we
are not finalizing our proposal to amend
the discount safe harbor to exclude
protection for reductions in price to
Medicaid MCOs, which we believe
partially addresses the commenter’s
concerns with respect to pharmaceutical
products dispensed to Medicaid
enrollees as well as the comments
regarding pharmacies owned by
Medicaid MCOs or their PBMs.
We confirm in this final rule our
statement in the Proposed Rule that we
‘‘intend[] for the discount safe harbor to
continue to protect discounts on
prescription pharmaceutical products
offered to other entities, including, but
not limited to, wholesalers, hospitals,
physicians, pharmacies, and third-party
payors in other Federal health care
programs.’’ 41 Further, we clarify that
protection is available for these
discounts (including rebates) even if the
prescription pharmaceutical product is
ultimately dispensed to a Part D
enrollee (provided all safe harbor
conditions are met). We have revised
the language in § 1001.952(h)(5)(viii) to
state that the term excludes ‘‘[a]
reduction in price or other remuneration
in connection with the sale or purchase
of a prescription pharmaceutical
product from a manufacturer to a plan
sponsor under Medicare Part D either
41 84
FR 2348.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
directly to the plan sponsor under
Medicare Part D, or indirectly through a
pharmacy benefit manager acting under
contract with a plan sponsor under
Medicare Part D, unless it is a price
reduction or rebate that is required by
law.’’ We believe this revised language
addresses commenters’ concerns and
reflects our intent as articulated in the
Proposed Rule.
Discounts offered or given to
pharmacies owned by a plan sponsor
under Part D or a PBM generally could
qualify under the discount safe harbor if
all conditions of the safe harbor are met.
However, remuneration that is labeled
as a ‘‘discount’’ but that is given to
pharmacies or other entities owned by
or affiliated with a plan sponsor under
Part D or a PBM to reward the plan or
the PBM for referrals of other Federal
health care program business would be
suspect. These arrangements would
appear to have many of the same
features as problematic swapping
arrangements discussed elsewhere in
this rule.
Comment: A commenter requested
that OIG clarify in the final rule that all
rebates are still protected under the
discount safe harbor, except for
formulary rebates paid by
pharmaceutical manufacturers to health
plans or PBMs. Similarly, a commenter
requested that OIG confirm that the
Proposed Rule does not affect discounts
offered to other entities (e.g.,
pharmacies).
Response: As we stated in the
Proposed Rule and confirm in this final
rule, ‘‘[t]he Department intends for the
discount safe harbor to continue to
protect discounts on prescription
pharmaceutical products offered to
other entities, including, but not limited
to, wholesalers, hospitals, physicians,
pharmacies, and third-party payors in
other Federal health care programs.’’ 42
As discussed above, we are finalizing
our proposed revisions to the discount
safe harbor with a slight modification to
ensure that the regulatory text is
consistent with our statement in the
Proposed Rule. Specifically, the
revisions to the definition of ‘‘discount’’
apply only to reductions in price or
other remuneration in connection with
the sale or purpose of a prescription
pharmaceutical product from a
manufacturer to a plan sponsor under
Medicare Part D or through a PBM
acting under contract with the plan
sponsor under Medicare Part D, unless
it is a price reduction or rebate that is
required by law. In other words, the
revisions apply only to reductions in
price offered from manufacturers to plan
42 84
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
PO 00000
FR 2348.
Frm 00030
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
sponsors under Medicare Part D or a
PBM acting under contract with such
entities. For reasons explained above,
the revisions to the discount safe harbor
in the final rule do not apply to
discounts offered to Medicaid MCOs.
Comment: A commenter
recommended that OIG clarify that
manufacturer rebates and discounts may
remain protected under other safe
harbors. The language of any proposed
point-of-sale reduction in price safe
harbor and related amendments should
specifically provide that the subject
remuneration may still receive
protection under other available safe
harbors.
Response: If a party enters into an
arrangement that fits squarely within a
safe harbor—any safe harbor—the party
would be protected from liability under
the anti-kickback statute.
v. Impact on Volume or Prompt Pay
Discounts
Comment: A commenter expressed
concern that the finalizing changes that
we proposed to the discount safe harbor
would enable other entities to engage in
the exact same practice that the
Department is trying to eliminate with
PBMs; specifically, it will allow other
entities in the supply chain to be
compensated for the provision of
services based on volume and a
percentage of list prices.
Response: We noted in the Proposed
Rule that we intended for the discount
safe harbor to continue to protect
discounts on prescription
pharmaceutical products offered to
other entities, including, but not limited
to, wholesalers, hospitals, physicians,
pharmacies, and third-party payors.
However, we reiterate that the discount
safe harbor protects only the reduction
in the amount a buyer is charged for an
item or service; it does not protect
payments for services.
vi. Impact on Beneficiary Access
Comment: A number of commenters
were supportive of the Proposed Rule.
These commenters contended that the
Proposed Rule would reduce out-ofpocket costs for beneficiaries; safeguard
and increase access to necessary and
affordable treatments and therapies and
increase patient adherence to those
treatments and therapies; and lower list
prices for drugs or, at least, address the
increasing cost of drugs.
Other commenters contended that the
Proposed Rule addresses the perverse
incentives for manufacturers to provide
rebates, which affects affordability of
drugs; curbs PBMs’ practices of
preferring high-cost drugs; shifts
practices so that drug choices are based
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
on what is best for patients; and
addresses PBMs’ role in reducing the
availability of drugs, patients’ access to
drugs, and patients’ freedom to choose
certain drugs.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support. The commenters
describe goals this rule is intended to
achieve.
Comment: A commenter requested
that the Department ensure that some
form of rebates remain protected to
maintain prescription drug choice and
savings for their enrollees.
Response: The new safe harbor for
point-of-sale reductions in price offers a
clear pathway for manufacturers to offer
price reductions to Part D plan sponsors
and Medicaid MCOs. In addition,
reductions in price to Medicaid MCOs
remain eligible for safe harbor
protection under the discount safe
harbor.
Comment: Several commenters were
concerned that finalizing the changes in
the Proposed Rule could result in higher
premiums. Some of these commenters
were specifically concerned that an
increase in premiums will decrease or
deter Part D enrollment, delay
enrollment by beneficiaries and,
therefore, cause them to incur penalties
for late enrollment, or cause
beneficiaries to dis-enroll or drop Part D
coverage altogether. Other commenters
were concerned that uncertainty in the
Part D program caused by the Proposed
Rule, including risks of an older and
sicker population and higher-thanprojected premiums, may cause smaller
plans to drop out of participation in Part
D because they may be unable to handle
the increased risk, which could, in turn,
reduce beneficiary choice of plans.
Some commenters suggested that an
increase in premiums may result in a
decrease in beneficiary access to
medically necessary medicines.
Commenters stated that an increase in
premiums could result in changes to
beneficiaries’, including dual-eligible
beneficiaries’, supplemental benefits,
contending that an increase in those
costs may deter enrollment. A
commenter suggested that an increase in
costs, generally, would reduce
beneficiary access to plans and plan
choices.
Response: We understand
commenters’ concerns. The Department
notes that premiums in the Part D
program have historically increased at a
slower rate than inflation, while the list
prices of drugs and government
expenditures have increased more
rapidly. Additional information about
impacts of this rule in areas predicted
by the commenters can be found in the
Regulatory Impact Statement. The
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
Department does not believe that the
risk of increased premiums or the other
uncertainties raised by the commenter
will lead to plans dropping out of the
Part D program because Part D plans
have methods for preventing premium
increases, such as tougher negotiation or
lower overhead, and that plans will be
able to share in the savings under this
final rule.
Comment: Several commenters raised
concerns that, without adequate or
timely updates to the Medicare Plan
Finder, beneficiaries may not be able to
find appropriate plans and could,
potentially, dis-enroll from Part D. The
same commenters, as well as another
commenter, are also concerned that
beneficiaries may be confused about
their cost-sharing obligations and may,
incorrectly and based on inaccurate or
unreliable information, assume that they
should benefit from lower cost-sharing
amounts. Commenters requested that
the Department create mechanisms for
beneficiaries to be provided or have
access to information about cost sharing,
discounts received at the point of sale,
and the amounts reimbursed to
pharmacies dispensing the medicine. A
commenter suggested that one way to
mitigate their concerns is to, for
example, update the Medicare Plan
Finder or to ensure that pharmacies and
prescribers have sufficient information
to provide beneficiaries about their costsharing obligations at the point of sale.
Other commenters recommended the
use of electronic tools, such as Real
Time Benefit Tools, that would allow
prescribers to access specific
information on patients’ formularies and
out-of-pocket costs for prescription
drugs.
Response: We agree with commenters
that it is important for beneficiaries to
have access to information needed to
make informed health care decisions.
The Department believes the reduced
price at the point of sale will create the
appropriate amount of transparency,
and that separately providing the
amount of the reduction in price is not
necessary for transparency to be
achieved. While the creation of
mechanisms for beneficiaries and
prescribers that provide information
about cost sharing, out-of-pocket costs,
and discounts received at the point of
sale would be programmatic tools that
are outside the scope of this rulemaking,
we point commenters to a May 2019
final rule published by CMS entitled
‘‘Modernizing Part D and Medicare
Advantage to Lower Drug Prices and
Reduce Out-of-Pocket Expenses’’ under
which CMS requires Part D plans by
2021 to adopt Real Time Benefit Tools
that provide complete, accurate, timely,
PO 00000
Frm 00031
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
76695
clinically appropriate and patientspecific real-time formulary and benefit
information to prescribers that they can
discuss with their patients. CMS has
also noted that Medicare beneficiaries or
their representatives can search an
online interactive drug plan comparison
tool, the Medicare Plan Finder, to find
formulary and cost-sharing information
for Part D plans. Additionally, CMS has
informed us that through their
eMedicare initiative, which is a multiyear initiative intended to empower
patients and update Medicare resources
to meet beneficiaries’ expectation of a
more personalized customer experience,
the Medicare Plan Finder will continue
to be improved over time to enhance
access to information.43
CMS has also advised us that it will
ensure that beneficiaries receive
adequate and timely information about
cost-sharing obligations under Medicare
plans, and that the Medicare Plan
Finder will reflect any necessary
updates before the final rule’s
implementation.
Comment: A commenter is
specifically concerned that the
increased transparency that results from
a final rule may pressure PBMs to
reduce overall costs in ways that may
disadvantage beneficiary access. The
commenter is concerned that health
plans and PBMs may narrow
prescription benefits for, e.g., vulnerable
populations, or discourage high-cost
patients from enrolling altogether. Other
commenters also raised concerns
relating to narrow prescription benefit
design and increased cost sharing,
indicating that if the amended and new
safe harbors are finalized, plans and
PBMs will have increased pressure to
reduce costs, which may result in some
plans and PBMs significantly narrowing
formularies, using utilization
management tools to a greater extent,
and/or increasing cost-sharing on brandname drug tiers in order to prevent
enrollment by beneficiaries who have
costly conditions or take certain
medications. Other commenters asserted
that mandatory point-of-sale reductions
in price could lead to adverse risk
selection, where beneficiaries with a
specific condition select the one plan
with the lowest upfront discounted
price for their specialty drug, which the
commenters asserted could result in
significant formulary and coverage
changes.
43 Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
(CMS), CMS announces new streamlined user
experience for Medicare beneficiaries, (Oct. 1,
2018), available at https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/
press-releases/cms-announces-new-streamlineduser-experience-medicare-beneficiaries-0.
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
76696
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
Expressing similar concerns, another
commenter stated that CMS should
enhance its review of Part D benefit
design to ensure the patient protections
of Part D are not undermined and that
plans are not restricting access to
medicines in a manner that would
violate the non-discrimination
protections in Part D. Another
commenter suggested that having
safeguards in place to protect patients
who are currently stable on a
medication will be important and
requested that OIG or the Department
provide certain additional safeguards.
Response: We appreciate and share
commenters’ concerns that beneficiaries
be protected from discriminatory
practices, including improper
restrictions on access to drugs. As stated
elsewhere in this rule, CMS is
responsible for administering the Part D
program. We are informed by CMS that
it has a robust formulary review and
approval process, which entails indepth checks to ensure sufficient
inclusion of all necessary Part D drug
categories or classes for Medicare
beneficiaries, preventing discriminatory
benefit designs. As part of this review,
CMS assesses the adequacy of a Part D
sponsor’s formulary drug categories and
classes along with the plan’s formulary
drug list to ensure that the formulary
offers an appropriate range of Part D
drugs.44 This formulary review process
also includes a review of utilization
management tools to ensure plans do
not restrict beneficiary access to
necessary medication. The Secretary
cannot approve a prescription drug plan
if the plan’s design and its benefits,
including any formulary and tiered
formulary structure, are likely to
substantially discourage enrollment by
certain Part D eligible individuals under
the plan.45
CMS also employs risk adjustment
where Medicare plan sponsors receive
higher payments for beneficiaries who
are higher risk (as determined by health
status). Risk adjustment is intended to
minimize the incentive for Medicare
Part D plan sponsors to engage in
practices that would result in the
enrollment and retention of
beneficiaries with expected cost below
the average, although individual plan
experience may differ based on the
plan’s mix of beneficiaries relative to
the national average and the specific
costs that they face relative to the
national average. CMS believes that the
formulary review and approval process,
risk adjustment, and anti-discrimination
44 79
FR 1918, 1939 (Jan. 10, 2014).
Security Act section 1860D–
11(e)(2)(D)(1).
45 Social
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
rules each serve to mitigate the
incentive for health plans and PBMs to
narrow prescription benefits for
vulnerable populations and to
discourage enrollment among high cost
patients.
Comment: A commenter stated that
the changes included in the Proposed
Rule could prevent Part D plan sponsors
and PBMs from penalizing
manufacturers for lowering list prices by
removing drugs from formularies or
imposing significant utilization
management requirements.
Response: We agree with the
commenter that it is inappropriate to
penalize lower prices; a key goal of this
rulemaking is to encourage lower drug
prices.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that, before
implementing the final rule, the
Department or OIG conduct certain
demonstrations, pilot programs, focus
groups, or other assessments or
evaluations to determine whether and
how beneficiaries will benefit from, or
be adversely affected by, the proposed
changes.
Response: While we appreciate the
commenters’ suggestions, we are not
conducting any particular pilot
programs or assessments prior to
finalizing the rule. We analyzed
anticipated impacts to beneficiaries in
the regulatory impact analysis and refer
readers to that section for further
information.
vii. Additional Safeguards
Comment: Several commenters
recommended OIG, CMS, or HHS
monitor, or implement mechanisms to
monitor, the effect of the final rule on
beneficiaries, PBMs, drug
manufacturers, plans, plan sponsors,
dispensing pharmacies, and other
stakeholders in the drug supply chain.
Some of these commenters
recommended that data be gathered on
the effect of the final rule, specifically
related to drug prices, beneficiaries’
costs, utilization management, access to
drugs, chargeback amounts, the
contracts PBMs enter into with drug
manufacturers and plans and the terms
of those contracts, and formulary
changes. A commenter specifically
recommended a mechanism for
stakeholders in the drug supply chain to
report non-compliance with any of the
proposed safe harbors. Another
commenter specifically requested that
the data gathered by OIG, CMS, or HHS
through its monitoring mechanisms be
publicly available. Finally, a commenter
recommended that OIG require
pharmaceutical manufacturers to
confidentially disclose their drug
PO 00000
Frm 00032
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
rebates before the Proposed Rule’s
changes are finalized so policymakers
can compare net costs for drugs before
and after the proposed changes go into
effect.
Response: The Department recognizes
that, due to the complexity of the drug
supply chain, the final rule has the
potential to affect stakeholders in ways
and to an extent that may be difficult to
anticipate. The Department declines the
commenter’s request to require
manufacturers to disclose rebate
amounts prior to issuance of the final
rule. The Department intends to monitor
the effects of this rule. As an
independent, objective oversight entity,
OIG regularly reviews the Part D and
other HHS program and has identified
ensuring that HHS prescription drug
programs work as intended as a priority
area. OIG’s reports are routinely made
public and available on our website at
https://oig.hhs.gov/reports-andpublications/index.asp. With respect to
a mechanism for reporting noncompliance with the requirements of a
safe harbor, the OIG website provides
detailed instructions for reporting
violations of law, including violations of
the anti-kickback statute, at https://
oig.hhs.gov/fraud/report-fraud/. We
note, however, that an individual or
entity’s failure to comply with the
requirements of a safe harbor does not
per se constitute a violation of the antikickback statute. The conduct in
question must otherwise meet the
elements of a violation of that law.
Comment: Some commenters
requested OIG include safeguards in the
amendment to the discount safe harbor.
For example, a commenter requested
OIG ensure that the only price
concessions available to health plans,
PBMs, or the affiliates in their vertically
integrated business in Part D are those
point-of-sale reductions in price under
the new safe harbor for point-of-sale
reductions in price.
Response: Arrangements are protected
from liability under the anti-kickback
statute if they meet all the requirements
of a safe harbor. Parties are free to enter
any arrangements that do not violate the
anti-kickback statute or other federal or
state law.
viii. Alternative Recommendations
Comment: A commenter
recommended that, in lieu of removing
rebates to Part D plans and Medicaid
MCOs from the discount safe harbor,
OIG should modify the existing safe
harbor by allowing rebates only when a
minimum percentage, for example 50
percent, is reflected at the pharmacy
point-of-sale, while the remaining
savings continue to be spread across
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
monthly premiums for all consumers
served by the health plan.
Response: We thank the commenter
for this proposal, but we decline to
adopt this revision. We did not propose
this approach, we do not believe it
would be practical to implement, and
we do not believe it would achieve the
goals of this rulemaking.
Comment: A commenter
recommended that OIG expand the
proposed amendment to the discount
safe harbor to permit manufacturers to
offer copayment and coinsurance
assistance to Part D beneficiaries for
single-source drugs where the patient
has no other choice and thus cannot be
induced to select one drug over another,
while still allowing plan sponsors to
decide whether to cover drugs under
existing rules and effectively manage
utilization for appropriate patient care
and while allowing patients who need
innovative therapies and cannot afford
the copayment due to the circumstances
of Part D’s benefit design to be able to
access manufacturer copayment
support. By contrast, a commenter
recommended that OIG narrow the
existing discount safe harbor to prohibit
rebate arrangements as a percentage of
list price while still allowing for price
concessions in the form of rebates that
are beneficial for the healthcare system,
including those that would yield a fixed
net price for a drug over time and those
that reimburse plans when a drug does
not work as promised.
Response: We decline to adopt the
changes proposed by commenters. First,
we did not propose or solicit comments
on including any protection for costsharing supplements from
manufacturers to beneficiaries, and we
have longstanding concerns with such
assistance. With respect to the second
suggestion, we believe that some valuebased arrangements involving
prescription pharmaceutical products
might qualify for protection under the
new point-of-sale safe harbor but also
could qualify under other safe harbors
(e.g., the personal services and
management contracts safe harbor,
warranties safe harbor). We decline to
continue protection under the discount
safe harbor for rebate arrangements
between pharmaceutical manufacturers
and Part D plans (directly or through
their PBMs) that might yield a fixed
price over time. It is unclear how we
could separately protect such rebates,
and beneficiaries would not be able to
share in the benefit of the lower cost.
We note other rebates may be permitted
under the discount safe harbor, and
certain price concessions are permitted
under the new point-of-sale reduction in
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
price safe harbor at 42 CFR
1001.952(cc).
Comment: Some commenters
recommended that CMS monitor
formulary changes by plan sponsors,
and one of those commenters
recommended specifically monitoring
for the potential emergence of ‘‘discount
walls.’’ A commenter recommended that
CMS monitor medical exceptions
(which, according to the commenter, are
ways for beneficiaries to access new
innovator products that are blocked
from formulary access (i.e., noncontracted) by rebate walls) to ensure
plan sponsors do not tighten controls for
or restrict access to these medical
exceptions as a way to manage costs in
the absence of rebates. The same
commenter recommended that CMS
ensure that the final rule does not affect
‘‘non-medical switching’’ (which,
according to the commenter, involves
switching between branded products
and across therapeutic classes in a
medically stable patient solely for cost
savings and potentially without the
patient’s or provider’s consent) so that
formulary changes made by plan
sponsors do not affect patients
undergoing therapy.
Response: We have coordinated with
CMS in promulgating this rule. As
described above, CMS has informed us
that it has and will use a robust
formulary review and approval process.
C. Safe Harbor for Certain Price
Reductions on Prescription
Pharmaceutical Products
Comment: We received a comment
that expressed concern about the new
safe harbor for point-of-sale reductions
in price taking effect 60 days after the
rule is finalized. The commenter stated
that 60 days is not enough to adjust bids
and amend contracts for compliance.
Response: The new safe harbor for
point-of-sale reductions in price does
not require any party to take any action
within a particular timeframe. The safe
harbor may be used starting 60 days
after the final rule is published, but it
is just another option for protecting
discounts.
i. Point-of-Sale Chargebacks
Comment: Several commenters
requested that OIG revise the definition
of ‘‘chargeback’’ proposed in the
Proposed Rule. A commenter requested
that OIG amend the definition to
prohibit entities that control Part D or
Medicaid MCO formularies from
processing chargebacks. Another
commenter recommended that different
chargeback amounts should not be
negotiated for chain pharmacies,
PO 00000
Frm 00033
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
76697
community pharmacies, and specialty
pharmacies.
With respect to the term
‘‘chargeback,’’ a commenter suggested
defining it as ‘‘a payment made directly
or indirectly to the dispensing
pharmacy that is equal to the price
reduction negotiated between the
manufacturer and the plan or PBM.’’ A
commenter representing pharmaceutical
manufacturers recommended that OIG
specify that the total payment to the
dispensing pharmacy be equal to: (1)
The payment to the pharmacy from the
plan or PBM; (2) the point-of-sale
chargeback due from the manufacturer;
and (3) the beneficiary cost-sharing
amount. The commenter recommending
these changes expressed concern that
OIG’s proposed definition could result
in gaming by other entities that would
result in pharmacies dispensing
medicines at a financial loss. Several
commenters requested that we change
the term to ‘‘point-of-sale chargeback’’
to avoid confusion with how that term
is used elsewhere in the distribution
channel.
While a commenter asked for the
definition of ‘‘chargeback’’ to include a
payment agreed upon by the pharmacy,
and not just Part D issuers and/or PBMs,
another commenter expressed support
for chargeback to be defined as
proposed in the rule but requested
clarification on whether a chargeback is
to be based on the pharmacy actual
acquisition cost or on Wholesale
Acquisition Cost (WAC). Another
commenter proposed amending the
definition of ‘‘chargeback’’ to confirm
that chargebacks are separate and apart
from the agreed upon reimbursement to
the pharmacy.
Response: We appreciate the range of
suggestions received in response to our
request for comment on the proposed
definition. As we noted in the Proposed
Rule, ‘‘the use of chargebacks [makes]
pharmacies whole for the difference
between acquisition cost, plan payment,
and beneficiary out-of-pocket payment
. . . .’’ 46 Further, we are mindful of
concerns about pharmacies dispensing
prescription pharmaceutical products at
a loss. We agree with the commenter
above who recommended clarifying that
a chargeback is equal to the amount of
the discount negotiated by the Plan
Sponsor under Part D, the Medicaid
MCO, or a PBM acting under contract
with either, and the manufacturer of the
prescription pharmaceutical product.
We are revising the definition to
eliminate any confusion on this point.
The revised definition is consistent with
our goal expressed in the Proposed Rule
46 84
FR 2361.
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
76698
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
to protect point-of-sale price reduction
arrangements in which consumers share
the full benefit. Any point-of-sale
chargeback, as defined in this rule, is
part of the total reimbursement to the
pharmacy for the prescription
pharmaceutical product.
With respect to the request that OIG
confirm that different types of
pharmacies must receive the same
chargeback amount, as described above,
the chargeback amount due to the
pharmacy must be equal to the
reduction in price negotiated by a plan
(or PBM operating on its behalf) and the
manufacturer of the prescription
pharmaceutical product. If a
manufacturer and a plan (or a PBM
acting on its behalf) have negotiated a
point-of-sale reduction in price for a
prescription pharmaceutical product
that complies with the safe harbor, we
would expect the chargeback to the
pharmacy to be the same, regardless of
the type of pharmacy.
Finally, we agree with those
commenters who recommended that we
revise the term from ‘‘chargeback’’ to
‘‘point-of-sale chargeback’’ to
differentiate this process from other
transactions in the pharmaceutical
supply chain with the same name. We
have revised the term in the final
regulations at § 1001.952(cc).
Comment: A number of commenters
raised concerns about the need for CMS
to promulgate or revise regulations and
to issue technical guidance applicable to
the chargeback administration process if
the new rule is finalized. Several of
these commenters requested that OIG
consult with CMS because of its
oversight and administration of the Part
D program. For example, a commenter
requested that CMS issue guidance
regarding how to incorporate
chargebacks into the Medicare Plan
Finder files. Another commenter
provided an extensive list of Part D
regulations that it believes would need
to be revised and topics for subregulatory guidance that it believes
would need to be published in order to
implement the chargeback construct.
Several commenters also posited that
significant involvement by CMS would
be required because there is currently
no regulatory structure or oversight
mechanism in Part D for these
chargebacks, for example, there is no
structure for invoicing, reconciliation,
or auditing and recovery functions. As
one example, a commenter expressed
concern that there are no requirements
for pharmacies to disclose chargeback
amounts to CMS and there is no
requirement for pharmacies to provide
evidence that the point-of-sale reduction
in price benefited the beneficiary. A
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
commenter recommended that there be
regulatory oversight of the chargeback
process by relevant agencies.
Furthermore, according to commenters,
under Part D there is no existing
regulatory authority over or oversight of
wholesalers or other entities that could
be facilitating the chargeback
administration process.
In addition, several commenters
requested guidance from CMS on error
adjudication or dispute resolution
processes. A commenter indicated the
error adjudication process would be
used in those instances where a
manufacturer erroneously remits a
chargeback to a pharmacy or where
there are errors in the amount that a
beneficiary pays. Other commenters
suggested that pharmacies should not be
required to reverse and rebill original
claims if a price reduction is applied in
error because it could result in a
beneficiary’s cost-sharing obligation
increasing, and a commenter requested
guidance from the Department
explaining that plan sponsors and PBMs
are not required to collect additional
cost-sharing from beneficiaries under
these circumstances. A number of
commenters raised concerns or
questions about the impact that changes
included in the Proposed Rule would
have on pharmacies. For example, a
commenter requested guidance on
dealing with non-collectible rebates
(e.g., if a beneficiary is given a discount
at the point of sale, which the
manufacturer later does not honor, must
the pharmacy attempt to collect the
disallowed amount from the
beneficiary?).
Similarly, a commenter requested
clarification on the role of pharmacies
in dispute resolutions involving pointof-sale reductions in price and asked
that there not be any retroactive
adjustments for chargebacks paid to
pharmacies. Another commenter
requested guidance on administering
chargebacks to pharmacies where the
value of the chargeback exceeds the
ingredient cost.
Response: This rule provides
flexibility for parties seeking safe harbor
protection to structure back-end, pointof-sale chargeback processes that result
in fully passed-through point-of-sale
discounts. Moreover, were we to
include detailed technical requirements,
we would make it more difficult for
parties to use and comply with the safe
harbor for its intended purposes. While
we have consulted with CMS in this
rulemaking, any requests for CMS to
issue guidance related to the chargeback
administration process (e.g., guidance
related to dispute resolution processes)
and questions about CMS authority to
PO 00000
Frm 00034
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
do so are outside the scope of this
rulemaking, as are CMS requirements
related to PDE reporting and correcting
known discrepancies in cost-sharing
charged to beneficiaries in the event of
a mistake or error in the calculation of
the point-of-sale price.
With respect to the comments
regarding the circumstances under
which a pharmacy extends a price
reduction to a beneficiary that is not
honored by the manufacturer, we note
that if an entity made a practice of
undercharging beneficiaries for cost
sharing, under the guise of passing
through manufacturer reductions in
price, with knowledge that the
reductions in price would not be paid
by manufacturers (thus providing
remuneration to the beneficiaries), and
did so with the intent to induce
beneficiaries to purchase items paid for
in part by a Federal health care program,
the entity could be subject to liability
under the anti-kickback statute.
Moreover, while occasional errors in
calculations (e.g., a miscalculation of a
beneficiary’s cost-sharing obligation)
would not implicate the anti-kickback
statute, a pattern of errors could
eliminate the protection of the safe
harbor (e.g., if a manufacturer regularly
miscalculates the full value of the
reduction in price owed to the
pharmacy that is required to be
provided for safe harbor protection) and
would be subject to scrutiny for intent.
We also clarify that there should be
no situation in which the price at the
pharmacy counter is less than zero. A
situation in which a beneficiary or a
Part D plan sponsor theoretically would
be owed money would not be a
reduction in price; that would be a
payment to a referral source and would
not be protected by a safe harbor.
Comment: A commenter requested
additional safeguards related to
chargebacks for small business
community pharmacies, including but
not limited to the right to: Appeal
chargeback decisions, inquire about
missing chargeback payments, utilize
audit processes, and engage in dispute
resolution. A commenter recommended
that, if other parties violate the
requirements under the Proposed Rule
and the anti-kickback statute, then
community pharmacies should be held
harmless from such conduct. This
commenter stated that independent
community pharmacies should have the
opportunity to do business with any
trading partner in the supply, billing, or
reconciliation chain.
Response: Nothing in this rule
restricts the ability of pharmacies to do
business with other parties in the
supply, billing, or reconciliation chain.
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
While we appreciate the commenter’s
concerns, we decline to provide
additional safeguards in the safe harbor
that are specific to community
pharmacies; the articulated concerns are
not unique to any particular type of
pharmacy, and we believe the safe
harbor contains the right combination of
conditions to protect programs and
patients from abusive kickback schemes.
We note that many of the commenter’s
requests, e.g., the right to appeal
chargeback decisions, are outside the
scope of this rulemaking, which
addresses the conditions necessary for
protection under the anti-kickback
statute. Nothing in this rule limits
pharmacies’ ability to inquire about
missing chargeback payments or to enter
into contracts that provide for appealing
chargeback decisions, utilizing audit
processes, and engaging in dispute
resolution. We further note that
community pharmacies would not
necessarily be liable under the antikickback statute if other parties violate
the anti-kickback statute. Whether a
party is subject to liability under the
anti-kickback statute depends upon the
actions and intent of that party and not
solely upon the actions and intent of
other parties to an arrangement.
Comment: Several commenters
requested that the Department facilitate
the exchange of information for
purposes of implementing the
chargeback process. For example, a
commenter requested that CMS allow
for the electronic sharing of data so that
pharmacies will know patients’ costsharing obligations and create a
mechanism for pharmacies to receive
point-of-sale chargebacks. Another
commenter asked that OIG require as a
safe harbor condition that plans, PBMs,
and other entities involved in the
chargeback administration process
exchange information and cooperate as
necessary to ensure transparency.
Several commenters raised concerns
or questions related to the claims-level
data needed for chargeback
administration. For instance, some
commenters asked that the Department
develop processes and claims-level data
elements to allow manufacturers to
administer chargebacks to pharmacies.
A commenter requested that HHS
implement updates to existing data and
communications file formats to assist
with the chargeback verification and
correction process.
Other commenters commented on the
need for pharmacies to have visibility
into various claims-level data. For
example, a commenter explained that
pharmacies should have full visibility
into the total and final reimbursement
due the pharmacy and any final
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
amounts due as chargebacks so that they
can predict their cash flow. A
commenter indicated that while other
parties in the drug supply chain may
argue that these chargeback amounts are
proprietary, access to this information is
vital to a pharmacy’s ability to
operationalize its business and support
the Proposed Rule. Another commenter
noted that transparent, timely, and planvalidated communication of claimslevel chargeback amounts due to the
pharmacy will enable wholesalers to
effectively adjudicate the chargeback
payment to pharmacies. A commenter
recommended that the chargeback
administrator be required to furnish
electronic remittance advices with all
chargeback amounts detailed at the
claim level so as to allow pharmacies to
substantiate the total and final
reimbursement. Other commenters had
various requests for pharmacies to have
full visibility into plan-adjudicated
claims, for example, to allow the
pharmacies to extract chargeback data or
to track price reductions made by an
entity who will be paying the
pharmacies (if the entity making
payment is not a plan sponsor under
Part D or a PBM).
Response: We do not intend for this
rule to stipulate the data that must be
shared among the parties administering
the point-of-sale chargebacks. As we
stated above, this rule provides
flexibility for the industry to develop
and implement arrangements for the
administration of chargebacks as
necessary to meet the conditions of the
safe harbor.
While we encourage such flexibility,
we note that point-of-sale chargebacks
are defined as a payment made directly
or indirectly by a manufacturer to a
dispensing pharmacy. To the extent the
chargeback process is used, we expect
the manufacturer and the plan sponsor
under Part D, Medicaid MCO, or PBM
to have a writing that sets forth the
reduction in price negotiated between
the parties, which would be equal to the
chargeback due to the pharmacy.
Similarly, we would expect a
manufacturer to have sufficient
documentation to prove that the
chargeback actually was administered to
the pharmacy and that the amount of
the chargeback was equal to the pointof-sale reduction in price agreed upon
in writing between the plan sponsor
under Part D, the Medicaid MCO, or a
PBM acting under contract with either,
and the manufacturer. While we are not
specifying the form of this
documentation, it would be prudent for
manufacturers to maintain appropriate
documentation to show that the
PO 00000
Frm 00035
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
76699
condition in (cc)(1)(ii) has been met, if
applicable.
We decline to adopt the commenter’s
request to create a condition in the safe
harbor related to the exchange of
information and cooperation among the
parties. While increased transparency is
an important goal of this final rule, we
believe such a condition in the safe
harbor would be vague and would result
in significant stakeholder confusion.
Comment: Several commenters noted
that NCPDP would need to be consulted
in order to implement new minimum
transaction standards related to
chargebacks. A commenter posited that
a new version of the standard
transaction is not required but
expedited code values would be
required. Several commenters suggested
that every approved pharmacy claim
(adjudicated through the standard
transactions developed by NCPDP)
should include an itemized chargeback
amount due to the pharmacy. One of
these commenters explained that a
number of sources (e.g., a manufacturer,
a health plan, a pharmacy switch) could
potentially provide the claims-level
chargeback data. Another commenter
raised concerns, however, that
manufacturers and wholesalers do not
currently have access to the final
adjudicated claim or to other enrolleelevel data, which the commenter
believes would be necessary to
implement the chargeback processing
system.
A commenter that is a not-for-profit
standards development organization
provided guidance on three possible
options for chargebacks to be
administered in accordance with the
HIPAA standards for electronic
healthcare transactions. In two methods,
a PBM would administer the chargeback
process and in the third method a nonPBM entity would serve as the
chargeback administrator. According to
the commenter, two of the possible
methods for administering chargebacks
(one involving a PBM and one involving
a non-PBM entity) would require nearterm modifications to the standard
transaction through additional
expedited code values added to the
existing HIPAA standard. The
commenter stated that ten-to-twelve
months from the date of a final rule
would be necessary for the standards
development process, with additional
time needed for modification of
industry operations. The commenter
requested that OIG and the Department
provide guidance as to which of these
methods would support the definition
of a ‘‘chargeback.’’
Response: We appreciate the
commenters highlighting changes to the
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
76700
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
HIPAA standard transactions that might
be required for certain parties to
administer point-of-sale chargebacks,
although we will note that the
Department is agnostic as to which
entities may choose to implement the
point-of-sale chargeback process. We
thank the commenter for the estimate
that ten to twelve months would be
necessary for standards development
and implementation. While we do not
endorse that estimate, we do believe the
revised effective date of January 1, 2022
for the amendments to § 1001.952(h)(5)
of the discount safe harbor will provide
adequate time for the standards
development process and for
implementation of industry operations
to provide the chargeback function.
Comment: A few commenters
requested that OIG provide flexibility as
to the entities that may administer the
chargebacks described in the point-ofsale reductions in price safe harbor,
with various commenters highlighting
that existing systems used by PBMs,
pharmacy switch models, and wholesale
distributors, among others, could be
leveraged to operationalize this process.
A commenter requested that OIG allow
market forces to determine the most
efficient revenue streams under this
new system. Another commenter
requested that OIG clarify those entities
that can have a role in the chargeback
administration process, and whether
entities that have formulary decisionmaking responsibility (directly or
indirectly) could serve as chargeback
administrators. A commenter
highlighted, however, that the safe
harbor only protects reductions in the
price charged by a manufacturer, which
the commenter noted could
unintentionally limit the chargeback
process to wholesalers because
manufacturers typically only ‘‘charge’’
these entities.
Several commenters supported the
use of wholesalers to effectuate
chargebacks to pharmacies. For
example, a trade association
representing pharmaceutical
distributors explained that existing
distributor systems could be leveraged
to process point-of-sale reductions in
price and to route chargebacks to
pharmacies. More specifically, some
commenters posited that wholesalers
are best-positioned in the distribution
channel to facilitate point-of-sale
discounts because of their existing
capabilities and infrastructure, and their
prior experience with chargeback
transactions. According to these
commenters, the wholesaler system
would create a ‘‘cash-less’’ discount
model and would move the industry
towards net prices for patients, would
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
enhance transparency, and would
minimize payment delays to
pharmacies. A wholesaler commenter
noted that the use of wholesalers to
effectuate chargebacks would increase
transparency and would ensure
wholesaler accountability because
pharmacies have the discretion to
choose a different wholesaler with
which to do business. However, the
commenter emphasized that there is a
need for additional accountability
principles to be set, such as
requirements to relay accurate
information and credits throughout the
channel promptly so as not to impede
manufacturers, wholesalers, or other
entities from the proper administration
of chargebacks. Another wholesaler
commenter stated that a new remittance
transaction would need to be
established for the payment of the
chargeback by the wholesaler to the
pharmacy once it is authorized by the
manufacturer.
A PBM commenter raised a number of
concerns with wholesalers serving as
chargeback administrators. For example,
the commenter expressed concern that
using a wholesaler-led system could
lead to pricing collusion. Another
commenter raised its concerns that
wholesalers that administer chargebacks
may be incentivized to ignore utilization
management requirements and pay
discounts because, unlike plans or
PBMs, they are paid per unit sold. A
commenter also cautioned against
unintended consequences of using
wholesalers to facilitate chargebacks;
specifically, the commenter stated that
using these entities would decrease the
AMP and, as a result, would lower the
amount that states and the Federal
government receive under the MDRP.
Other commenters requested that
PBMs be designated to administer
chargebacks because they are able to use
existing infrastructure and relationships
with manufacturers, plan sponsors, and
pharmacies. However, a trade
association representing community
pharmacists supported a model in
which PBMs would not participate in
the chargeback administration process.
According to the commenter,
interactions between pharmacies and
PBMs have led to a non-transparent
environment that may hinder patient
care. Another commenter cautioned
against making pharmacies the
chargeback administrator, as it would
require the pharmacy to be privy to a
significant amount of new information,
such as information about the
beneficiary’s plan, benefit structure,
position in the benefit parameters, and
costs, as well as information about the
discount negotiated. The commenter
PO 00000
Frm 00036
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
also cautioned that such responsibilities
would significantly change the role of a
pharmacy.
Response: The Department recognizes
that stakeholders in the pharmaceutical
industry are best positioned to
determine what entity or entities should
be responsible for the point-of-sale
chargeback administration process. In
addition, the Department wants to
encourage current and future innovation
and seeks a level playing field so that a
variety of entities may engage in the
chargeback administration process. For
these reasons, and so as not to be overly
prescriptive, the final rule does not
require a specific category or categories
of entities to serve as chargeback
administrators.
We did not intend for the use of the
word ‘‘charged’’ in the safe harbor to
imply that only wholesalers may
effectuate the chargeback process, and
that term has been changed in the
regulatory text. So long as all conditions
of the safe harbor are met, any entity
may administer the chargeback process
for purposes of compliance with the safe
harbor.
Comment: Many commenters raised
concerns about the costs, coordination,
and development that would be
required for all Part D stakeholders (e.g.,
manufacturers, wholesalers, and
pharmacies) to create and implement
new systems to operationalize
chargebacks. For example, several
commenters noted that pharmacies
would be required to develop
mechanisms to track payments at
negotiated discount rates and to
operationalize chargebacks. To address
these concerns, a commenter requested
that OIG minimize burden and financial
risk for pharmacies and suggested that
the responsibility for calculating the
total payment due to the pharmacy rest
with the plan sponsor. On a similar
note, a commenter raised concerns
about the burden on pharmacies to
determine beneficiary out-of-pocket
cost-sharing amounts.
Commenters noted that entities would
incur significant financial costs through,
by way of the commenters’ examples,
upfront investments in IT; development
of systems for invoicing, reconciliation,
and recovery; and new systems (specific
to pharmacies) to collect reimbursement
from the PBM and chargeback
administrator. Such system
modifications also would be required
across the entire drug supply chain to
incorporate and analyze utilization
information at the beneficiary level. In
addition, some commenters noted that
the existing wholesaler chargeback
systems in place are much simpler and
very different than what would be
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
required in the retail pharmacy context
and would need to be modified for this
context, potentially requiring significant
infrastructure changes and material
investments.
Commenters also noted that all parties
involved would have to renegotiate
existing contracts or enter into new
contracts to operationalize this system,
which they posited would be a timeconsuming and resource-intensive
process. A commenter also requested
confirmation from CMS that the
renegotiation of the terms and
conditions of contracts between
pharmacies and plans (or PBMs)
implicates the any willing pharmacy
provisions of the Act.
Commenters highlighted that the new
chargeback infrastructure would need to
undergo rigorous testing to avoid
adverse impacts, and a commenter
noted that the proposed deadline does
not provide sufficient time for
stakeholders to develop, test, and
deploy these new chargeback systems.
According to a commenter, requiring
pharmacies to implement these new
processes increases administrative costs
for, and requires significant upfront
investment by, these entities, with no
added benefit. Several commenters
noted that these burdens, challenges,
and risks would be worse for
independent community pharmacies
and specialty pharmacies.
Response: While we recognize that
some system changes may be required
in order to administer point-of-sale
chargebacks, we note that nothing in the
point-of-sale reduction in price safe
harbor requires parties to utilize this
process. While the Department
encourages rapid adoption of point-ofsale price reductions, we note that we
are finalizing a later effective date than
originally proposed for the amendments
to § 1001.952(h)(5) of the discount safe
harbor, which should help address
commenters’ concerns about
implementation timelines. As we set
forth in § 1001.952(cc)(1)(ii), the
reduction in price must not involve a
rebate unless the full value of the
reduction in price is provided to the
dispensing pharmacy by the
manufacturer, directly or indirectly,
through a point-of-sale chargeback or
series of point-of-sale chargebacks, or is
required by law. We view this criterion
of the safe harbor as applying only if a
rebate is involved (in the form of a
point-of-sale chargeback). If the
pharmacy receives the full value of the
reduction in price at the time of sale of
the prescription pharmaceutical product
to the beneficiary, then a chargeback
(and the requirements for chargebacks
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
under this safe harbor) would not be
needed.
We are not providing specific
guidance and rules around
reimbursement methodologies or
processes in the safe harbor to allow
flexibility, as further explained below. If
the chargeback process is used, then in
order to receive protection under the
safe harbor the payment must be made
from the manufacturer (directly or
indirectly) to the pharmacy, and the
amount of the payment must be equal to
the reduction in price negotiated
between the plan sponsor and the
manufacturer. Moreover, we agree that
the new safe harbor should not restrict
patient access to drugs because of delays
in reimbursement at the pharmacy.
Comment: A commenter raised
concerns that the chargeback system
may allow manufacturers to access
pharmacy systems for auditing
purposes, which the commenter
believes raises privacy issues.
Response: Nothing in this final rule
would alter in any aspect existing
obligations of Covered Entities under
the HIPAA privacy and security rules.
We would expect such entities to
structure their interactions in full
compliance with applicable laws.
Comment: A commenter asked if
payments to pharmacies will be subject
to prompt payment rules, particularly
with regard to chargeback payments
where, according to the commenter,
CMS has no regulatory authority over
wholesalers. The commenter noted that
if the chargeback system fails to timely
compensate pharmacies at the point of
sale, pharmacies may refuse to
participate in Part D plans or networks
that rely on chargebacks rather than
existing PBM-facilitated transaction
systems, decreasing beneficiary access
to medicines at pharmacies.
Commenters also noted that there
could be a significant delay between a
pharmacy’s dispensing of a product and
receipt of a chargeback, which the
commenters believe will create
significant financial burdens,
substantial operational challenges, and
increased financial risk for pharmacies.
A commenter asked for clarification as
to what entity holds the financial risk in
the period between when the price
reduction is applied at the point of sale
and when pharmacies are made whole.
According to the commenters, this lag
also could jeopardize patient access to
needed medications.
Commenters suggested solutions to
this issue such as tracking systems to
account for each specific discount,
applying chargebacks as credits due
from the wholesaler to the pharmacy,
immediate communication of the
PO 00000
Frm 00037
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
76701
discount at the time of invoicing, or
daily adjudication for rebate payments.
Several commenters posited that
pharmacies may choose not to
participate in the Part D program if they
are not compensated in sufficient time
or are required to implement these new
operations.
Some commenters recommended that
CMS amend its regulations to apply the
Part D prompt-payment requirements to
point-of-sale reductions in price, while
another commenter opposed application
of these regulations to chargeback
payments. At least one commenter
requested that the safe harbor require as
a condition of protection that any
chargeback process be consistent with
prompt payment laws. Similarly, a
commenter requested that pharmacies
be permitted to charge interest for
delayed payment of chargebacks in
addition to being paid in full for the
total and final reimbursement.
Response: We thank commenters for
highlighting these issues. As a threshold
matter, the Proposed Rule did not
propose prompt payment as a condition
of meeting the safe harbor condition
regarding chargebacks. We did not
propose this condition, and, in any
event, it would add unnecessary
technical detail to the safe harbor to
stipulate the specifics related to the
timing of any payments made via the
chargeback process or which party
assumes the financial risk during the
process. In large part, these comments
concern questions that must be resolved
through arrangements negotiated by the
relevant parties. The Part D program is
a private sector-based program in which
the participating entities negotiate with
their partners to make what they believe
are the most effective arrangements to
participate in the Part D market. Entities
have been and continue to be required
to establish these arrangements in
compliance with programmatic
requirements as well as the antikickback statute.
We expect terms related to
chargebacks to be in the agreements
between the relevant parties, but we
note that, to the extent the chargeback
process is used, the chargeback must be
made from the manufacturer to the
pharmacy, directly or indirectly, in
order for the safe harbor to protect the
reduction in price.
Comment: A trade association
representing pharmacy benefit managers
stated that the rule, if finalized, would
require parties to create a new system to
handle chargeback transactions unless
rebates can be transferred through a
PBM. In lieu of the Proposed Rule, the
commenter provided a detailed
description of an alternative in which
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
76702
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
PBMs would be responsible for
administering price concessions at the
point of sale.
Response: The Department does not
intend for this rule to prescribe those
individuals or entities that may serve as
chargeback administrators, and we see
no compelling reason to do so. The
Department believes that PBMs as well
as other individuals or entities
(including entities that currently or may
in the future participate in the
pharmaceutical supply chain) would be
able to develop the means and
infrastructure necessary to effectuate the
chargeback process. By remaining
agnostic in this safe harbor, the
Department believes that innovation
and competition will be encouraged in
the marketplace.
Comment: A commenter requested
that HHS modify Medicare and
Medicaid policy to ensure point-of-sale
chargebacks will continue to be treated
as plan discounts because they are
established through manufacturer-plan
relationships, rather than being treated
as pharmacy discounts because this may
affect pharmacy reimbursement.
Response: We have consulted with
CMS as part of this rulemaking and are
informed that point-of-sale chargebacks
should be treated as plan discounts.
Comment: A commenter noted that
key portions of the Proposed Rule
related to the chargeback process are
vague and ambiguous, which heightens
enforcement concerns for these parties
under the anti-kickback statute. The
commenter requested that OIG repropose the rule with additional
clarifications.
Response: While we appreciate the
commenter’s concerns, we respectfully
disagree that the portion of the proposal
related to the chargeback process is
vague and ambiguous. By design, the
proposed safe harbor is not overly
prescriptive with respect to the
chargeback process to allow for private
sector flexibility, competition, and
innovation, and to avoid creating
technical barriers to the safe harbor’s
utility. We intend for this safe harbor to
provide flexibility in terms of the parties
responsible for chargeback
administration as well as how that
process is operationalized.
Comment: Several commenters
requested that OIG revise the safe harbor
for point-of-sale reductions in price to
add disclosure requirements for
chargeback administrators that mirror
the disclosure requirements in the PBM
service fees safe harbor.
Response: We decline to accept the
commenter’s suggestion. As we
explained in the Proposed Rule, the
‘‘transparency requirement is important
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
to ensure that PBM’s arrangements with
pharmaceutical manufacturers are not in
tension with the services that the PBM
provides to the health plans for which
it is acting as an agent.’’ We believe the
transparency requirement is important
for purposes of the PBM service fee safe
harbor because of the agency
relationship and functions in that safe
harbor, because of the potential for a
wide variety of services and
compensation structures and amounts,
and because there are defined parties
(i.e., the pharmaceutical manufacturer,
the PBM, and the health plans to which
the PBM provides pharmacy benefit
management services). Because the
point-of-sale reductions in price safe
harbor specifically requires the point-ofsale chargeback (if used) to be equal to
the discount negotiated between the
manufacturer and plan and is agnostic
as to the entity that serves as chargeback
administrator, and because a range of
individuals and entities could
potentially be involved in this process,
we believe the same disclosure
requirements are not appropriate or
necessary for purposes of this safe
harbor.
Comment: Commenters who
commented on the chargeback process
raised a number of questions about fees
that may be charged to administer
chargebacks. For instance, a commenter
recommended that pharmacies not be
responsible for any chargeback
administration fees, and another
commenter recommended that
pharmacies be held harmless for these
processing fees. Commenters also asked
that the compensation and disclosure
requirements set forth in the new PBM
service fees safe harbor apply with
respect to fees for chargeback
administration services. A commenter
recommended that OIG establish a form
for a chargeback administration fee (e.g.,
specify that the fee must be on a perchargeback basis), and recommended
that OIG mandate that chargeback
administration fees not vary
substantially by manufacturer or by
drug.
Response: We did not propose, and
are not finalizing in this rule,
requirements regarding chargeback
administration arrangements. We note,
however, that chargeback fee
arrangements should not be used to
reward the generation of Federal health
care program business and would need
to comply with the anti-kickback
statute. Other existing safe harbors (e.g.,
the personal services and management
contracts safe harbor) could be used to
protect such arrangements. We note that
chargeback administration fees based on
the cost of the drug, or that vary
PO 00000
Frm 00038
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
substantially by drug, would share
many of the same problematic features
of those rebate arrangements that are no
longer protected under the discount safe
harbor and would be suspect.
ii. Reverse Engineering
Comment: Various commenters
expressed concerns that the proposed
point-of-sale reduction in price safe
harbor would provide sufficient data to
reverse engineer the manufacturer’s or
the PBM’s discount structure, with
certain commenters asserting that pointof-sale reductions in price would not
likely be incentivized because
disclosure of sensitive price and
bargaining information inhibits
competition. However, another
commenter noted that this reverse
engineering may allow stakeholders to
have a better understanding of drug
discounts and pricing and may result in
increased competition and lower prices.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
concerns about price transparency and
agree that providing the market with
additional information could have
unintended effects in certain, limited
circumstances. However, the
Department is not persuaded, on net,
that this would increase overall program
costs or reduce competition. Price
transparency lowers a key barrier to
entry and increases competition in most
competitive markets. Additionally, as
commenters suggest and program
performance indicates, PBMs have been
extremely effective negotiators in the
Medicare Part D program, and the
Department does not anticipate that
additional price transparency would
weaken their negotiating leverage and
ability to obtain price concessions.
PBMs are aware of the rebates they
currently receive, and, in the
Department’s view, they are unlikely to
accept higher net prices going forward
as they compete to attract Medicare
beneficiaries.
Comment: Numerous commenters
were concerned that requiring the
disclosure of discounts would, for
example, lead to collusion among
manufacturers; higher prices; and lower,
unvaried discounts because, in part,
negotiation leverage diminishes,
manufacturers will be able to determine
the contract terms offered by their
competitors to each plan, and
manufacturers will lose the incentive to
negotiate the lowest possible discounts,
in order to protect market share. In
support of these assertions, several
commenters cited statements from the
FTC indicating that, if pharmaceutical
manufacturers learn the exact amount of
rebates offered by their competitors,
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
tacit collusion among manufacturers is
more feasible.47
Several commenters recommended
that OIG consider implementing
commercial best practices and
safeguards that maintain the
confidentiality of proprietary contract
data and ensure point-of-sale discounts
that manufacturers negotiate with plans
and their PBMs are not made public. A
commenter also requested that CMS not
display the value of rebates on Medicare
Plan Finder but only require display of
the final discounted drug prices, net of
any pharmaceutical manufacturer
discounts.
By contrast, a commenter asserted
that, while some stakeholders fear full
price transparency will undermine the
negotiating power of payers and
increase the potential for collusion, the
disclosure of price concessions
represents the best way of assuring plan
sponsors that formulary development is
not being influenced by rebates.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
concerns that manufacturers may raise
their prices or engage in tacit collusion
as a result of this final rule. However,
the Department has seen very limited
evidence that this will occur.
Additionally, although we recognize
that the pharmaceutical market is
different than other markets in some
respects, in most consumer markets
where prices are known, transparency
increases competition, rather than
harms it. In the Department’s
experience, a hallmark of the
prescription drug market is that
manufacturers are less concerned about
other manufacturers knowing the level
of discounts they offer. Indeed,
manufacturers can generally estimate
the discount their competitors are
offering, based on negotiations they
have won or lost. Manufacturers are
more concerned about each PBM
knowing the discount the other PBMs
have received, because that will enable
PBMs to seek the lowest discount
offered by a manufacturer for a
particular product. This places
downward pressure on net prices, rather
than enabling collusion.
Echoing a sentiment of many
commenters, the Department recognizes
that PBMs are extremely effective
negotiators. Nothing in this final rule
takes away a PBM’s ability to negotiate
lower drug prices in exchange for better
formulary access, and the Department
47 U.S. FTC, Letter to Assembly Member Greg
Aghazarian, 2004, available at https://www.ftc.gov/
sites/default/files/documents/advocacy_
documents/ftc-comment-hon.greg-aghazarianconcerning-ca.b.1960-requiring-pharmacy-benefitmanagers-make-disclosures-purchasers-andprospective-purchasers/v040027.pdf.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
expects that PBMs will continue to be
effective negotiators.
iii. Common Ownership
Comment: Various commenters raised
concerns regarding changes proposed in
the Proposed Rule and common
ownership between PBMs, pharmacies,
and health plans. Commenters noted
that many of the largest PBMs have
vertically integrated business lines, such
as health plans or pharmacies. Some
commenters asserted that OIG’s
proposed definition of ‘‘PBM’’ might
allow vertically integrated organizations
to circumvent the proposed
requirements, with a commenter noting
that this potential loophole could give
PBM-affiliated pharmacies improper
competitive advantages over non-PBMaffiliated pharmacies. Another
commenter highlighted the potential
anti-competitive behavior of PBMs,
including requesting that drug
manufacturers provide higher discounts
for drugs sold through PBMs’ own
pharmacy operations.
To address this issue, commenters
recommended that OIG adopt a
functional definition of PBM that
includes any person, business, or other
entity that carries out specified PBM
services to a manufacturer, where
directly or through an owned, affiliated,
or other related entity under a common
ownership structure with a PBM, with
a commenter recommending that PBMand plan-affiliated pharmacies be able
to access non-abusive purchase
discounts, such as those on generics. A
commenter suggested that PBMs be
required to provide the same conditions
and same reimbursement to
independent, non-vertically integrated
pharmacies as are provided to PBMowned pharmacies, while another
commenter recommended that all
discounts and rebates from any source
and PBM service fees be disclosed at the
point of sale and PBM service fees paid
by the pharmaceutical industry be
disclosed and separated from any
discounts and rebates provided to PBMowned pharmacy operations.
However, another commenter noted
that only extending the revisions
proposed in the Proposed Rule to PBMowned pharmacies could raise anticompetitive issues with non-PBMowned competitors. This commenter
recommended expanding the scope of
the amendment to include all
intermediaries involved in drug
distribution and payment transactions,
whether or not they take possession of
the drugs. Another commenter
specifically noted that the provisions in
42 CFR 1001.952(dd)(2)(iii) for PBM
services must also include language to
PO 00000
Frm 00039
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
76703
prohibit the PBM’s activity between the
manufacturer and another business
entity in which the PBM has operational
control or an ownership interest.
Another commenter suggested that
the changes we proposed could result in
unfair competition because they would
exclude from safe harbor protection all
purchase discounts received by any
mail-order pharmacy, specialty
pharmacy, or retail pharmacy owned by
a PBM or a plan sponsor, regardless of
whether the purchase discounts (offered
to the buyer in its capacity of a
dispensing pharmacy, not in the
capacity of a formulary manager) are
dependent on formulary placement of
the manufacturer’s pharmaceutical
product. The same commenter is
concerned that, if purchase discounts
are not offered to PBM-owned and plan
sponsor-owned pharmacies because of
the safe harbor exclusion, class-of-trade
pricing could prevent manufacturers
from offering purchase discounts to any
mail-order pharmacy, specialty
pharmacy, or retail pharmacy.
Response: We appreciate the
comments on any potential issues that
ownership interests might create under
our proposed revisions to the discount
safe harbor and suggestions on how best
to address these issues. However, we
intend for the discount safe harbor to
continue to protect discounts on
prescription pharmaceutical products
offered to entities other than plan
sponsors under Medicare Part D
(directly or through a PBM), including,
but not limited to, wholesalers,
hospitals, physicians, and pharmacies.
As explained previously, we are not
expanding the amendment to include
entities other than plan sponsors under
Medicare Part D, such as PBM-affiliated
pharmacies. We note, however, that
arrangements in which PBMs funnel
discounts through affiliated or
commonly owned entities, or
arrangements where it appears that a
PBM is channeling kickbacks through a
commonly owned entity or otherwise in
order to evade this rule, are highly
suspect. The anti-kickback statute
prohibits remuneration offered, paid,
solicited, or received, directly or
indirectly, to induce or reward referrals
of, or the purchase (or arranging for the
purchase) of, an item or service paid for
in whole or in part by Federal health
care programs. If a discount offered to
a pharmacy is for the purpose of
inducing a commonly owned entity,
e.g., a PBM, to arrange for the purchase
of a drug paid for by Federal health care
programs, through formulary placement
or otherwise, then the discount would
not be protected by the discount safe
harbor.
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
76704
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
Finally, while we appreciate the
commenter’s suggestion to require
disclosure of all discounts and rebates
from any sources and PBM service fees
paid by the pharmaceutical industry, we
note that this safe harbor is limited to
reductions in price by manufacturers for
prescription pharmaceutical products
payable by a plan sponsor under
Medicare Part D or a Medicaid MCO.
The safe harbor does not protect
discounts or rebates offered to or from
other sources and it does protect any
service fees. Given this limited scope of
this safe harbor, we decline to adopt the
commenter’s suggestion for broader
disclosure requirements.
Comment: Other commenters
recommended that OIG monitor for
inappropriate business practices
involving PBMs and PBM-affiliated
entities, with several pharmaceutical
company commenters pointing to price
concessions from manufacturers to
specialty pharmacies that are owned by
or affiliated with PBMs and may be used
to subvert the requirements set out in
the Proposed Rule. A commenter also
encouraged OIG to assert in the
preamble to the final rule that these
types of price concession arrangements
will be viewed as highly suspect if
certain facts are present.
Response: We acknowledge the issues
that common ownership interests
between PBMs and other entities may
cause and understand that this may be
a potential area of risk following the
implementation of the final rule. We
reaffirm that this rule is intended to
explicitly exclude from the discount
safe harbor certain reductions in price
and other remuneration offered by
manufacturers of prescription
pharmaceutical products to Part D plan
sponsors that may pose a risk to certain
Federal health care programs and
beneficiaries. As discussed above,
pricing arrangements that enable PBMs
to retain these types of discounts
through an affiliated or commonly
owned entity, instead of flowing to Part
D plans, are excluded from the discount
safe harbor and would not qualify for
protection under the new point-of-sale
reductions in price safe harbor. The
determination as to whether a particular
pricing arrangement would receive safe
harbor protection would be dependent
upon the facts of that particular case.
Comment: Some commenters
recommended that DOJ monitor and
increase its scrutiny related to vertical
and horizontal mergers, especially given
that three PBMs appear to control a
majority of the market, allowing the
PBMs to leverage their market power to
the detriment of plan sponsors
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
(government and commercial),
providers, and consumers.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ feedback. This issue is
outside the scope of this rule.
Comment: A commenter stated that
pharmaceutical companies should
provide to all pharmacies in the same
circumstances, irrespective of their
ownership, access to the same drug
product’s actual acquisition cost and
discounts.
Response: The amendment to the
discount safe harbor and the two new
safe harbors promulgated in this final
rule do not address discounts or other
pricing arrangements between
manufacturers and wholesalers,
pharmacies, or other entities.48
iv. Incentives for Point-of-Sale
Reduction in Price
Comment: Several commenters were
uncertain how manufacturers, health
plans, and PBMs would react to the new
safe harbor for point-of-sale reductions
in price for and how those reactions
would affect the prescription drug
marketplace. These commenters were
generally unsure whether the new safe
harbor would incentivize point-of-sale
reductions in price and requested that
HHS further analyze how manufacturers
may alter pricing strategies, particularly
longer-term impacts, before enacting a
final rule.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
concerns regarding uncertainty. The
Department intends to monitor the
effects of this final rule. However, we
note that the new safe harbor for pointof-sale reductions in price is designed to
offer more flexibility for manufacturer
discounts and several manufacturers
commented that they would be
incentivized to offer point-of-sale
reductions in price, noting their support
for lowering out-of-pocket costs for
beneficiaries.
Comment: A few commenters
questioned whether manufacturers
would provide point-of-sale reductions
in price to fully offset the rebates that
would be prohibited if the amendment
to the discount safe harbor were
finalized, especially because point-ofsale reductions in price have been
offered by PBMs for some time in the
commercial market, and there has not
been widespread adoption.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
observations about the dynamics of the
commercial market. As we discuss
elsewhere in this rule, we are aware that
some commercial plans may be
operationalizing point-of-sale benefit
designs and believe that at least some
48 See
PO 00000
84 FR 2348.
Frm 00040
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
industry stakeholders have the
capabilities to operationalize point-ofsale reductions in price that would be
protected under the new safe harbor.
Comment: A commenter requested
clarification on how PBMs will
negotiate for discounts without using
rebates. For example, the commenter
requested clarification on what
compensation would be available to
PBMs, how PBMs would be
incentivized to negotiate lower prices
for patients, and how drug
manufacturers would negotiate for
formulary placement, all in the absence
of rebates.
Response: This rule does not require
any particular method of negotiation of
discounts, and parties are free to pursue
all lawful forms of negotiation. With
respect to negotiations between PBMs
and manufacturers, PBMs are supposed
to be acting as an agent of health plans
and, in this role, we would expect them
to negotiate with manufacturers on
behalf of plan sponsors under Part D for
point-of-sale reductions in price. We
leave it to the applicable parties to
determine how negotiations of point-ofsale reductions in price will evolve and
how financial arrangements will be
structured between these parties to
comply with the anti-kickback statute.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed concern that errors or delays
in the implementation of point-of-sale
reductions are likely, which could leave
beneficiaries without prescriptions at all
or with prescriptions at higher costs.
Commenters questioned whether a
pharmacy would be liable for such
errors via retroactive reconciliation.
Without clarity on these issues,
commenters believed manufacturers
were not likely to be incentivized to
offer point-of-sale reductions in price.
Response: Questions regarding billing
errors are outside the scope of this
rulemaking. However, we note that
while all conditions of a safe harbor
must be met to ensure protection, falling
outside a safe harbor does not
necessarily result in liability under the
statute. Moreover, mere errors do not
create liability under the anti-kickback
statute.
Comment: A couple of commenters
questioned whether point-of-sale
reductions in price were viable as
constructed under the Proposed Rule as
they would require significant
operational changes, ultimately
discouraging point-of-sale reductions in
price from being offered. These
commenters recommended that the
Department should require Part D plans
to provide a point-of-sale rebate plan as
one of their plan offerings instead.
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ concerns regarding the
viability of point-of-sale reductions. The
Department believes that industry
stakeholders have or can develop the
capabilities to operationalize point-ofsale reductions in price that would be
protected under the new safe harbor.
Regarding commenters’
recommendation that the Department
require Part D plans to provide a rebate
plan, we note that changes to Part D
rules related to required plan offerings
are outside the scope of this rulemaking.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed concern that manufacturers
would not likely be incentivized to offer
point-of-sale reductions in price unless
HHS clarified whether discount safe
harbor protection will continue to be
available for formulary and utilization
management arrangements.
Response: As we explain above,
reductions in price to a plan sponsor or
Medicaid MCO that are conditioned on
formulary placement and utilization
management tools can qualify for
protection under the new safe harbor for
point-of-sale reductions in price.
Comment: A few other commenters
expressed concern that manufacturers
were not likely be incentivized to enter
into arrangements to offer point-of-sale
reductions in price unless the
Department clarified whether
manufacturers have an option to
provide these discounts via plans,
directly to each pharmacy, or through
another mechanism.
Response: We thank commenters for
their concern. We note that the discount
safe harbor continues to protect
discounts on prescription
pharmaceutical products offered to
other entities, including, but not limited
to, wholesalers, hospitals, physicians,
pharmacies, and third-party payors in
other Federal health care programs. We
clarify, however, that under the new
safe harbor at § 1001.952(cc), the
reduction in price must be set in
advance with a plan sponsor under
Medicare Part D, a Medicaid MCO, or a
PBM acting under contract with either.
While a chargeback may be paid directly
to the pharmacy, the Medicaid MCO or
Part D plan is the anticipated recipient
of the reduction in price.
Comment: A few other commenters
expressed concern that manufacturers
were not likely be incentivized to enter
into arrangements for point-of-sale
reductions in price unless HHS clarified
whether point-of-sale discounts are
required to be uniform across all stages
of the benefit design.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ concern. We clarify that
because the reduction in price must be
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
set in advance with a plan sponsor
under Medicare Part D, a Medicaid
MCO, or a PBM acting under contract
with either, we would expect the pointof-sale reduction in price to be uniform
across all stages of the benefit design,
and would not expect the reduction in
price to be negotiated on a beneficiaryby-beneficiary basis. Any such
arrangement would be difficult to know
at the point of sale and thus could not
be applied accurately to the point-ofsale price, creating risk of violating the
requirements of the new safe harbor for
point-of-sale reductions in price.
Comment: Another commenter
expressed concern that manufacturers
would not likely be incentivized to
provide point-of-sale reductions in
price, or only provide limited
reductions at the point of sale, because
manufacturers would more likely set
single discount levels across all payers
due to the increased transparency
requirements.
Response: As we discuss in more
detail in the Regulatory Impact
Statement, we acknowledge that there
may be a wide range of behavioral
changes throughout the prescription
pharmaceutical product supply chain.
However, PBMs will continue to have
access to important negotiation tools,
such as formulary placement.
Additionally, PBMs know the net prices
that plans paid before the revisions to
the safe harbors. Accordingly, the
Department believes it is unlikely that
parties will dramatically change the
prices they negotiate due to
transitioning from rebates to point-ofsale reductions in price.
Comment: A few commenters noted
that since drugs are not typical
consumer products, offering point-ofsale reductions in price would not likely
impact demand; therefore,
manufacturers would not likely be
incentivized to offer them. However,
another commenter expected that the
new safe harbor would increase
competition and create a strong
behavioral response among plans and
manufacturers. Another commenter
believed that some manufacturers
would be highly incentivized to offer
point-of-sale reductions in price if the
drug was already in a highly
competitive market.
Response: We thank commenters for
their insights into the dynamics of drug
markets. We agree that manufacturers
are more likely to be incentivized to
offer point-of-sale reductions in highly
competitive drug markets and less likely
to be incentivized in drug markets with
less competition, as was the case with
rebates. However, as explained
elsewhere in this final rule, we believe
PO 00000
Frm 00041
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
76705
there is a decreased risk of fraud and
abuse when the reductions in price are
offered at the point of sale rather than
as rebates.
v. During 100 Percent Cost Sharing
Comment: A commenter noted that
the Proposed Rule did not address how
point-of-sale discounts would apply to
beneficiaries with 100 percent cost
sharing. Other commenters provided
examples of how they interpreted the
point-of-sale discount to apply during
phases with 100 percent cost sharing,
e.g., the deductible phase. A commenter
suggested that such beneficiaries should
pay 100 percent of the discounted net
cost. The commenter provided the
following example: If a drug’s list price
is $200 and a beneficiary’s plan sponsor
under Part D has negotiated a point-ofsale reduction in price of 10 percent,
then the price of the drug is $180.
According to the commenter, during a
period of 100 percent cost sharing, the
beneficiary would pay $180.
Response: We agree with the example
offered by the commenter. Specifically,
if a drug’s list price is $200 and a plan
sponsor under Part D has negotiated a
point-of-sale discount of 10 percent, the
price of the drug for enrollees of that
plan is $180. If a beneficiary is in the
deductible phase, the beneficiary would
pay the full discounted price of the drug
(i.e., $180) at the pharmacy counter.
vi. Additional Safeguards
Comment: A commenter
recommended OIG require entities to
‘‘refrain from doing anything that would
impede’’ their contracting counter-party
from meeting its own obligations under
the safe harbor. The commenter noted
that this is a condition of the discount
safe harbor.
Response: The proposed safe harbor
for point-of-sale reductions in price for
prescription pharmaceutical products
differs from the discount safe harbor at
42 CFR 1001.952(h), in that the latter
has separate sets of requirements for
buyers and sellers or offerors of
discounts. Because the ability of the
buyer to meet its obligations under the
discount safe harbor depends in part on
cooperation of the seller or offeror, the
safe harbor includes requirements that
the seller or offeror refrain from
impeding the buyer from meeting the
buyer’s own obligations. Because the
proposed safe harbor for point-of-sale
reductions in price does not include
conditions that similarly require the
cooperation of other parties to the
transaction, we did not propose to
include this safeguard, and we decline
to include it in the final rule.
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
76706
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
Comment: A commenter
recommended that the point-of-sale
reductions in price not be contingent
upon agreement between the
manufacturer and the PBM as to PBM
service fees.
Response: We did not propose, and
therefore are not finalizing in this rule,
a condition of the point-of-sale
reduction in price safe harbor that
would prohibit a reduction in price
being contingent upon agreement
between the manufacturer and the PBM
on PBM service fees. We note, however,
that the point-of-sale reduction in price
safe harbor protects only the reduction
in price; it does not protect a demand
or request for concession with regard to
a PBM service fee arrangement. Such a
demand or request itself could
constitute a solicitation for
remuneration (the remuneration being
the service fee agreement, or a
concession on the terms of the service
fee agreement) prohibited by the antikickback statute that would not be
protected by any safe harbor.
Comment: Some commenters
recommended revising the proposed
safe harbor for point-of-sale price
reductions to require any individual or
entity administering point-of-sale
chargebacks to meet the same
compensation requirements set forth in
the proposed PBM service fees safe
harbor.
Response: We did not propose, and
therefore are not finalizing in this rule
any requirements for payments related
to chargeback administration. We note,
however, that the point-of-sale
reduction in price safe harbor protects
only a reduction in price by a
manufacturer for a prescription
pharmaceutical product that is payable,
in whole or in part, by a plan sponsor
under Medicare Part D or a Medicaid
MCO; it does not protect any payment
arrangements that parties may enter into
for services such as chargeback
administration.
Comment: Several commenters
requested that OIG require certain
transparency requirements, for example:
Plans or PBMs should be required to
exchange information to enable
manufacturers to validate that the full
value of the reduction in price is
provided to the dispensing pharmacy;
data from plans and PBMs should be
available to manufacturers to confirm
that patients receive point-of-sale
reductions in price; information from
plans or PBMs be available to patients
and pharmacies at the point-of-sale; and
information from plans or PBMs,
including chargeback amounts due and
paid, be available to pharmacies in real
time. By contrast, some commenters
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
opposed general transparency
requirements and requested that OIG
ensure that point-of-sale reductions in
price remain confidential by explicitly
stating that transparency is not required
for this proposed safe harbor. For
example, pharmacies are not parties to
the agreements between plans, PBMs,
and manufacturers and, thus, should not
be allowed to know their terms.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ suggestions for and
concerns about certain transparency
requirements for the proposed point-ofsale reductions in price safe harbor. As
explained elsewhere in this final rule,
we believe that creating a new safe
harbor for point-of-sale reductions in
price will increase transparency,
including transparency to plans and
beneficiaries, and improve alignment of
incentives among parties that could
result in lower list prices and out-ofpocket costs. However, as explained
earlier in this rule, we decline to adopt
the commenter’s request to create a
condition in the safe harbor related to
the exchange of information and
cooperation among the parties, such as
the suggested disclosures to
manufacturers.
Comment: Some commenters
recommended that OIG ensure that
pharmacies are further protected by, for
example, ensuring that a reduction in
revenue for PBMs is not compensated
by reduction in payment to pharmacies
not affiliated with the PBM, or ensuring
that the chargeback accounts for costs
incurred by the pharmacy or that
pharmacies are reimbursed for
medication costs and costs to acquire,
handle, and dispense medications.
Response: We are not specifying the
reimbursement terms of an agreement
between a PBM or plan and a pharmacy
for prescription pharmaceutical
products in the final safe harbor. To the
extent point-of-sale chargebacks are
used, the payment from the
manufacturer to the pharmacy must be
equal to the reduction in price
negotiated between the manufacturer
and the plan or PBM. As we stated in
the Proposed Rule, we intend for the
point-of-sale chargeback to make
‘‘pharmacies whole for the difference
between acquisition cost, plan payment,
and beneficiary out-of-pocket payment.’’
Comment: A commenter requested
that OIG clarify the meaning of
‘‘completely applied’’ as set forth in
paragraph (cc)(1)(iii). Another
commenter requested OIG revise
paragraph (cc)(1)(iii) to indicate that the
reduction in price must be completely
applied to the price upon which the
patient’s out-of-pocket spending at the
point-of-sale is based. Another
PO 00000
Frm 00042
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
commenter recommended revising
paragraph (cc)(1)(iii) to ensure that the
rule does not inadvertently permit
point-of-sale reductions in price to
operate like a branded drug
manufacturer coupon program for
Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries.
Response: We agree with the
commenter’s interpretation of
‘‘completely applied’’ as it was set forth
in paragraph (cc)(1)(iii) of the Proposed
Rule and confirm that a protected
reduction in price cannot operate like a
coupon program. We have revised the
language for clarity in this final rule.
The reduction in price is from the
manufacturer to the plan sponsor under
Medicare Part D or a Medicaid MCO,
but the reduction in price negotiated by
a Part D plan sponsor or Medicaid MCO
(or a PBM on the plan sponsor’s or
Medicaid MCO’s behalf) must be
reflected at the pharmacy counter. The
amount paid by a beneficiary at the
pharmacy counter will depend on the
benefit design of a particular plan, the
phase of the benefit year in which the
prescription is filled, and the price
negotiated by the plan sponsor or PBM
for the prescription pharmaceutical
product that may include, e.g.,
reductions in price negotiated with the
pharmaceutical manufacturer or
dispensing fees negotiated with the
pharmacy. For example, if a
pharmaceutical product has a list price
of $120 and the manufacturer gives a
reduction in price of $20, then that
entire $20 would need to be reflected
completely in the price upon which the
beneficiary’s cost-sharing obligation is
based. We are informed by CMS that
their guidance allows for this reflection
of the entire discount at the point of
sale.49 For purposes of safe harbor
protection, the reduction in price must
be completely reflected at the point of
sale.
If a Part D beneficiary has a 20 percent
coinsurance obligation, the beneficiary
typically would pay 20 percent of $100,
or $20, at the pharmacy counter (plus
any portion required by the benefit
design for, e.g., dispensing fees). If the
beneficiary were in the deductible phase
at the time the prescription was filled,
the beneficiary would pay $100 at the
pharmacy counter (plus any portion
required by the benefit design for, e.g.,
dispensing fees). If, however, the
beneficiary’s plan used copayments
instead of coinsurance, then the
beneficiary would pay the copayment
amount according to Part D rules. Part
49 CMS, Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit
Manual, ch. 5, section 20.6 (describing that Part D
plan sponsors must provide enrollees with access
to negotiated prices for covered Part D drugs as part
of their qualified prescription drug coverage).
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
D plan sponsors must meet actuarial
equivalence standards when designing
plans and benefit structures during the
Part D bidding process. The reduction in
price must be reported in accordance
with existing rules and regulations
governing the reporting of discounts and
other reductions in price under the Part
D program. We reiterate that if a PBM
operating on behalf of a Part D plan
sponsor or Medicaid MCO retains any
portion of the reduction in price, the
remuneration retained by the PBM
would not be protected under this new
point-of-sale safe harbor.
To provide additional clarity for
stakeholders, we include the following
example from the Proposed Rule
regarding the current rebate framework
and then explain how a reduction in
price would be reflected at the point of
sale consistent with the new safe harbor.
Consider a branded prescription drug
dispensed at a retail pharmacy that has
a WAC/list price of $100. A
manufacturer sells the drug to a
wholesaler at a 2 percent discount from
the WAC. Thus, the drug is sold to the
wholesaler at $98. The wholesaler in
this example sells the drug to a
pharmacy for $100. A PBM negotiates
on behalf of a plan both a negotiated
reimbursement rate with a pharmacy
that dispenses the drug and a rebate
from the manufacturer for including the
drug on the plan’s formulary, tier
placement within the formulary, etc.
Under its contract with the PBM, the
pharmacy agrees to be paid a negotiated
rate such as, by way of example only,
1.20 × WAC/list price minus 15 percent
plus a $2 dispensing fee.
When a patient has a prescription for
the medication, the pharmacy files a
claim on behalf of the patient to the
patient’s prescription insurance. This
claim is processed by the plan and/or
the PBM on the plan’s behalf. The PBM
determines what they pay the pharmacy
and the amount remaining for the
patient to pay the pharmacy. In this
instance, the pharmacy is paid $104 for
Transaction
The difference in the patient’s cost
sharing relative to that of the plan is
even more acute when the beneficiary is
in the deductible phase and is fully
$100
$104
$30
$74
($26)
$48
25%
35%
Notes
(A).
(P).
(B) = 30% of (A).
(C) = (P)¥(B).50
(D) = 25% * (P).
(E) = (C)¥(D).
(H) = (D)/(P).
(I) = (D)/(C).
responsible for the total pharmacy
reimbursement. In this case, the
beneficiary pays the full $104, more
than 40 percent higher than what the
Transaction
plan negotiated, but never paid any
fraction of it. In fact, the plan netted $30
when the beneficiary picked up the
prescription.
Brand
List Price .....................................................................................
Pharmacy Reimbursement/POS Price .......................................
Manufacturer Rebate to Plan .....................................................
Net Drug Cost .............................................................................
Patient Coinsurance ...................................................................
Net Cost to Plan .........................................................................
Patient’s Share of POS Price .....................................................
Patient’s Share of Net Cost ........................................................
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
the drug. After the transaction, the plan
and/or PBM may also receive rebates
from the manufacturer, and in some
cases, pay the pharmacy less than the
original amount.
In this example, the PBM has
negotiated a rebate with the
manufacturer, of 30 percent of the
WAC/list price ($30), which is passed
on entirely to the plan sponsor. This
rebate does not reduce the price charged
at the pharmacy counter or the
beneficiary’s out-of-pocket cost, and the
beneficiary’s $26 coinsurance is actually
35 percent of the net cost of the drug
($104-$30), compared to the 25 percent
coinsurance described in the benefits
summary (which is based on negotiated
pharmacy reimbursement and not net
price). Thus, in this example, the plan
receives back $30 in rebates, reducing
the net cost for the drug to $74 (i.e.,
$104-$30). This process is reflected in
the following chart, which has been
revised slightly with technical edits:
Brand
List Price .....................................................................................
Pharmacy Reimbursement/POS Price .......................................
Manufacturer Rebate to Plan .....................................................
Net Drug Cost .............................................................................
Patient Coinsurance ...................................................................
Net Cost to Plan .........................................................................
Patient’s Share of POS Price .....................................................
Patient’s Share of Net Cost ........................................................
$100
$104
$30
$74
($104)
($30)
100%
140%
76707
Notes
(A).
(P).
(B) = 30% of (A).
(C) = (P)¥(B).
(D) = 100% of (P).
(E) = (C)¥(D).
(H) = (D)/(P).
(I) = (D)/(C).
As we stated in the Proposed Rule,
this example reflects the Department’s
concern that, under the current rebatebased system, beneficiaries may not
receive the benefits of reduced prices
and costs that other parties do. The
Department recognizes that parties to
prescription drug sales are frequently
paid based on a percentage of the WAC/
list price and therefore, as the list price
increases, so does the revenue to these
parties. For example, in the context of
branded prescription drugs, the absolute
net revenue to the PBM and
manufacturer generally may increase as
the WAC increases. The net revenue to
the pharmacy also may increase, but
that would be contingent on the
pharmacy’s contract with the PBM.
While the insurer’s costs will increase
as the WAC increases, under the current
system, PBMs often offset the increase
for insurers via a higher rebate from the
manufacturer. In contrast, when a
beneficiary is in the deductible phase,
their out-of-pocket spending is more
closely related to the WAC price than
the net price. The rebate from the
manufacturer is not utilized to offset
beneficiary’s out-of-pocket costs.
Similarly, the beneficiary’s coinsurance,
which is often partly a percentage of
WAC, will often increase as list price
50 The Federal government shares in the rebates
received by PBMs and Part D plan sponsors. See
also https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/
medicare-part-d-direct-and-indirect-remunerationdir.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
PO 00000
Frm 00043
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
76708
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
increases. Under the current system,
rebates are often not applied at the point
of sale to offset the beneficiary’s
deductible or coinsurance or otherwise
reduce the price paid at the pharmacy
counter.
Under this final rule, beneficiaries
would be able to share—at the
pharmacy counter—in the discounts
that plans and PBMs negotiate with
manufacturers. Using the examples
above, if the rebate were fully reflected
in the point-of-sale price, the
beneficiary’s cost-sharing obligations
would drop from $104 to $74 if the
beneficiary were still in the deductible
phase, and from $26 to $18.50 if she had
a coinsurance obligation of 25 percent.
The plan’s share of the discount would
be proportional to the coinsurance: The
plan would get no share of the discount
if the beneficiary were to pay full cost,
but it would get 75 percent of the
discount if the beneficiary had 25
percent coinsurance. The following
provides an illustration of this point:
100 Percent
coinsurance
(deductible)
Transaction
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
List Price ..................................................................................................................................................................
Pharmacy Reimbursement ......................................................................................................................................
Negotiated POS Discount ........................................................................................................................................
Net Drug Cost/POS Price ........................................................................................................................................
Patient Coinsurance ................................................................................................................................................
Net Cost to Plan ......................................................................................................................................................
Patient’s Share of POS Price ..................................................................................................................................
Patient’s Share of Net Cost .....................................................................................................................................
Comment: A commenter
recommended that OIG restrict, through
a revision to the proposed safe harbor,
the provision of identifying patient and
prescriber information the drug
manufacturer can receive from a
Medicaid MCO or PBM acting on behalf
of a Medicaid MCO in exchange for
providing a price reduction.
Specifically, the commenter
recommended that a new paragraph
(cc)(1)(iv) be added: (iv) The reduction
in price does not involve the provision
of identifying patient or prescriber
information to the pharmaceutical
manufacturer by a Medicaid MCO, or
the PBM acting under contract with it.
Response: Nothing in this final rule
affects obligations under existing
privacy and security rules. We do not
expect manufacturers to need patient- or
provider-specific information. The plan
sponsor under Part D, Medicaid MCO,
or PBM must have a writing with the
manufacturer that sets in advance the
reduced price for a prescription
pharmaceutical product. The plan
sponsor under Part D, Medicaid MCO,
or PBM is best positioned to ensure that
the reduction in price is completely
reflected in the price of the prescription
pharmaceutical product at the time the
pharmacy dispenses it to the
beneficiary, and we would expect these
parties to maintain documentation
showing that these reductions in price
were completely reflected at the time of
dispensing.
Comment: A commenter requested
that OIG clarify that under the point-ofsale safe harbor, point-of-sale reductions
in price can be made contingent on
bundled sales arrangements. Such
arrangements can provide additional
value to patients by expanding the types
of discount arrangements available to
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
manufacturers and payors. Another
commenter recommended that any
point-of-sale reductions in price that are
contingent on bundled sales
arrangements are passed along to
consumers in a non-allocated,
disaggregated fashion. This commenter
further stated that if a method for
allocating bundles at the point-of-sale is
needed, OIG should look to CMS’s
definition of ‘‘bundled sale’’ at 42 CFR
447.502 and that OIG should encourage
manufacturers and PBMs to agree upon
a written method for estimating and
allocating, in advance, effective rates for
products subject to a bundle and that
these effective rates are provided to the
dispensing pharmacy. This commenter
also recommended that price protection
payments are passed along as point-ofsale chargebacks.
Response: The conditions of the new
safe harbor for point-of-sale reductions
in price do not limit the types of
negotiation methods the parties may
use, as long as the reduction in price
can be completely reflected at the point
of sale. Elsewhere in this final rule, we
make clear that a reduction in price
must be simply a reduction in price and
not payment for a service. Therefore,
making a reduction on price contingent
on a bundled sale arrangement (e.g., by
providing for a reduction in price for
one drug contingent on formulary
placement of another drug) is not
prohibited. However, we caution that to
be protected under the safe harbor, the
reduction in price must be reflected in
the price of the product at the point of
sale and a reduction in price that is not
known at the time of sale (and therefore
cannot be reflected at the time of sale)
would not meet this condition of the
safe harbor. For example, we could see
PO 00000
Frm 00044
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
$100
$104
($30)
$74
$74
$0
100%
100%
25 Percent
coinsurance
$100
$104
($30)
$74
$18.5
$55.5
25%
25%
a bundled arrangement based on
formulary placement (such as in the
example above) to be feasible; the
parties will know at the time of sale,
what the reduction in price would be.
However, some types of bundling
arrangements (e.g., an arrangement that
might be contingent on volume of sales
of different items in a bundle) would
make it difficult to reflect the final price
at the time of sale, and therefore would
not be consistent with the requirements
of the safe harbor. We also clarify that
there should be no situation in which
the price at the pharmacy counter is less
than zero. A situation in which a
beneficiary or a Part D plan sponsor
theoretically would be owed money
would not be a reduction in price; that
would be a payment to a referral source
and would not be protected by a safe
harbor.
Comment: A commenter suggested
that OIG coordinate with the FTC to
identify and address anti-competitive
rebate schemes, such as rebate walls
(which, according to the commenter,
block competition by coupling volumebased discounts across multiple
indications with retaliatory measures,
such as the clawback of rebates by a
market leader), when they run afoul of
antitrust law.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s feedback. We work closely
with our Government partners,
including the FTC, as appropriate.
Comment: A commenter proposed an
alternative model relating to point-ofsale reductions on drugs covered under
Federal health care programs—namely,
safe harbor protections for manufacturer
cost-sharing assistance programs that
provide point-of-sale reductions on
prescription drugs covered under
Federal health care programs when
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
there is no less expensive and equally
effective generic available, such as for
biologics.
Response: We did not propose to
protect manufacturer cost-sharing
assistance programs and have longstanding concerns with these types of
arrangements; for these reasons, we
decline to adopt the commenter’s
suggestion in this final rule.
Comment: Some commenters
requested that OIG clarify how the
point-of-sale discounts should be
structured. For example, a commenter
requested that OIG clarify whether
manufacturers would be required to or
have the option to provide the point-ofsale discounts by plans directly to the
pharmacies, individually, or through
another mechanism.
Response: If safe harbor protection is
desired, point-of-sale reductions in
price can be structured in any way that
complies with the requirements of this
safe harbor and any other applicable
law. We note, however, that the safe
harbor protects the price reduction from
the manufacturer to the plan (directly or
through a PBM). Discounts to
pharmacies are not included in this safe
harbor, but they are eligible for
protection under the discount safe
harbor if all safe harbor conditions are
met. We have made minor changes to
the regulatory text at § 1001.952(cc)(1)
to clarify this point.
Comment: Some commenters
recommended that patients with higher
cost sharing be provided preferential
treatment. A commenter requested that
OIG provide manufacturers with the
ability to pass through differential
discounts to patients with, for example,
copayments or higher cost sharing.
Another commenter requested that
patients with copayments, specifically,
pay the lesser of the negotiated price of
the drug, after it is reduced to reflect the
point-of-sale discounts, or a reduced
copayment reflecting a reduction that
must, at a minimum, be proportional to
the point-of-sale discount.
Response: We have clarified above the
treatment of copayments under this
final rule. We are not providing
specifically for differential discounts
under the safe harbor. We note,
however, that this safe harbor protects
reductions in price that manufacturers
offer to plan sponsors under Part D and
to Medicaid MCOs; the amount that gets
passed through to beneficiaries is part of
a plan’s design and would not be
determined by the manufacturer.
Comment: Several commenters
identified that there is no mechanism in
the proposed safe harbor to influence or
even monitor drug manufacturer
behavior, particularly related to
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
lowering drug prices. Some commenters
recommended that OIG require
manufacturers to lower drug prices,
while another commenter recommended
that drug manufacturers be required to
‘‘price drugs fairly’’ as a condition for
receiving government-funded research
monies. A commenter recommended
that OIG enforce penalties for
‘‘egregious price increases’’ that have
the effect of increasing costs for plans,
Federal health care programs, or
patients. Another commenter
recommended that OIG require not just
manufacturers, but also PBMs and
payors to lower drug prices. Another
commenter recommended that CMS
leverage the condition of participation
standards by implementing new
conditions on drug manufacturers that
(1) would limit price increases for
existing drugs to a measure of
healthcare cost inflation and (2) allow
managed care companies the option to
exclude new drugs from their
formularies if their price is higher than
existing, peer drugs, but the differences
in their clinical effectiveness relative to
existing, peer drugs are not statistically
different. A commenter recommended
that the Department establish
requirements on drug manufacturers
that are similar to the medical loss ratio,
for example, drug manufacturers should
be held to standards based upon a ratio
of expenditures on research and
development and required to provide
detailed reports of their expenses with
penalties or other consequences for noncompliance. A commenter
recommended that OIG require not only
manufacturers, but also PBMs and
payors, to lower drug prices.
Response: OIG does not have the
authority to require that manufacturers
or others lower drug prices, and
comments recommending CMS take
certain actions are outside the scope of
this rulemaking. This final rule is
limited to the issue of safe harbor
protection under the anti-kickback
statute for certain arrangements that
implicate the prohibition on referral
payments but pose an acceptably low
risk of fraud or abuse. To that end, we
have revised the discount safe harbor
and added two new safe harbors. We
have not required any particular level of
discounts or price reductions.
Comment: Several commenters were
concerned that the changes included in
the Proposed Rule would not influence
manufacturers’ behavior and would not
impose requirements on manufacturers
to engage in good faith negotiations with
all entities of the supply chain.
Response: As we stated in the
Proposed Rule, it is difficult to predict
any particular manufacturer’s behavior.
PO 00000
Frm 00045
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
76709
We are finalizing a safe harbor that
permits manufacturers to offer
reductions in price that meet certain
conditions, including that the reduction
be completely reflected in the price of
the prescription pharmaceutical product
at the time the pharmacy dispenses the
drug to the beneficiary. Like all safe
harbors, this safe harbor is optional and
does not require manufacturers to offer
discounts.
Comment: A commenter identified
that the Proposed Rule does not provide
a mechanism by which manufacturers
can monitor or validate whether the
reductions in price from manufacturers
are passed through at the point of sale.
Thus, the commenter recommended that
OIG allow for manufacturers to be
insulated from liability if certain
discounts are not passed through at the
point of sale, until OIG can establish a
mechanism for monitoring and
validating the pass through actually
occurs.
Response: We decline to adopt this
suggestion. Under the anti-kickback
statute, parties are always required to
comply with the law regardless of
whether the OIG monitors for
compliance with it. With that said, we
recognize that each party has certain
responsibilities for complying with the
safe harbor. Whether a party has
complied with the law is a fact-specific
inquiry, including with respect to the
intent of the parties.
Comment: Some commenters
recommended that OIG require all
participants or intermediaries in the
drug supply chain be regulated and
subject to the proposed safe harbor.
Response: For reasons explained
elsewhere, we are not expanding the
scope of the safe harbor beyond what we
proposed. The commenters’ suggestion
would be impractical. Further, a safe
harbor offers protection under the
Federal anti-kickback statute for the
remuneration described in the safe
harbor; it does not generally regulate
parties in the industry.
D. Safe Harbor for Certain PBM Service
Fees
The Proposed Rule proposed a safe
harbor to protect remuneration in the
form of flat, fixed fees that
manufacturers pay to PBMs for services
the PBM provides to a manufacturer.
Comment: Many commenters who
commented on the proposed safe harbor
for PBM service fees were generally
supportive of the safe harbor and its
requirements. According to a
commenter, the conditions limit the
potential for PBMs to perform services
with the incentive to increase costs for
beneficiaries and programs. Another
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
76710
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
commenter supporting the proposal
stated that it will allow parties to
receive appropriate payment for the
value of their services, rather than the
volume or value of the pharmaceutical
products.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support for this safe
harbor.
Comment: Some commenters raised
concerns about or opposed the proposed
safe harbor for PBM service fees. For
example, according to a commenter, the
proposed safe harbor does not address
what the commenter believes to be a
conflict of interest when a PBM
provides services to plan sponsors and
patients while profiting from their
relationships with manufacturers. The
same commenter also said that
manufacturers and PBMs can mislead
parties by how they classify rebate
payments and service fees in their
financial arrangements.
Another commenter said that the safe
harbor will not lower the surplus that
PBMs with market power receive
because, according to the commenter,
such PBMs can demand a flat fee as
easily as they can negotiate for
percentage-based fees under the current
rebate system. According to this
commenter, payments from
manufacturers to PBMs should first flow
to the payor before being split between
the payor and the PBM.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ responses. While we agree
that PBMs can negotiate for flat fees just
as they can negotiate for percentagebased fees, this safe harbor includes
safeguards to reduce the risks associated
with remuneration that may be tied to
referrals. For example, the fees must be
consistent with fair market value in an
arm’s-length transaction and cannot be
determined in a manner that takes into
account the volume or value of referrals
or business otherwise generated
between the parties, or between the
manufacturer and the PBM’s health
plans that is payable, in whole or in
part, by a Federal health care program.
In addition, protected fees would be
only for services that the PBM provides
to the manufacturer, not for services
provided to health plans. Fees for
services furnished to health plans may
be structured to comply with the
personal services and management
contracts safe harbor at § 1001.952(d).
Comment: Several commenters
requested that OIG clarify the meaning
of ‘‘services the PBM provides to the
pharmaceutical manufacturer related to
the pharmacy benefit management
services that the PBM furnishes to one
or more health plans,’’ and requested
that OIG specify the types of services
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
protected by the proposed safe harbor.
A commenter recommended OIG
narrow the list of ‘‘pharmacy benefit
management services’’ listed in the
preamble to the Proposed Rule so that,
for example, PBMs do not create rebates
composed of new classes of fees, or
otherwise disguise rebates as fees,
charged to and paid by manufacturers.
Another commenter recommended OIG
restrict PBM services to adjudicating
claims only. Other commenters
suggested that OIG issue guidance on
the types of PBM services that OIG
views as appropriately compensated by
plans instead of by manufacturers, with
a commenter pointing to claims
adjudication and utilization
management as examples of services
performed for plans, and member
aggregation as an example of a service
appropriately provided to
manufacturers.
Response: We are not specifying the
services to be protected under the PBM
service fees safe harbor because we do
not want to set a static list of services
that will be protected. Moreover, the
types of services a PBM might provide
to a health plan are not necessarily the
same types of services that a PBM might
provide to a manufacturer. Using the
commenter’s example, adjudicating
claims is a service that a PBM performs
for a health plan, but not for a
manufacturer; further, while member
aggregation might be one type of service
provided by PBMs to manufacturers, to
the extent that any compensation for
such services is determined based on
the volume or value of Federal health
care program business, the
compensation would not be protected
by this safe harbor. We decline to
specify a list of services that the PBM
provides for plans as opposed to
manufacturers. We believe it should be
clear to the contracting parties whether
the PBM is providing a service for a
manufacturer or a plan.
i. Scope of Protected Fees
The Proposed Rule proposed a new
safe harbor to protect certain PBM
service fees that were flat service fees
manufacturers make to PBMs for
services the PBMs provide to the
pharmaceutical manufacturers, for the
manufacturers’ benefit, when those
services relate in some way to the PBMs’
arrangements to provide pharmacy
benefit management services to health
plans. This safe harbor would protect
only a pharmaceutical manufacturer’s
payment for those services that a PBM
furnishes to the pharmaceutical
manufacturer, and not for any services
that the PBM may be providing to a
health plan. The compensation paid to
PO 00000
Frm 00046
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
the PBM must be consistent with fair
market value in an arm’s-length
transaction, be a fixed payment, not
based on a percentage of sales, and not
be determined in a manner that takes
into account the volume or value of any
referrals or business otherwise
generated between the parties, or
between the manufacturer and the
PBM’s health plans, for which payment
may be made in whole or in part under
Medicare, Medicaid, or other Federal
health care programs. The Proposed
Rule provided a non-exhaustive list of
‘‘pharmacy benefit management
services,’’ but proposed not to create a
definition because the role of the PBM
may evolve over time. We address the
definition of pharmacy benefit
management services in the definition
section. This section discusses the scope
of the protected fees.
Comment: Some commenters
suggested clarifying that the services
must be performed ‘‘on behalf of’’ the
manufacturer instead of ‘‘to the
manufacturer’’ or ‘‘for the
manufacturer’s benefit.’’ Commenters
also recommend that the safe harbor be
limited to fees for services ‘‘that the
manufacturer would otherwise perform
(or contract for) in the absence of the
service arrangement.’’
Response: For purposes of this safe
harbor, and in this context, we believe
that ‘‘to the manufacturer’’ is
sufficiently clear. The PBM would be
providing a service to a manufacturer
(which also might be on behalf of the
manufacturer). While we are not
incorporating the particular language
suggested regarding the services that the
manufacturer would otherwise perform
(or contract for), we agree that the safe
harbor protects payment only for
legitimate services.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended broadening the proposed
safe harbor related to PBM Service Fees
to all fees, especially all PBM
arrangements with manufacturers.
These commenters wanted to ensure
that the ‘‘related to’’ language does not
unduly limit the scope of the safe harbor
or risk noncompliance if manufacturers
contract with PBMs for services that
may not clearly ‘‘relate to’’ the PBM
services that they typically provide to
health plans.
Response: We thank the commenter
for this suggestion but decline to accept
it. If a service does not relate to
pharmacy benefit management services
that the PBM provides to a health plan,
then it is unclear how the PBM could
meet the condition that requires certain
annual disclosures to health plans. As
we note elsewhere, other services that
PBMs provide could be protected by
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
other safe harbors, including the GPO
and personal services safe harbors.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that OIG clarify the PBM
services covered by the safe harbor by
removing the requirement that the
services must ‘‘relate to’’ services the
PBM furnishes to health plans and
clarify the types of PBM services that
might be provided for the benefit of the
manufacturer.
Response: We decline to remove the
requirement in the new safe harbor for
PBM service fees that the fees for which
safe harbor protection is sought ‘‘relate
to’’ pharmacy benefit management
services that the PBM furnishes to
health plans. This proposed condition
fosters transparency for health plans. As
we stated in the Proposed Rule, the
Department believes that PBMs are
agents of the health plans with which
they contract and that transparency is
important to ensure that a PBM’s
arrangements with pharmaceutical
manufacturers are not in tension with
the services it provides to the health
plans for which it is acting as an agent.
Disclosures of specific services will
allow a plan to see what services a PBM
is contracting with a manufacturer that
relate to the health plan. Thus, we
proposed to protect only those fixed fee
arrangements between manufacturers
and PBMs where plans could have
visibility into the arrangements, in other
words, arrangements related to services
the PBM was providing the plans. We
solicited comments on limiting the safe
harbor to fees that pharmaceutical
manufacturers pay to the PBMs that
relate to the PBM’s arrangements to
provide pharmacy benefit management
services to health plans.
The language of the final rule clarifies
that the fees for which safe harbor
protection is available are fees for
services provided for the benefit of the
manufacturer who is paying for them.
As noted in the Proposed Rule, such
services might include services
rendered to a manufacturer that depend
on or use data gathered from PBMS from
their health plan customers (whether
claims or other types of data), subject to
all applicable privacy and security
rules. PBMs also might provide services
for manufacturers to prevent duplicate
discounts on 340B claims. Nothing in
this rule preempts any contractual terms
that a PBM has with health plans that
limit uses of health plans or enrollees’
data.51
Comment: As noted in the definition
section, many commenters
recommended that the PBM services
and their related fees be tied to bona
51 84
FR 2349–50.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
76711
fide services. Additionally, these
commenters recommended that the
services be itemized to clearly show that
the fees are paid for specific services at
a market value. These commenters
recommended that this guidance clarify
that these services cannot be negotiated
as a fixed suite of services or services
that are applied on an ‘‘all or nothing
basis.’’
Response: As we explain above, we
have included additional conditions
aimed at clarifying that only payment
for legitimate services would be
protected. We did not propose, and are
not finalizing, a specified format for
disclosure of the services to health
plans, nor would PBMs be required to
disclose the fees to health plans.
However, PBMs would be required to
disclose both the services and
associated fees to the Secretary upon
request. Therefore, it would be a best
practice to maintain documentation that
could demonstrate how each element of
the safe harbor (e.g., fair market value,
fixed fees) is met.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that the safe harbor fees
be narrowed to protect only service fees
paid for the purposes of administering
point-of-sale reductions in price and
related chargebacks.
Response: We decline to adopt this
suggestion. The safe harbor for point-ofsale reductions in price protects a
different stream of remuneration (i.e.,
the reduction in price from a
manufacturer to a plan sponsor under
Part D or a Medicaid MCO). This safe
harbor for PBM service fees is not
related to the safe harbor for point-ofsale reductions in price and therefore
should not be limited to arrangements
protected under it.
Comment: A commenter requested
that OIG protect only fees paid to PBMs
independent of services a PBM already
provides to plans.
Response: The PBM service fees safe
harbor protects payments ‘‘for services
the PBM provides to the pharmaceutical
manufacturer.’’ Services provided to
plans are not services provided to
manufacturers, and therefore payments
for services to plans are not protected by
the safe harbor.
harbor provides that the compensation
must (1) be consistent with fair market
value in an arm’s-length transaction; (2)
be a fixed payment, not based on a
percentage of sales; and (3) not be
determined in a manner that takes into
account the volume or value of Federal
health care program business. We
believe it is clear from this context that
the compensation must reflect the fair
market value of the service rendered,
and not the value of the products
involved.
Comment: Several commenters
requested that OIG clarify the meaning
of ‘‘fair market value.’’ A commenter
asked OIG to provide examples of
valuation approaches to meet the
standard. Other commenters requested
that OIG either adopt CMS’s statements
regarding fair market value in the
context of CMS’s bona fide service fees
guidance for the MDRP or clarify the
‘‘fair market value’’ standard is
consistent with CMS’s statements.
Another commenter asserted that in
order to establish fair market value,
PBMs and manufacturers should
provide specific disclosures and
demonstrate that the performed services
are of real value to manufacturers,
instead of simply showing that many
manufacturers are willing to pay PBMs
comparable amounts of money for
general, nondescript services.
Response: The requirement that
compensation paid for PBM service fees
be ‘‘consistent with fair market value in
an arm’s-length transaction’’ is nearly
identical to a requirement of the safe
harbor for personal services and
management contracts, 42 CFR
1001.952(d), which has been in effect
since 1991. 56 FR 35952 (July 29, 1991).
In addition, both the personal services
and management contracts safe harbor
and the proposed PBM service fees safe
harbor include a requirement that the
compensation not be determined in a
manner that takes into account the
volume or value of any Federal health
care program business. (Because of this
requirement, a fair market value
determination cannot be made through
comparison to transactions where
compensation may have taken the value
of referrals into account.) 52 The
ii. Fair Market Value
Comment: A commenter
recommended that the fair market value
of the payment to PBMs reflect the value
of the services, not the value of the
products involved.
Response: By its terms, the proposed
safe harbor for PBM service fees protects
compensation paid for services
performed by a PBM for a
pharmaceutical manufacturer. The safe
52 See, e.g., Letter from D. McCarty Thornton,
Associate General Counsel, Inspector General
Division, to T. J. Sullivan, Office of the Associate
Chief Counsel, Internal Revenue Service, Dec. 22,
1992 (‘‘When considering the question of fair
market value, we would note that the traditional or
common methods of economic valuation do not
comport with the prescriptions of the anti-kickback
statute. Items ordinarily considered in determining
the fair market value may be expressly barred by
the anti-kickback statute’s prohibition against
payments for referrals. Merely because another
PO 00000
Frm 00047
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
Continued
30NOR2
76712
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
proposed PBM service fees safe harbor
also specifically excludes from
protection compensation based on a
percentage of sales. In addition, as we
explain elsewhere, we include certain
additional requirements similar to the
personal services and management
contracts safe harbor at 42 CFR
1001.952(d).
We decline to provide further
guidance on the setting of compensation
for PBM service fees, nor do we adopt
the guidance provided by CMS in a
different context.53
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
iii. Take Into Account Volume or Value
Comment: Commenters suggested
that, if OIG does not believe that all fees
based on volume or value would
generate a significant risk, OIG should
adopt clear guidance excepting lower
risk arrangements from the volume or
value requirement. More specifically,
several commenters recommended that
OIG exempt any arrangement that
involves varying numbers of
transactions, provided that the fee for
each individual transaction is fixed in
advance and consistent with fair market
value in an arms-length transaction, as
it presents a low risk of fraud. This
would facilitate practical service fee
arrangements between manufacturers
and PBMs. Alternatively, commenters
suggested that the rule could clarify that
the reference to volume or value of
business ‘‘otherwise generated’’ between
parties means that payment terms under
the PBM service fee arrangement in
buyer may be willing to pay a particular price is not
sufficient to render the price paid to be fair market
value. The fact that a buyer in a position to benefit
from referrals is willing to pay a particular price
may only be a reflection of the value of the referral
stream that is likely to result from the purchase.’’),
available at https://oig.hhs.gov/fraud/docs/
safeharborregulations/acquisition122292.htm.
53 A commenter on the Proposed Rule cited
CMS’s response when asked to provide guidance on
the meaning of ‘‘fair market value’’ as used in its
definition of ‘‘bona fide service fees.’’ 81 FR 5170,
5179–5180 (Feb. 1, 2016). Among the comments
cited in that rulemaking was one that ‘‘encouraged
CMS to acknowledge that many or most fee
arrangements common in the industry tend to be
percentage based agreements and that
manufacturers can establish a fair market value
rationale for a percentage based fee through
industry benchmarking by comparing types of
specific services outlined in an agreement with
ranges of payments observed throughout the
industry.’’ 81 FR 5179. While CMS did not respond
to this particular comment and declined to further
define fair market value for purposes of the bona
fide service fee definition, it stated its belief that
manufacturers should retain flexibility in
determining whether service fees are paid at fair
market value. We are not adopting CMS’
terminology nor its definition of ‘‘bona fide services
fees,’’ for purposes of this final rule. To the extent
that CMS’s guidance on the topic of service fees
leaves room for percentage-based arrangements, it
should be noted that percentage-based
arrangements are expressly excluded from
protection under the PBM service fees safe harbor.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
question should not take into account
other arrangements outside of the
contract, but would not preclude perunit fees based on volume or value of
the services furnished under the service
fee agreement itself. According to
commenters, these types of
arrangements present a low risk of fraud
or abuse if certain safeguards are
incorporated into the safe harbor.
Specifically, a few commenters
recommended including the factors
identified in OIG’s Advisory Opinions
10–14 and 11–18 54 to deem certain fair
market value, arms-length, per-unit fees
as not taking into account the volume or
value of referrals or other business
generated between the parties. A
commenter requested that the safe
harbor protect fees where PBMs are paid
less per claim as the number of claims
increases in light of certain fixed costs.
Response: We agree with the general
premise of the commenters’ concerns,
that compensation for services may be
determined on a per-unit of work basis
and thus vary with the volume of work
performed. This particular safe harbor
condition excludes compensation that
takes into account the volume or value
of referrals or other business that are
payable in whole or in part under a
Federal health care program. For
example, if a per-unit-of-work fee is
fixed in advance at fair market value for
services actually provided to the
manufacturer and is not based on
volume or value of Federal health care
business, then that arrangement could
be protected, so long as the unit-based
compensation does not vary during the
course of the compensation arrangement
in any manner that takes into account
referrals or other Federal business
generated. On the other hand, the safe
harbor would not protect per unit
compensation that varies with either
increases or decreases in volume (e.g., X
amount per unit for the first 1,000 units,
X + 1 per unit for additional units), as
we believe that compensation
determined in this manner is not low
risk. In addition, we emphasize that this
safe harbor would not protect any perunit-of-work fee that is based on or
otherwise connected with drug prices.
Comment: According to a commenter,
the Proposed Rule would allow all
entities (other than PBMs) in the drug
supply chain that supply services to
manufacturers to be compensated for
the provision of services based on
volume and a percentage of list price.
The commenter recommended requiring
all payments by manufacturers for
services provided by third parties to be
54 Advisory Opinion 11–18 was terminated on
April 1, 2014.
PO 00000
Frm 00048
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
applied equally and to be set in
advance, fixed, and based on fair market
value.
Response: In the Proposed Rule, we
proposed a new safe harbor specifically
to protect fees paid from manufacturers
to PBMs for services rendered to the
manufacturers, if all the conditions of
the safe harbor are met. This safe harbor
does not ‘‘allow’’ payments to other
entities that do not meet these
conditions; it simply does not protect
them, whether they meet the conditions
or not. Manufacturer payments to
entities other than PBMs may be
protected by other safe harbors, such as
the safe harbor for personal services and
management contracts, 42 CFR
1001.952(d). (This safe harbor also
requires that compensation be set in
advance, consistent with fair market
value in arm’s-length transactions, and
not determined in a manner that takes
into account volume and value of
Federal health care program business.)
However, compliance with the terms of
each safe harbor is voluntary. If parties
choose not to comply with such
requirements with regard to particular
arrangements, it may be that they do not
believe that these arrangements
implicate the anti-kickback Statute or
that they otherwise comply with the
law.
iv. Fixed Fees
Comment: Several commenters were
supportive of the condition in the safe
harbor requiring that the compensation
paid to a PBM be a fixed payment rather
than a payment based on a percentage
of sales. A commenter noted that this
proposal may increase the placement of
less expensive drugs on preferred
formulary tiers and could reduce out-ofpocket costs for certain patients. Some
commenters noted that a flat-fee system
aligns fees with the value of the services
provided.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support for this condition
of the safe harbor. Based on the
comments received, we are finalizing
this condition, as proposed.
Comment: Several commenters
suggested changes to the scope of fees
that can be protected under the PBM
service fees safe harbor. For instance,
several commenters recommended that
the safe harbor apply to fees for any
service a PBM provides to or on behalf
of a manufacturer. Many commenters
either requested that the safe harbor
protect fees for all bona fide services
provided by PBMs to manufacturers or
asked that we incorporate (or consider
incorporating) the standards from the
bona fide service fee definition under
the MDRP (42 CFR 447.502). According
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
to at least one commenter, if we do not
limit the scope of the safe harbor to
bona fide services, PBMs may seek to
convert costs and lost revenue to service
fees.
Response: We are finalizing a
modification to the new safe harbor to
protect payments by a pharmaceutical
manufacturer to a PBM for legitimate
services the PBM provides to the
pharmaceutical manufacturer related to
the pharmacy benefit management
services that the PBM furnishes to one
or more health plans with certain
conditions. We share commenter’s
concerns about the use of this safe
harbor to convert costs and lost revenue
to service fees. Therefore, we are
clarifying in the regulatory text that the
safe harbor applies only to ‘‘legitimate’’
services; thus, this safe harbor does not
protect arrangements between
manufacturers and PBMs for services
that are not necessary, are worthless, or
are duplicative. Because we are not
adopting or incorporating by reference
the term ‘‘bona fide service fee,’’ as CMS
may use that term, we wanted to use a
different term to convey a similar
concept.
Comment: A commenter requested
clarification as to how fixed fees would
be structured to comply with this safe
harbor. In particular, the commenter
raised concerns that a fixed-fee model
could lead PBMs to pass down higher
administrative costs to Medicaid MCOs
that could, in turn, increase costs for
states and the Federal Government.
Another commenter raised concerns
that flat fees will be used by
manufacturers as another way to
encourage utilization of their products.
According to these commenters, the
fixed fees are a mechanism for entities
to offset rebate losses.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s concerns about how a
fixed-fee model could affect costs for
states and the Federal government, and
we do not intend for this safe harbor to
protect fixed fees that serve only as a
mechanism for entities to offset rebate
losses. As discussed above, we are
finalizing a modification to the new safe
harbor to protect payments by a
pharmaceutical manufacturer to a PBM
for legitimate services the PBM provides
to the pharmaceutical manufacturer
related to the pharmacy benefit
management services that the PBM
furnishes to one or more health plans
with certain conditions. If the fee
arrangement does not meet all safe
harbor conditions, then it would not be
protected.
Comment: A commenter sought
clarification from OIG that the PBM
service fees protected under the safe
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
harbor would replace the existing
administrative fees received by PBMs
that are based on a percentage of WAC.
Additionally, the commenter requested
that OIG not protect any administrative
fees based on a percentage of WAC that
are paid to PBMs or any other
intermediaries.
Response: We proposed to add, and
are finalizing, a new safe harbor
specifically designed to protect certain
fixed fees pharmaceutical manufacturers
pay to PBMs for services rendered to the
manufacturers that relate to PBMs’
arrangements to provide pharmacy
benefit management services to health
plans. With respect to the commenter’s
second request, we note that nothing in
this final rule is intended to affect any
existing protections that may be
available under other safe harbors for
the types of administrative fee
arrangements the commenter described.
Comment: A commenter disputed
OIG’s assertion that a PBM service fee
becomes a kickback because the basis
for setting it is a percentage of list price,
especially since this is typically the best
measure of fair market value. To address
this concern, the commenter
recommended a prohibition on any
manufacturer requirement that the
service fees be dependent on formulary
placement. This would permit
specifying that service fees tied to a
fixed percentage of sales may qualify as
a permitted fixed fee under the rule.
Response: Our Proposed Rule stated
that service fees tied to a product’s price
‘‘could function as a disguised
kickback.’’ Whether a service fee based
on a percentage of list price rises to the
level of an unlawful kickback under the
anti-kickback statute would depend on
the facts and circumstances. As we
noted in the Proposed Rule, we
proposed a safe harbor that would
protect flat fees because they ‘‘pose
lower risk of abuse and conflicts of
interest.’’ Because of these concerns, we
decline to adopt the commenter’s
suggestion to protect service fees tied to
a fixed percentage of sales.
v. Disclosure Requirement
Comment: Many commenters
expressed general support for PBM
disclosures arguing that plans should
have full information about PBM
relationships with manufacturers,
including fees that manufacturers pay to
PBMs.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support. To promote
transparency, we are finalizing our
proposals that information about both
the services and the associated fees be
disclosed to the Secretary upon request.
In the Proposed Rule we said we were
PO 00000
Frm 00049
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
76713
considering and solicited comments on
requiring additional information about
the fee arrangements, including
information about valuation, valuation
methodologies, compliance with the
‘‘volume or value’’ criterion, and other
characteristics. For purposes of
compliance with the final safe harbor,
we are not requiring disclosure of each
of these additional elements. However,
maintaining documentation of these
elements would be prudent to
demonstrate safe harbor compliance.
Comment: Many commenters
recommended additional disclosure
requirements, including: Requiring
PBMs to disclose service fee
arrangements with plans to
manufacturers; requiring PBMs to
disclose all arrangements with
manufacturers and wholesalers that are
related to health plans; requiring PBMs
to disclose all information related to the
fees PBMs are paid for the services
protected under the safe harbor;
requiring PBMs to disclose to
manufacturers when they seek
manufacturer compensation for services
also compensated by a plan; requiring
PBMs to annually disclose to the
Department information that explains
their valuation methodology and
demonstrates their fee arrangements
meet the volume and value criteria; and
requiring PBMs to disclose service fees
that are separated from any discounts or
rebates. A commenter requested
clarification regarding the specific
information that must be included in
the disclosures under the new safe
harbor, particularly as it related to the
‘‘additional information about fee
arrangements’’ that PBMs would be
required to disclose to the Secretary.’’
See 84 FR 2350. Another commenter
requested that PBMs’ written
agreements with pharmaceutical
manufacturers be made publicly
available on both the manufacturer’s
and PBM’s websites and that CMS
should also compile and display these
agreements on the agency’s website.
Response: Although we appreciate
commenters’ suggestions, we did not
propose transparency requirements for
agreements between PBMs and health
plans or wholesalers and, therefore,
could not finalize such requirements
here. Moreover, the additional
disclosure requirements suggested by
the commenters exceed what we believe
should be necessary for safe harbor
compliance, given the overall structure
of the safe harbor, and to protect against
abusive fee arrangements between
manufacturers and PBMs. Additionally,
we see no need to require the public
disclosure of this type of private
agreement between two parties as a
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
76714
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
requirement under the safe harbor.
However, we note that under the final
rule, PBMs would disclose to the
Secretary upon request the services
provided and fees paid for the services.
Of course, to the extent a PBM was
subject to an enforcement action and
asserting the safe harbor as a defense,
the PBM would have to show that it met
each element of the safe harbor.
Therefore, as a best practice, the PBM
should have documentation of how it
met each element (e.g., a fair market
value analysis for the fees).
Comment: A commenter proposed
that beneficiaries should have similar
access as health plans to information
regarding PBM contracts and another
commenter requested clarification as to
whether the PBM disclosures would be
required to the pharmacy or beneficiary.
Response: We did not propose and are
not finalizing any requirement for PBMs
to make disclosures to pharmacies or
beneficiaries. We believe the safe harbor
conditions we are finalizing provide the
appropriate protections against abusive
kickback schemes.
Comment: Another commenter
proposed that disclosures of contracts
and service fees should be made at the
time of agreement rather than annually,
because obtaining the information
earlier would aid plans in
contemporaneously addressing possible
conflicts in PBMs’ recommendations.
The same commenter recommended
adding a new subsection to prohibit
Medicaid-identifying patient or
prescriber information from being
provided to the manufacturer.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s suggestion, but we decline
to delete the requirement for PBMs to
report on arrangements with
manufacturers annually. We believe that
this information can change over time
and should be updated. Medicaididentifying patient or prescriber
information is not part of the disclosure
requirement and its disclosure may be
governed by other laws.
Comment: A commenter supported
general disclosure of the types of
services that PBMs may provide to
manufacturers but objected to
disclosures of specific services provided
to manufacturers on the grounds that
such disclosure would be unwieldy and
provide no additional transparency.
Another commenter objected to the
disclosure requirements, because PBMs
and their clients already engage in
arm’s-length negotiations, including
what is disclosed and not disclosed, and
called any additional disclosure
requirements unnecessary, burdensome,
and invasive.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
Response: Although we appreciate the
commenters’ concerns, we respectfully
disagree. The transparency requirement
is important to ensure that a PBM’s
arrangements with pharmaceutical
manufacturers are not in tension with
the services it provides to the health
plans for which it is acting as an agent.
Disclosures of specific services will
allow a plan to see what services a PBM
is contracting with a manufacturer for
on its behalf.
Comment: A commenter requested
clarification regarding the scope of
‘‘associated costs’’ and ‘‘associated
compensation’’ for services rendered to
pharmaceutical manufacturers that are
to be disclosed under the new PBM
service fees safe harbor. The commenter
objected to the disclosure to plan
sponsors of fees paid by manufacturers
to PBMs, stating that the disclosure of
fees to plan sponsors would not provide
any additional transparency and would
negatively affect competition due to
widespread dissemination of the fees
paid by each manufacturer to each PBM.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s concern. The terms ‘‘costs’’
and ‘‘compensation’’ as used in the
Proposed Rule were meant to be
synonymous. We further note that while
we considered and solicited comments
on whether PBMs should be required to
disclose fee arrangements to health
plans, we are not finalizing this
requirement. We are, however,
finalizing the proposal that PBMs are
required to disclose fee arrangements to
the Secretary upon request.
Comment: Regarding ‘‘additional
information about fee arrangements’’ to
be disclosed to the Secretary upon
request, a commenter recommended
that PBMs disclose information to the
Department that demonstrates fee
arrangements do not duplicate other
arrangements for which the PBM might
receive payments. Conversely, other
commenters cautioned that duplicative
services may not always constitute
‘‘double dipping’’ and that duplicative
services may not necessarily indicate
that an arrangement is fraudulent or
abusive. As an example, these
commenters noted that ‘‘PBMs may
provide the same data to more than one
entity, and such data could represent
value to each recipient, even if the data
is also received by others.’’
Response: In the Proposed Rule, we
said we were considering and solicited
comments on a range of additional
information we might require be
disclosed to the Secretary, upon request,
including information related to
duplicative payments and doubledipping. However, we are not requiring
that the PBM proactively disclose
PO 00000
Frm 00050
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
information that specifically
demonstrates a lack of duplicate
services. The safe harbor requires that a
PBM disclose to the Secretary upon
request the services it rendered to each
pharmaceutical manufacturer related to
the PBM’s arrangements to furnish
pharmacy benefit management services
to the health plan and the fees paid for
such services. We believe this
disclosure requirement will provide
sufficient transparency and that
additional disclosure requirements are
not necessary to achieve the goals of the
safe harbor. The requirement to provide
information about services and the fees
paid for those services to the Secretary
on request does not constitute a
determination that any particular
arrangement is abusive. We recognize
that particular fees and services cannot
be examined in a vacuum, and we
would look at the totality of facts and
circumstances in reviewing an
arrangement.
Comment: A commenter argued that,
as proposed, the definition of pharmacy
benefit manager services eligible for
protection under the proposed safe
harbor meets the definition of a bona
fide service fee and urged HHS to
specify that if administrative service
fees meet the bona fide services fee
definition they would no longer be
treated as reportable price concessions.
Response: Determinations of what
services are or are not reported as price
concessions are the purview of CMS,
which administers the Part D program.
vi. Scope of Agreement
We solicited comments regarding
whether the safe harbor for pharmacy
benefit manager fees should specify the
format of any such agreement (e.g.,
whether it would be sufficient for a
PBM to have one agreement with a
manufacturer that covers all of the
services the PBM provides to that
manufacturer, or whether separate
agreements for services that relate to
each health plan would be necessary).
Comment: A commenter
recommended that the rule should not
dictate the format of a PBM agreement,
which could vary based on the services
to be provided and the preferences and
standards desired by the parties. The
commenter suggested that requiring
separate agreements for each of a PBM’s
plan sponsor clients would impose
tremendous costs on the parties while
providing no benefit or protection to
Federal health care programs. The
commenter also pointed out that PBMs
may need separate agreements for
Federal and commercial business.
Response: The final rule does not
specify the format of a PBM service fee
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
agreement and does not mandate that
the PBM have separate agreements with
each health plan with which it
contracts.
vii. Statutory Exception and Safe Harbor
for Group Purchasing Organizations
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
Comment: Various commenters asked
OIG to affirmatively rescind statements
from its 2003 CPG that indicate rebates
or other payments to PBMs may be
structured to fit under the GPO safe
harbor at 42 CFR 1001.952(j) 55 and to
indicate in revised guidance that these
statements have been superseded and
replaced by the point-of-sale reductions
in price and PBM service fees safe
harbors, as of the effective date of the
final rule. Another pharmaceutical
manufacturer commenter asserted that
allowing PBMs to rely on the GPO safe
harbor would create a loophole to the
new safe harbors and reduce uptake of
point-of-sale discount arrangements and
service fees based on flat, fair market
value payments.
Commenters also asked for
clarification as to whether OIG still
recognizes the GPO safe harbor as a
possible source of protection for rebates
or other payments by manufacturers to
PBMs. Similarly, other commenters
recommended that OIG clarify or revise
the 2003 CPG in light of the final rule
because of the potential for confusion by
stakeholders on the status of rebates or
other payments paid by manufacturers
to PBMs.
Conversely, a PBM commenter
indicated that it intends to continue to
utilize the GPO safe harbor, 42 CFR
1001.952(j), to protect the receipt of
administrative fees from manufacturers.
Another commenter stated the GPO safe
harbor also has a corollary statutory
exception that would protect these
payments.
Response: To qualify for protection
under the GPO safe harbor, certain
requirements must be met. First, the safe
harbor protects only payment by a
vendor to a GPO as part of an agreement
to furnish goods or services to an entity.
Second, the GPO must have a written
agreement with each individual or
entity for which items or services are
55 Specifically, several commenters requested OIG
rescind the following statements from the
‘‘Payments to PBMs’’ section in 68 FR 23736: ‘‘Any
rebates or other payments by drug manufacturers to
PBMs that are based on, or otherwise related to, the
PBM’s customers’ purchases potentially implicate
the anti-kickback statute. Protection is available by
structuring such arrangements to fit in the GPO safe
harbor at 42 CFR 1001.952(j). That safe harbor
requires, among other things, that the payments be
authorized in advance by the PBM’s customer and
that all amounts actually paid to the PBM on
account of the customer’s purchases be disclosed in
writing at least annually to the customer.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
furnished that specifies either that the
fee the GPO receives will be three
percent or less of the purchase price of
the goods or services provided by that
vendor or specifies the amount (or if not
known, the maximum amount) the GPO
will be paid by each vendor (where such
amount may be a fixed sum or a fixed
percentage of the value of purchases
made from the vendor by the members
of the group under the contract between
the vendor and the GPO). Third, if the
entity that receives the goods or service
from the vendor is a health care
provider of services, the GPO must
disclose in writing to the entity at least
annually, and to the Secretary upon
request, the amount received from each
vendor with respect to purchases made
by or on behalf of the entity. In addition
to meeting the requirements above, a
PBM, as a threshold matter, would have
to meet the definition of a GPO: An
entity authorized to act as a purchasing
agent for a group of individuals or
entities who are furnishing services for
which payment may be made in whole
or in part under Medicare, Medicaid or
other Federal health care programs, and
who are neither wholly-owned by the
GPO nor subsidiaries of a parent
corporation that wholly owns the GPO
(either directly or through another
wholly-owned entity).56
Thus, for a PBM to qualify as a GPO
acting as a purchasing agent on behalf
of its members, the PBM could not
wholly own the members, nor could the
members be wholly owned by the same
parent corporation as the PBM. This
may limit the utility of the safe harbor
for many PBMs. The propriety of any
particular arrangement and whether it
can fit under a safe harbor is highly
dependent upon the facts and
circumstances of each particular case.
Any statements in this final rule should
be not construed as approval of an
individual arrangement. PBMs and
manufacturers wishing to use the GPO
safe harbor should closely scrutinize
their arrangements for full compliance
with all safe harbor conditions and
definitions, including all requirements
relating to written agreements and
disclosures.
Requests for amendments to the
regulatory safe harbor for GPOs are
beyond the scope of this rulemaking. In
addition, as we state above, fees to
PBMs are not protected by the discount
or point-of-sale reduction in price safe
harbors, so nothing in this rule would
suggest those amendments would
replace or supersede a PBM’s ability to
have fees protected by a different safe
harbor. The new PBM service fee safe
56 42
PO 00000
CFR 1001.952(j)(2).
Frm 00051
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
76715
harbor is an additional avenue for
protection for arrangements between
pharmaceutical manufacturers and
PBMs that meet the conditions of that
safe harbor. As with any safe harbor,
only offers or payment of remuneration
that meet all safe harbor conditions,
including any applicable definitions
and disclosure requirements, would be
protected.
Comment: Another commenter
encouraged OIG to clarify and
distinguish the GPO safe harbor term
‘‘purchasing agent’’ from PBM in the
final rule or future rulemaking. The
commenter asserted that the term
‘‘purchasing agent’’ is used but not
defined in both the GPO statutory
exception and safe harbor. The
commenter requested that OIG define
the term ‘‘purchasing agent’’ narrowly,
e.g., as an entity that is distinct from a
PBM and represents members that take
title and possession of purchased
products, which, the commenter
asserted, would better ensure the
objectives of the Proposed Rule.
Similarly, another commenter
encouraged OIG to clearly distinguish
PBMs from GPOs based on the types of
entities that they represent and services
they perform for those entities.
Response: Defining the term
‘‘purchasing agent’’ and distinguishing
between GPOs and PBMS as those terms
are used in the GPO statutory exception
and safe harbor is outside the scope of
this rulemaking, which does not address
the GPO safe harbor.
viii. Additional Recommendations
Comment: Several commenters
requested that OIG clarify, expand, or
restrict the definition of PBM for
purposes of the proposed safe harbor for
various reasons. For example, some
commenters recommended a definition
that is based on an entity’s function or
incorporates the types of services an
entity provides, rather than the label of
its name. A commenter recommended
that a definition of ‘‘PBM’’ not include
‘‘negotiating rebate arrangements’’
because it could create the impression
of protecting PBM services provided to
manufacturers that are not legitimate
and/or necessary. Some commenters
recommended OIG include in the
definition all PBM-owned and PBMaffiliated entities, including PBMowned pharmacies.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their suggestions. We decline to
expand or limit the definition of ‘‘PBM’’
that we included in the Proposed Rule.
We included only the core function of
a PBM in the definition because we
recognize that one PBM may perform
more or fewer services than another
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
76716
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
PBM, and we do not want a defined
term to dictate a business model for
purposes of safe harbor protection. We
also decline to include all PBM-owned
or PBM-affiliated entities in the
definition. Other safe harbors (such as
the personal services safe harbor) might
be available to protect services
performed by other types of entities.
Comment: Some commenters
requested that OIG clarify or remove
altogether the ‘‘related to’’ aspect of the
proposed safe harbor so that the safe
harbor protection could be more broadly
available to, for example, all PBM
services arrangements with
manufacturers.
Response: We are not adopting this
suggestion. The conditions in this safe
harbor are designed to ensure that
protection is offered only for service
fees if the services are related or (i.e.,
connected in some way) to pharmacy
benefit management services that the
PBM provides to health plans. If there
is no connection to health plan services,
certain conditions in the safe harbor
would be inapplicable (e.g., the
requirement to make certain disclosures
to health plans). We note, however, that
other safe harbors, such as the personal
services and management contracts safe
harbor at § 1001.952(d) may be available
to protect other types of service
arrangements between PBMs and
manufacturers.
Comment: Some commenters
recommended that OIG incorporate
certain requirements of the personal
services and management contracts safe
harbor to the PBM service fees proposed
safe harbor. Specifically, the
commenters recommended requiring
that (1) the agreement for the service be
signed by the parties; (2) the services
performed under the agreement do not
involve the counselling or promotion of
a business arrangement or other activity
that violates any State or Federal law,
and (3) the aggregate services contracted
for do not exceed those that are
reasonably necessary to accomplish the
commercially reasonable business
purpose of the services.
Response: The proposed safe harbor
for PBM service fees includes certain
safeguards adapted from the personal
services and management contracts safe
harbor, including a requirement that
compensation be fair market value for
services rendered.
With regard to the suggestion that the
safe harbor include a requirement that
the agreement for PBM services be
signed by the parties, we believe that
such a requirement is implicit in the
requirement that the agreement be in
writing in order to establish and
memorialize the agreement of the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
parties. However, we acknowledge that
the personal services and management
contracts safe harbor includes an
explicit requirement of signatures. For
the sake of consistency, and to avoid
any implication that an inconsistency
on this point means no signatures are
required for compliance with the PBM
service fees safe harbor, we are adding
this explicit requirement to the final
rule.
As noted by commenters, the personal
services and management contracts safe
harbor also includes a requirement that
the services performed under the
agreement do not involve the
counselling or promotion of a business
arrangement or other activity that
violates any State or Federal law. While
the proposed PBM service fees safe
harbor did not include such a
requirement in regulatory text, we think
it is obvious that the proposed safe
harbor was not intended to protect
payments for the counselling or
promotion of illegal activities. For the
sake of clarity, we are adding this
explicit requirement to the final rule.
The commenters also noted that the
personal service and management
contracts safe harbor requires that ‘‘the
aggregate services contracted for do not
exceed those that are reasonably
necessary to accomplish the
commercially reasonable business
purpose of the services.’’ While we are
not including this specific condition in
the final rule, we note that considering
whether services are commercially
reasonable would likely be useful in
meeting the condition that payments
protected by the safe harbor be ‘‘for
services the PBM provides to the
pharmaceutical manufacturer related to
the pharmacy benefit management
services that the PBM furnishes to . . .
health plans’’ and not for favorable
treatment of the manufacturers’
products.
Comment: A commenter
recommended that OIG provide
guidance stating that companies will be
held accountable for their own
compliance, noting that the discount
safe harbor requires entities to ‘‘refrain
from doing anything that would
impede’’ their contracting counter-party
from meeting their own obligations
under the safe harbor. The contractor
further noted that the 1999 preamble to
the discount safe harbor states that, if a
seller meets its obligations under the
safe harbor in good faith, while the
buyer fails to meet its obligations, the
seller would be protected by the safe
harbor. 64 FR 63518, 63527 (Nov. 19,
1999).
Response: The safe harbor for PBM
service fees differs from the discount
PO 00000
Frm 00052
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
safe harbor at 42 CFR 1001.952(h), in
that the latter has separate sets of
requirements for buyers and sellers. The
PBM service fee safe harbor has only
one condition that is the responsibility
of only one party: The PBM is
responsible for certain disclosures,
which we believe it is able to make
without the assistance of any other party
to the agreement. We confirm that,
provided that all other requirements of
the safe harbor are met, and provided
that the manufacturer party to an
agreement with a PBM has taken no
steps to discourage or impede the PBM
from meeting the disclosure
requirements, the PBM’s failure to meet
the disclosure requirement will not, by
itself, cause the manufacturer to lose the
protection of the safe harbor. We note,
however, that if the manufacturer were
aware of a failure to disclose and took
no steps to remedy it, liability might
attach to the manufacturer through
various legal theories, depending on all
the facts of the arrangement and the
conduct of the parties.
Comment: A commenter explained
that bona fide payments for services
performed by PBM intermediaries
should be converted to fee-for-service
arrangements that are tied to the fair
market value of the services performed
rather than a percentage of WAC. The
commenter requested that OIG provide
similar protections for pharmacies,
wholesalers, and outpatient providers.
Response: The commenter did not
explain how the referenced service
arrangements with pharmacies,
wholesalers and outpatient providers
implicate the anti-kickback statute
while posing low risk of abuse, and
therefore are suitable for protection by
a safe harbor. If the arrangements do not
fit in a safe harbor, they would be
analyzed on a case-by-case basis for
compliance with the statute.
Comment: Some commenters
requested that pharmacies’
reimbursement not be affected by the
negotiated rate between plans or PBMs
and manufacturers and that pharmacies
not be expected to pay any of the service
fees owed by manufacturers to PBMs.
Response: There is no expectation
under the final rule that pharmacies pay
any of the service fees owed by
manufacturers to PBMs. Pharmacy
reimbursement from plan sponsors and
the relationships between pharmacies
and manufacturers are beyond the scope
of this rulemaking. However, we note
that the PBM service fee safe harbor
protects only payments to PBMs by
manufacturers, provided all conditions
of the safe harbor are met. Payments that
are made by pharmacies, even indirectly
through reimbursements to
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
manufacturers, are not protected by the
safe harbor.
Comment: Some commenters
requested that OIG clarify what ‘‘arm’slength transaction’’ means. In particular,
a commenter specifically requested that
OIG clarify: (1) That PBMs are obligated
to negotiate services arrangements in
good faith based on the bona fide needs
of manufacturers; (2) the scope of safe
harbor protection available for
arrangements in which a PBM provides
services on behalf of an affiliated plan;
and (3) that individual health plans that
do not provide pharmacy benefits
management services to plan sponsors
under Part D may not attempt to use the
safe harbor to negotiate administrative
fees from manufacturers.
Response: The term ‘‘arm’s-length
transaction’’ has appeared in safe harbor
regulations since 1999 57 and has been
subject to interpretation in advisory
opinions and other OIG guidance,58 as
well as court cases,59 since that time.
We decline to provide further
interpretation here.
Comment: A commenter suggested
that alternative, transparent, flat-fee
based pharmacy benefits models that
reduce costs already exist (and were not
considered by OIG or HHS) that
generate savings, which are used by
health plans in a variety of ways,
including (1) reducing plan spending
and/or providing member savings, such
as offsetting premium costs; or (2)
lowering copayments for enrollees and
not charging an enrollee more than the
cost of the drugs themselves.
Response: The Proposed Rule does
not prohibit the use of other models but
only provides protection from liability
for PBM service fees, in certain
circumstances, because they implicate
the anti-kickback statute and are
considered to be low-risk.
Comment: A commenter urged OIG to
clarify that, if an arrangement fell under
the protection of other safe harbors,
including discount, personal services
and management contracts, managed
care, and GPO administrative fee, those
arrangements can only now be protected
under the proposed PBM service fees
safe harbor.
Response: An arrangement that
satisfies all conditions of any safe
harbor can be protected without
satisfying conditions of other potentially
applicable safe harbors. Thus an
arrangement between a PBM and a
57 See,
e.g., 64 FR 63518 (Nov. 19, 1999).
e.g., 2003 CPG, Special Advisory Bulletin:
Contractual Joint Ventures (April 23, 2003,
available at https://oig.hhs.gov/fraud/docs/
alertsandbulletins/042303SABJointVentures.pdf.
59 See, e.g., U.S. ex rel. Gale v. Omnicare, Inc.,
2013 WL 3822152 (N.D. Ohio, July 23, 2013).
58 See,
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
manufacturer that does not satisfy the
conditions of the safe harbor for PBM
service fees could be protected by a
different safe harbor, if the arrangement
met all the conditions of that other safe
harbor.
E. Technical Comments
We received several comments
requesting that we make technical
revisions to certain provisions in the
regulatory text. We summarize the
comments received below.
Comment: Commenters requested that
we revise ‘‘reduced price’’ to ‘‘reduction
in price’’ in § 1001.952(cc)(1)(i) to
ensure consistency with the term used
in § 1001.952(cc).
Response: We agree with the
commenters and have made the
technical correction.
Comment: Commenters noted that we
use the term ‘‘health benefits plan’’ in
the proposed definition of ‘‘pharmacy
benefit manager’’ but use the term
‘‘health plan’’ throughout the rest of the
Proposed Rule. The commenters
requested that we avoid introducing
inconsistency and use the term ‘‘health
plan’’ in this definition.
Response: We agree with the
commenters and have made the
technical correction.
IV. Provisions of the Final Regulation
This final rule incorporates, in large
part, the amendments to the discount
safe harbor and the new safe harbors we
proposed in the Proposed Rule, but with
some changes to the regulatory text.
A. Revision to the Discount Safe Harbor
We are finalizing, with certain
revisions, our amendments to the
discount safe harbor (42 CFR
1001.952(h)). In the Proposed Rule, we
proposed to exclude from safe harbor
protection a reduction in price or other
remuneration from a manufacturer in
connection with the sale or purchase of
a prescription pharmaceutical product
to a plan sponsor under Medicare Part
D or to a Medicaid MCO. In response to
comments, we are not finalizing our
proposal to exclude from protection
those reductions in price from
pharmaceutical manufacturers to
Medicaid MCOs.
B. New Safe Harbors
We are finalizing, with certain
revisions, a new safe harbor in
§ 1001.952(cc) to protect point-of-sale
reductions in price by a manufacturer
for a prescription pharmaceutical
product that is payable, in whole or in
part, by a plan sponsor under Medicare
Part D or a Medicaid Managed Care
Organization. In addition, we are
PO 00000
Frm 00053
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
76717
finalizing, with minor revisions, a new
safe harbor that protects payment by a
pharmaceutical manufacturer to a PBM
for services the PBM provides to the
pharmaceutical manufacturer related to
the pharmacy benefit management
services that the PBM furnishes to one
or more health plans.
C. Technical Corrections
We are correcting a numbering error
in the new safe harbor in
§ 1001.952(dd). Specifically, we
inadvertently failed to include a (1)
before the opening language for
§ 1001.952(dd). In this final rule, we
have inserted the (1) and renumbered
the subsequent paragraphs accordingly
to correct this oversight.
V. Regulatory Impact Statement
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
direct agencies to assess all costs and
benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and
equity). A regulatory impact analysis
must be prepared for major rules with
economically significant effects of $100
million or more in any one year.
Executive Order 13771 (January 30,
2017) requires that the costs associated
with significant new regulations ‘‘to the
extent permitted by law, be offset by the
elimination of existing costs associated
with at least two prior regulations.’’ The
Department believes that this rule is a
significant regulatory action as defined
by Executive Order 12866 that imposes
costs, and therefore is considered a
regulatory action under Executive Order
13771. The Department estimates that
this rule generates $78.0 million in
annualized costs at a 7 percent discount
rate, discounted relative to 2016, over a
perpetual time horizon.
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
and the Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement and Fairness Act of 1996,
which amended the RFA, require
agencies to analyze options for
regulatory relief of small businesses. For
purposes of the RFA, small entities
include small businesses, non-profit
organizations, and government agencies.
Based on subsequent analysis, the
Secretary does not believe that this rule
will have significant impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
In addition, section 1102(b) of the Act
requires us to prepare a regulatory
impact analysis if a rule may have a
significant impact on the operations of
a substantial number of small rural
hospitals. This analysis must conform to
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
76718
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
section 603 of the RFA. For purposes of
section 1102(b) of the Act, we define a
small rural hospital as a hospital that is
located outside a Metropolitan
Statistical Area for Medicare payment
regulations and has fewer than 100
beds. The Secretary has determined that
this rule would not have a significant
impact on the operations of a substantial
number of small rural hospitals.
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 also
requires that agencies assess anticipated
costs and benefits before issuing any
rule whose mandates require spending
in any one year of $100 million in 1995
dollars, updated annually for inflation.
In 2020, that threshold is approximately
$156 million. The rule may have effects
on states through its effects on the
MDRP, under which rebates are shared
between the Federal Government and
the states based on the Federal Medical
Assistance Percentage (FMAP) for each
state.
The rule does not alter obligations
under the statutory provisions for
Medicaid prescription drug rebates
under Section 1927 of the Act that are
calculated as percentages of AMP plus
the difference between the rate of
increase in AMP and the increase in the
consumer price index for all urban
consumers (CPI–U). It also does not alter
Section 1927’s provisions for Medicaid
rebates based on the Best Price available
to other payers for innovator drugs or
for supplemental rebates negotiated
between states and manufacturers, nor
does the rule alter the regulations and
guidance to implement Section 1927
provisions.
Although it is difficult to anticipate
the final rule’s potential effects on AMP,
if the rule reduces AMP, it will also
reduce Medicaid prescription drug
rebates calculated as percentages of
AMP plus the difference between the
rate of increase in AMP and the increase
in the CPI–U. The Milliman analysis
includes an extended example
demonstrating that the loss of revenue
from these rebates can exceed the
savings from lower list prices.60
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
60 Milliman, Inc., Impact of Potential Changes to
the Treatment of Manufacturer Rebates (Jan. 31,
2019). This citation is corrected from the Proposed
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
The VA, Department of Defense, Coast
Guard, and the Public Health Service
(including the Indian Health Service)
are eligible to purchase drugs under the
FCP Program. The FCP is calculated as
a percentage of non-FAMP. Eligible
programs can purchase drugs using the
lesser of the FSS Price and FCP.
Although it is difficult to determine the
effects of the final rule on FSS users or
entities entitled to FCPs, if the overall
effect of lowering list pricing is
achieved and that results in lower prices
to commercial customers (and
wholesalers) or pricing components of
non-FAMP, it is possible the VA may
realize some additional savings.
Executive Order 13132 establishes
certain requirements that an agency
must meet when it promulgates a rule
(and subsequent final rule) that imposes
substantial direct requirement costs on
State and local governments, preempts
State law, or otherwise has federalism
implications. Since this regulation does
not impose any direct costs on State or
local governments, preempt State law,
or otherwise have federalism
implications, the requirements of
Executive Order 13132 are not
applicable.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that the Proposed Rule did not comply
with the requirements under E.O. 13771
to offset costs of significant rules by
eliminating costs from at least two prior
final rules and suggested the E.O. 13771
cost estimate was calculated incorrectly.
Response: We appreciate the
comments but disagree. The Proposed
Rule complied with the requirements
under E.O. 13771, as described in more
detail in OMB guidance.61
A. Need for Regulation
As described above, manufacturers
paying rebates to PBMs may be a factor
in list prices rising faster than inflation.
This phenomenon may also be causing
PBMs to favor higher-cost drugs with
Rule and reflects the document that was posted as
supplementary material in the docket for this rule
at regulations.gov in February 2019.
61 For general guidance, see https://
www.whitehouse.gov/sites/whitehouse.gov/files/
omb/memoranda/2017/M-17-21-OMB.pdf. For
guidance on accounting methods, see https://
www.reginfo.gov/public/pdf/eo13771/EO13771_
accounting_methods.pdf.
PO 00000
Frm 00054
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
higher rebates over drugs with lower
costs and discouraging the adoption of
lower-cost brand drugs and biosimilars.
As a result, rebates may increase costs
for consumers, because their out-ofpocket costs during the deductible,
coinsurance, and coverage gap phases of
their benefits are based on the retail
price derived from pharmacy
acquisition costs with negotiated
additional markups and dispensing fees.
Rebates may also increase costs for the
government, which pays a portion of the
premium, cost-sharing, and reinsurance
payments associated with the use of
highly rebated drugs instead of lesscostly alternatives.
Prescription drug spending can be
measured based on WAC price (also
referred to as list price or invoice price)
and the so-called ‘‘net price’’ (which
accounts for all price concessions).62
According to the IQVIA Institute for
Human Data Science (a private research
organization affiliated with the human
data science and consulting firm IQVIA
that uses proprietary data from IQVIA),
the difference between total U.S. invoice
spending (the amount paid by
distributors) and net spending (which
accounts for all price concessions)
across all distribution channels has
increased from approximately $38
billion in 2009 to $135 billion in 2018
for retail drugs.63
Department analysis shows that
within Medicare there has been a
similar trend of growing differences
between list and net prices.
Manufacturer rebates grew from about
10 percent of gross prescription drug
costs in 2008 to about 20 percent in
2016 and are projected to reach 28
percent in 2027 under current policy
(Figure 1). Reinsurance spending and
gross drug costs, after rising in tandem
with premiums in the early years of the
Part D benefit, are now growing much
faster than premiums.
62 ‘‘Net price’’ is industry jargon. Each PBM or
plan sponsor may treat payments and price
concessions differently. Thus the ‘‘net price’’ of a
drug is more difficult to define than the Wholesale
Acquisition Cost set by the manufacturer.
63 IQVIA Institute for Human Data Science,
Medicine Use and Spending in the U.S.: A Review
of 2018 and Outlook to 2023, May 2019, p. 20.
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
B. Background on Costs, Benefits, and
Transfers
This rule eliminates safe harbor
protection for rebates received by plan
sponsors, or PBMs under contract with
them, from manufacturers in connection
with Medicare Part D prescription
pharmaceutical products and offers new
safe harbor protection for certain price
reductions offered at the point of sale.
As a result, manufacturers will have an
incentive to lower list prices, PBMs will
have greater incentive to negotiate larger
discounts from manufacturers, and
beneficiaries will benefit from more
transparency enabling them to better
choose a plan that meets their needs.
The goal of this policy is to lower outof-pocket costs for consumers, reduce
government drug spending in Federal
health care programs, and create
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
transparency that increases choice,
competition, and program integrity.
The full magnitude of these savings is
difficult to quantify, and the Office of
Management and Budget has specific
definitions of costs, benefits, and
transfers. As such, a brief summary of
potential effects of this rule is provided
here. More information about these
effects may be found in the respective
costs, benefits, and transfers sections.
Notably, the Department intends for
this rule to result in manufacturers
lowering their list prices and replacing
rebates with point-of-sale reductions in
price. One way to quantify this impact
is to simply replace all manufacturer
rebates paid to PBMs with point-of-sale
reductions in price to consumers and
estimate the effect of this transfer on
stakeholders. However, this approach
does not consider the range of strategic
behavioral changes stakeholders may
make in response to this rule, including
the extent to which manufacturers lower
list prices or retain a portion of current
rebate spending, PBMs change benefit
designs or obtain additional price
concessions, and the impact on
consumer utilization of lower-cost
drugs. The section below describes the
current system and the potential system
that could result from finalizing this
rule, based on current Medicare Part D
spending and a range of potential
behavioral changes, including the
manufacturer pricing changes and PBM
negotiation practices described above.
In some places, the analysis in this
section is premised on the proposed
effective date of January 1, 2020. We
recognize that impacts will not occur in
2020, but did not feel that updated
analyses would significantly change the
discussion of the range of potential
impacts or resolve uncertainty around
estimates from the proposed rule stage.
PO 00000
Frm 00055
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Impacts will occur at a later point in
time, relative to the proposed rule, due
to the delayed effective date. As at the
proposed rule stage, the precise timing
of impacts depends on external factors,
such as when regulated entities
implement adjustments to their business
arrangements.
Today, prescription drug
manufacturers prospectively set the
WAC, or list price, of the drugs they sell
to wholesalers and other large
purchasers. Manufacturers also
retrospectively make payments to PBMs
or other customers who meet certain
volume-based or market-share criteria.
The difference between the list price of
a drug and the rebate amount is referred
to in industry parlance as the ‘‘net
price.’’ Since the passage of the antikickback statute and the establishment
of the various safe harbors, the list
prices of branded prescription drugs,
and the rebates paid by manufacturers
to PBMs, have grown substantially. The
phenomenon of list prices rising faster
than ‘‘net prices’’ is referred to as the
‘‘gross to net bubble.’’
Research suggests that the approval of
a new drug can lead to higher list prices
for existing drugs in the therapeutic
class.64 PBMs may favor drugs with
higher rebates over drugs with lower
costs, or otherwise discourage the
adoption of lower-cost brand or generic
drugs and biosimilars. As a result,
rebates may increase costs for
64 Hartung DM, et al. The cost of multiple
sclerosis drugs in the US and the pharmaceutical
industry: Too big to fail? Neurology 2015;
84(21):2185–92; Alliance of Community Health
Plans, The Spike in Drug Costs: Rheumatoid
Arthritis, available at https://www.achp.org/wpcontent/uploads/Rheumatoid-Arthritis_Final.pdf;
Alliance of Community Health Plans, The Spike in
Drug Costs: Diabetes, available at https://
www.achp.org/wp-content/uploads/Diabetes_
FINAL_Revised-12.7.15.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
ER30NO20.000
Comment: One commenter suggested
that the Proposed Rule does not
adequately justify the need for
regulation, does not adequately describe
and assess the impacts of alternatives,
and does not carefully weigh effects on
stakeholders.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s feedback and additional
information but disagree with the
conclusion. One of the purposes of the
Proposed Rule was to get feedback and
information from the public that we
could not otherwise access. We have
updated the regulatory impact analysis
and the rule based on the comments,
and the regulatory impact analysis
represents our best thinking in these
areas with consideration of these
comments. We note that while we only
had qualitative evidence on benefits in
the Proposed Rule, the Department now
quantifies some of these benefits, and
these benefits exceed the rule’s cost
estimates.
76719
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
76720
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
consumers (who experience out-ofpocket costs more closely related to the
list price than the rebated amount
during the deductible, coinsurance, and
coverage gap phases of their benefits)
and the government (which pays a
portion of the premium, cost-sharing,
and reinsurance payments associated
with the use of higher-rebated drugs
instead of less-costly alternatives). This
rule seeks to correct the incentives that
have created the widening gaps between
gross and net prescription drug costs
and between gross prescription drug
costs and Part D premiums.
This rule removes safe harbor
protection for rebates from a
manufacturer of prescription
pharmaceutical products to plan
sponsors under Part D (either directly or
indirectly through PBMs under contract
with them), and creates two new safe
harbors protecting certain reductions in
price at the point of sale by
manufacturers and protecting certain
flat fees paid by manufacturers to a PBM
for services that the PBM renders to the
manufacturer. To the extent that this
rule results in manufacturers reducing
the list price of drugs, it will impact all
cash flows throughout the system.
The intent of this rule is to remove
discount safe harbor protection for
rebates and other reductions in price
from manufacturers to plan sponsors
under Part D or PBMs under contract
with those sponsors and to provide a
new avenue for point-of-sale reductions
in price that will benefit beneficiaries at
the pharmacy counter. This change will
impact the price that many patients pay
for prescription drugs. As part of their
health insurance coverage, many
consumers pay some cost-sharing for the
use of health care services. For many
plans, consumers first pay a deductible.
This typically means that the consumer
pays the full cost of services until the
deductible is met. After the consumer
has met the deductible, cost sharing
often takes the form of coinsurance, in
which consumers pay a percentage of
the cost of the covered health care
service or product, or copayments, in
which consumers pay a fixed amount
for a covered health care service or
product. A recent IQVIA report found
that in 2017 more than 55 percent of
commercially-insured consumer
spending on branded medicines was
filled under coinsurance or before the
deductible is met.65 For most health
care services, consumer deductibles and
coinsurance are based on the prices that
65 IQVIA, Patient Affordability Part One: The
Implications of Changing Benefit Designs and High
Cost-Sharing (May 18, 2018), available at https://
www.iqvia.com/locations/united-states/patientaffordability-part-one.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
health insurers negotiate with their
network providers. However, for
prescription drugs, often the price the
plan ultimately pays is based on rebates
that are paid after the point of sale to the
consumer, whereas the consumers’
deductible and coinsurance payments
are based on the list price.
With a reduced price used to
adjudicate the benefit, patients with
coinsurance or deductible plans will
likely experience reductions in costsharing for rebated brand-name drugs at
the point of sale. Because of actuarial
equivalence requirements in the Part D
program, patients with fixed copayments may also see changes in their
cost-sharing at the point of sale outside
of the deductible, coverage gap, or
catastrophic phases of their benefits.
These effects will accrue to some
beneficiaries through lower out-ofpocket costs and to all beneficiaries
through more transparent pricing. If this
rule closes the gap between list and net
prices and leads to additional price
concessions, as the Department
anticipates, the benefit of lower
premiums and out-of-pocket costs
would accrue to all beneficiaries with
individual out-of-pocket savings varying
by beneficiary prescription drug
utilization. If this rule closes the gap
between list and net prices but leads to
fewer price concessions, all
beneficiaries could experience higher
premiums with only some experiencing
lower out-of-pocket costs. The potential
impact of these distributional changes is
described in the transfers section of this
regulatory impact analysis.
Consumers also select health
insurance plans based on their
understanding of relevant plan
characteristics, including premiums,
cost-sharing, formulary coverage, and
in-network providers. Research shows
that consumers often do not understand
their health insurance plans and would
better understand a simpler plan.66
Research specific to Medicare Part D
suggests beneficiaries place a greater
weight on premiums than out-of-pocket
costs, are most likely to choose the plan
with the lowest premiums.67 Oftentimes
they select the plan with the lowest
premiums when plans with higher
premiums and more comprehensive
coverage were actuarially favorable.68
66 Loewenstein G et al. Consumers
misunderstanding of health insurance. Journal of
Health Economics. 32 (2013) 850–62.
67 Abaluck and Gruber. Evolving Choice
Inconsistencies in Choice of Prescription Drug
Insurance. Am Econ Rev. 2016 Aug., 106(8): 2145–
84.
68 Heiss, Leive, McFadden and Winter. Plan
Selection in Medicare Part D: Evidence from
Administrative Data. J Health Econ. 2013 Dec.,
32(6): 1325–44.
PO 00000
Frm 00056
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
However, consumers in poorer health or
with higher drug costs are more likely
to anticipate their future drug spending
and choose a plan that places them at
less financial risk. Also, as stated
earlier, a beneficiary paying 20 percent
coinsurance on a drug with a $100 WAC
and 30 percent rebate effectively pays
28 percent of the plan’s cost after
accounting for payments made by the
manufacturer to the PBM. Thus, the
publication of premiums and costsharing amounts that more accurately
reflect the discounted price of a
prescription drug could help align
consumer understanding of health
insurance benefits with reality and help
consumers to choose the health
insurance plans that best meet their
needs. These effects are described in the
benefits section.
The Federal government pays a
significant portion of the premium for
every Medicare Part D beneficiary and
subsidizes the cost-sharing of
beneficiaries eligible for the Part D Low
Income Subsidy (LIS). If this rule
increases or decreases premiums,
Federal spending on premium subsidies
will also increase or decrease,
potentially outweighing estimated
Federal savings associated with this
rule. These potential effects are
described in the transfers section of this
regulatory impact analysis.
Stakeholders involved in the
manufacture, sale, distribution, and
dispensing of prescription drugs, as well
as those who provide prescription drug
coverage, will need to review this policy
and determine how it affects them. They
may also need to make changes to
existing business practices, update
systems, or implement new
documentation and recordkeeping
requirements. These effects are
described in the costs section of this
regulatory impact analysis.
After the close of the comment period,
CBO independently estimated the
impact of the Proposed Rule.69 The CBO
analysis was substantially similar to the
CMS Office of the Actuary (OACT)
analysis of the Proposed Rule. One
significant difference is that CBO
expects that rather than lowering list
prices, manufacturers would offer the
renegotiated discounts in the form of
point-of-sale chargebacks. In addition,
the CBO analysis includes transfer
effects related to the costs of
implementation of the rule. Despite
69 Congressional Budget Office. ‘‘Incorporating
the Effects of the Proposed Rule on Safe Harbors for
Pharmaceutical Rebates in CBO’s Budget
Projections—Supplemental Material for Updated
Budget Projections: 2019 to 2029,’’ May 2019,
https://www.cbo.gov/system/files/2019-05/55151SupplementalMaterial.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
these differences, the transfer effects of
the rule estimated by CBO are within
the range of estimates presented in the
Proposed Rule, and as a result, we do
not provide additional substantial
discussion of CBO’s estimates of these
transfers in the final rule.
The CBO analysis also includes
additional analysis not conducted for
the Proposed Rule. Part of this analysis
related to guidance on Part D bids for
the 2020 plan year and a CMS
demonstration that was contemplated,
but not finalized, in 2019. CBO analyzed
the impact of the rule on Medicare Part
A, B, and D utilization. On net, these
changes are expected to reduce
Medicare spending. According to the
CBO analysis, the rule will increase
prescription drug utilization, resulting
in increased Part D spending. This
increase in Part D spending is estimated
to be offset by savings in Medicare Parts
A and B. As previously described in
detail in this impact analysis, the range
of actuarial estimates for this rule range
from $100 billion in reduced federal
spending if more than 100 percent of
rebates are converted into list price
concessions and Part D plans exert
greater formulary control, to $196
billion in increased Federal spending, if
manufacturers reduce price concessions
in Part D. There is wide variation in the
analyses conducted that makes it
difficult to project with certainty the
impact of the policy change on federal
spending. The Secretary, in applying the
modeling assumptions and the range of
available estimates, coupled with the
fifteen-year history of the program
(including its competitive dynamic), has
projected that there will not be an
increase in federal spending, patient
out-of-pocket costs, or premiums for
Part D beneficiaries as required by the
Executive Order. The Department
further believes that the rule will make
beneficiary medications more affordable
and lead to lower cost sharing for
patients.
The Department has considered the
wide variation of potential transfer
impacts in the analyses conducted and
has decided to proceed with this
rulemaking based on its view that the
rule will have significant transparency
and prescription adherence benefits for
Medicare beneficiaries.
Comment: Multiple commenters
suggested that impact estimates indicate
that premiums for plans will increase,
but the estimates do not account for
how this will affect enrollment. One
commenter noted that a study shows
that a $100 increase in MA–PD
premiums leads to 34 percent increase
in plan switching.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
Response: We appreciate commenters’
feedback but would note that a change
of $100 in monthly premiums is several
orders of magnitude outside the range of
potential impacts discussed in this rule.
We would further note that since the
inception of the Medicare Part D
program, the base beneficiary premiums
have ranged from $27 to $35, but the
number of enrollees in Medicare Part D
have increased every year.70
Comment: One commenter noted that
the estimates rely on the standard plan
design (full deductible and 25 percent
coinsurance) on all non-low-income
beneficiaries in the initial coverage limit
and coverage gap, when in reality, the
majority of Part D plans use actuarial
equivalents of the standard benefit that
have smaller deductibles. This
commenter suggested that estimates of
beneficiary cost-savings are overstated
because they assume 100 percent
deductibles for all patients.
Response: We disagree with the
commenter. Use of the standard benefit
design does not inherently build any
bias into the estimates. All basic plans
must provide coverage that is actuarially
equivalent to the standard benefit so the
net effects on the modeling are at most
modest.
Comment: One commenter stated that
the estimates suggest that the transition
to a chargeback system will result in
$170.9 billion in extra Federal spending
that will provide a net benefit to
manufacturers.
Response: We agree with the
commenter that several of the estimates
included in the proposed rule estimated
transfers from the Federal government
to manufacturers. OACT estimated that
there will be $196.1 billion in additional
Federal spending that will partly reduce
individuals’ out-of-pocket spending and
will partly result in additional
manufacturer revenue. However, other
actuarial estimates based on strategic
industry responses to this final rule
range from $99 billion in reduced
federal spending (Part D plan sponsors
increased formulary controls and
obtained additional price concessions)
to $140 billion in increased Federal
spending (if manufacturers reduced
price concessions in Part D to offset list
price decreases in other markets).
Comment: One commenter noted that
the estimates do not account for
transfers related to the administrative
burden necessary for a transition to a
wholesaler chargeback system.
70 CMS,
2020 Annual Report, Boards of Trustees
Fed. Hospital Ins. & Fed. Supp. Medical Ins. Trust
Funds, available at https://www.cms.gov/files/
document/2020-medicare-trustees-report.pdf.
PO 00000
Frm 00057
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
76721
Response: We agree in part with the
commenter that a wholesaler-led
chargeback system is a possible outcome
of this rule and note that CBO’s estimate
does account for changes in premiums
related to administrative burden, and
CBO’s estimates are well within the
range of estimates provided in the
Proposed Rule. OACT did not make any
explicit assumptions with respect to
potential additional administrative
expenses in administering the
wholesaler chargeback system.
C. Affected Entities
Comment: One commenter suggested
that the Department underestimated the
number of entities (specifically, PBMs
and pharmaceutical wholesalers)
affected by the rule, underestimated the
categories of entities affected by various
categories of impacts, and offered
suggestions for improving discussion of
the impact on pharmacies.
Response: We agree that wholesalers
are affected by this rule but lack
concrete data to estimate the number of
affected wholesalers. The commenter
suggested ten wholesalers are affected.
To ensure we do not undercount, we
will estimate that approximately twenty
wholesalers are affected by the rule. The
commenter suggests 66 PBMs, rather
than the 60 estimated in the Proposed
Rule, are affected by the rule. We are
unable to verify the source underlying
this information and retain the estimate
that approximately 60 PBMs are affected
by the rule. The commenter suggested
small pharmacies largely use 20
pharmacy services administration
organizations (PSAOs) to provide
administrative services, such as
negotiation, on their behalf. As a result,
we have adjusted estimates to assume
that costs affecting pharmacies occur at
each pharmacy and drug store firm and
each of 40 PSAOs to ensure we do not
undercount. We have also revised the
analysis to reflect that a broader pool of
entities may be affected by impacts in
all categories discussed below.
This rule will affect the operations of
entities that are involved in the
distribution and reimbursement of
prescription drugs to Medicare Part D
prescription drug benefit enrollees.
According to the U.S. Census 71 and
other sources,72 there were 67,753
community pharmacies (including
19,500 pharmacy and drug store firms
and 21,909 small business community
pharmacies), 1,775 pharmaceutical and
medicine manufacturing firms, and 880
71 U.S. Census Bureau, Statistics of U.S.
Businesses, available at https://www.census.gov/
programs-surveys/susb.html.
72 Qato, Zenk, Wilder, et al. PLoS One. 2017 Aug
16;12(8).
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
76722
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
direct health and medical insurance
carrier firms operating in the U.S. in
2015. In 2018, there were 44 PBMs
listed in the Pharmacy Benefit
Management Institute directory.73
Organizations are required to pay a fee
if they choose to register, and therefore
we estimate that participation in the
directory is incomplete and that the
total number of PBMs operating in the
U.S. is approximately 60. As described
above, we estimate that the rule affects
approximately 20 pharmaceutical
wholesalers. Finally, a 2013 GAO
study 74 identifies 22 PSAOs, and notes
there may be more in operation. We
adjust this upward and estimate the rule
affects 40 PSAOs. As noted previously,
we assume that costs affecting
pharmacies are incurred at each
pharmacy and drug store firm and each
PSAO.
We note that this rule no longer
amends the discount safe harbor to
exclude rebates offered to Medicaid
MCOs.
Finally, the rule will affect Medicare
prescription drug enrollees. CMS
reports there were 44,491,003 enrollees
with Part D prescription drug coverage
in December 2018.75 CMS reports there
were 80,184,501 beneficiaries in
Medicaid in 2016, 65,005,748 of which
were enrolled in any type of managed
care plan. However, these beneficiaries
are less likely to be significantly
affected, given Medicaid’s low
beneficiary cost-sharing requirements
and the decision not to finalize
inclusion of Medicaid MCOs in the
amendment to the discount safe harbor.
The Department estimates the hourly
wages of individuals affected by this
rule using the May 2016 National
Occupational Employment and Wage
Estimates provided by the U.S. Bureau
of Labor Statistics.76 We note that,
throughout, estimates are presented in
2016 dollars. We use the wages of
Medical and Health Services Managers
as a proxy for management staff, the
wages of Lawyers as a proxy for legal
staff, and the wages of Network and
Computer Systems Administrators as a
proxy for information technology (IT)
staff throughout this analysis. To value
the time of Medicare prescription drug
benefit enrollees, we take the average
wage across all occupations in the U.S.
73 https://www.pbmi.com/PBMI/Directory/
Pharmacy_Benefit_Manager_Directory.aspx, last
accessed July 13, 2018.
74 https://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-13-176.
75 https://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Dataand-Systems/Statistics-Trends-and-Reports/
Dashboard/Medicare-Enrollment/
Enrollment%20Dashboard.html.
76 https://www.bls.gov/oes/2016/may/oes_
nat.htm.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
We assume that the total dollar value of
labor, which includes wages, benefits,
and overhead, is equal to 200 percent of
the wage rate. Estimated hourly rates for
all relevant categories are included
below.
TABLE 1—HOURLY WAGES 77
Medical and Health Services Managers .............................................
Lawyers ............................................
Network and Computer Systems Administrators ....................................
Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit
Enrollees .......................................
$52.58
67.25
40.63
23.86
D. Costs
Comment: We received a number of
comments on our assumptions
associated with the costs of the
Proposed Rule. Various commenters
suggested the Department
underestimated administrative burden
generated by the Proposed Rule, and
two commenters provided quantitative
feedback on the burden estimates. In
addition, a report discussing the
Proposed Rule provides additional
quantitative feedback on the cost
estimates.78 Another commenter
suggested information technology
improvements would require thousands
of hours of effort.
Response: The Department has
substantially revised estimates of
administrative burden in response to
public comments. These changes take a
number of pieces of information into
consideration. First, a single commenter
provided the most substantial
quantitative feedback on the cost
estimates in the Proposed Rule, with
alternative estimates greatly exceeding
those in the Proposed Rule. The
commenter also sponsored the report
discussed above; the comment and the
report both suggest much more
moderate changes to the cost analysis.
This suggests a range of reasonable
estimates. Second, this commenter
represents a subset of entities affected
by the rule. Other categories of entities
expressed confidence that the rule can
be implemented quickly, suggesting the
rule is less burdensome for some
entities than described in the most
comprehensive quantitative comments,
and reflecting the fact that the
implementation may be more resource
intensive for some entities than others.
In addition to adjusting estimates in
response to this feedback, we have
provided ranges of impacts to reflect
77 https://www.bls.gov/oes/2016/may/oes_
nat.htm.
78 See https://getmga.com/wp-content/uploads/
2019/04/MGA-Report-on-Proposed-RebateRestriction-3.pdf.
PO 00000
Frm 00058
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
uncertainty regarding the rule’s effects
on administrative burden. Finally, we
received feedback on the timing of
impacts for Medicare enrollees who
learn of and respond to the changes
generated by this rule. However, the
commenter did not provide any
rationale to support this feedback, and
as a result these estimates were not
changed. More detail on specific
changes can be found in the sections on
affected entities above and the cost
estimates below.
In order to comply with the regulatory
changes in this rule, affected businesses
would first need to review the rule. The
Department estimates that this would
require an average of 5 to 15 hours, with
a primary estimate of 10 hours, for
affected businesses to review, divided
evenly between managers and lawyers,
in the first year following publication of
the final rule. As a result, using wage
information provided in Table 1, this
implies costs of $13.4 to $40.2 million,
with a primary estimate of $26.8
million, in the first year following
publication of a final rule after adjusting
for overhead and benefits.
After reviewing the rule, businesses
would need to review their policies in
the context of these new requirements
and determine how to respond. For
some affected businesses, this may
mean substantially changing their
pricing models, and engaging in lengthy
negotiations with other businesses. For
others, much more modest changes are
likely needed. The Department
estimates that this would result in
affected businesses spending an average
of 50 to 150 hours, with a primary
estimate of 100 hours, reviewing their
policies and determining how to
respond, divided evenly between
lawyers and managers, in the first year
following publication of the final rule.
In years two through five, the
Department estimates this would result
in affected businesses spending an
average of 5–15 hours, with a primary
estimate of 10 hours, implementing
policy changes, with 20 percent of time
spent by lawyers and 80 percent of time
spent by managers. As a result, using
wage information provided in Table 1,
the Department estimates costs of
$133.9 to $401.7 million, with a primary
estimate of $267.8 million, in the first
year and $12.4 to $37.2 million, with a
primary estimate of $24.8 million, in
years two through five following
publication of the final rule after
adjusting for overhead and benefits.
This rule imposes documentation and
reporting requirements on PBMs for
parties choosing to use the PBM services
fee safe harbor. In particular, PBMs and
pharmaceutical manufacturers must
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
have a written agreement signed by the
parties that covers all of the services the
PBM provides to the manufacturer in
connection with the PBM’s
arrangements with health plans for the
term of the agreement and specifies each
of the services to be provided by the
PBM and the compensation associated
with such services. In addition, PBMs
must disclose to the health plan and to
the Secretary (upon request) their
services rendered to each
pharmaceutical manufacturer related to
the PBM’s arrangements to furnish
pharmacy benefit management services
to the health plan. In addition, PBMs
also must disclose to the Secretary upon
request the fees paid for such services.
We believe that these written
agreements already exist as a matter of
standard business practice, as they need
to be in place in order to enforce
contractual arrangements between these
entities. As a result, we believe that the
documentation requirement merely
codifies standard practice, and therefore
imposes no marginal costs on affected
entities. We believe that the disclosure
requirements will not require PBMs to
generate new information or retain
additional records related to their
interactions with pharmaceutical
manufacturers or health plans.
However, we believe that the disclosure
requirements will result in additional
disclosure to health plans and
potentially the Secretary. We estimate
that each PBM will provide this
information an additional 25 to 75 times
per year, with a primary estimate of 50
times each year. We estimate that these
disclosures will require an average of 4
hours, with 50 percent of time spent by
managers, 25 percent of time spent by
attorneys, and 25 percent of time spent
by IT staff. As a result, using wage
information provided in Table 1, the
Department estimates costs of $0.7 to
$2.1 million, with a primary estimate of
$1.4 million, in each year following
publication of the final rule after
adjusting for overhead and benefits.
We expect that this rule will also lead
businesses affected by the rule to update
their IT systems for processing claims
and payments. For these entities, the
Department estimates that this will
require an average of 40 to 120 hours,
with a primary estimate of 80 hours, in
the first year following publication of
the final rule to make these changes. In
years two through five, the Department
estimates this this will require an
average of 10 to 30 hours, with an
average of 20 hours, in each of these
years. We note that these estimates are
in line with a comment suggesting
thousands of hours are required for
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
covered entities to make IT changes in
response to this rule. Using wage
information provided in Table 1, we
estimate this will generate costs of $66.7
to $200.1 million, with a primary
estimate of $133.4 million, in the first
year following publication of the final
rule, and $16.7 to $50.0 million, with a
primary estimate of $33.3 million, per
year in years two through five following
publication of the final rule after
adjusting for overhead and benefits.
Medicare prescription drug benefit
enrollees will also spend time
responding to the rule. In particular, the
Department believes that this rule will
result in changes to the characteristics
of Medicare prescription drug plans.
Once enrollees become aware that
changes have been made, we believe
they will review available plans to
determine the plan which best suits
their needs. The Department expects
that Medicare enrollees will become
aware of these changes gradually over
time. In particular, the Department
expects that 20 percent of enrollees will
become aware of these changes in each
of the five years following publication of
the final rule, and that responding to
these changes will require an average of
thirty minutes per enrollee. As a result,
using wage information provided in
Table 1, we estimate costs of $209
million in each of the first five years
following publication of a final rule
after adjusting for overhead and
benefits.
This rule may lead to shifts in the
composition of affected industries by
affecting the extent to which entities
vertically integrate, and the rate at
which entities of various sizes
(particularly small entities) enter and
exit the market. Vertical integration is a
strategy where a firm acquires business
operations in a different sector of the
supply chain and reimbursement
system. Entities are affected by this rule
to the extent that their business models
depend on using rebates, and rebates are
streamlined regardless of where they are
paid if a company is vertically
integrated. As a result, this rule may
affect incentives for vertical integration
for affected entities. For example, PBMs,
plan sponsors, and pharmacies may
want to vertically integrate as a result of
this rule. At the same time, the potential
loss of retained rebate revenue by PBMs
may cause existing vertically integrated
businesses to consider new
organizational structures. These
changes, in turn, may generate costs and
benefits.
E. Benefits
Comment: A commenter suggested
that the Proposed Rule does not clearly
PO 00000
Frm 00059
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
76723
articulate the benefits of replacing
rebates with up front price reductions,
noting that it only qualitatively
describes two possible benefits:
Transparency, which the commenter
did not find compelling, and adherence
and outcomes, which the commenter
suggested is not adequately explored.
Multiple commenters suggested that the
estimates do not account for Part D plan
behavioral changes and do not account
for offsetting savings in Medicare Parts
A and B.
Response: We have updated the
analysis to reflect evidence on the rule’s
effects on behavioral changes and note
that these estimates suggest the rule
generates substantial benefits to the
public.
It is difficult to accurately quantify
the benefits of this rule due to the
complexity and uncertainty of
stakeholder response. As such, the
Department relied on qualitatively
describing two potential benefits in the
Proposed Rule.
First the Department anticipates the
enhanced transparency of premiums,
out-of-pocket costs, and improved
formulary designs will help
beneficiaries make more actuarially
favorable decisions, because the new
point-of-sale price reductions negotiated
by PBMs would be reflected in the price
paid by beneficiaries at the point of sale
for those enrolled in health plans
electing to use the new safe harbor
protecting certain point-of-sale
reductions in price on prescription
pharmaceutical products.
Second, with reduced out-of-pocket
payments, patient adherence and
persistence with prescription drug
regimens may improve. Patients
abandoned 21 percent of all
prescriptions for branded drugs
processed by pharmacies in the United
States in the fourth quarter of 2017,79
and copayment or coinsurance amounts
can be a predictor of abandonment.80
While there may be a variety of reasons
patients may not pick up a medication,
one factor that may impact patient
decision-making is the out-of-pocket
cost of a prescription. One study
suggested that for chronic myeloid
leukemia, patients using tyrosine kinase
inhibitors were 42 percent more likely
to be non-adherent (which may include
delaying the purchase of, never
purchasing, or switching their
prescription to a less optimal choice) if
they were in the higher copayment
79 IQVIA Institute for Human Data Science,
Medicine Use and Spending in the U.S.: A Review
of 2017 and Outlook to 2022, April 2018, p. 31.
80 William H. Shrank, et al., The Epidemiology of
Prescriptions Abandoned at the Pharmacy, 153
Annals Internal Med. 633 (2010).
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
76724
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
group compared to the lower copayment
group.81 The intent of this rule is to
lower the out-of-pocket costs for
prescription drugs for some Medicare
prescription drug enrollees. The pricing
decisions of drug companies, and
negotiations between manufacturers and
PBMs, will determine how plan
sponsors make formulary decisions that
determine whether beneficiaries pay
more or less in out-of-pocket costs.
Furthermore, lower out-of-pocket
costs may lead to fewer enrollees
abandoning prescription drugs. This
could result in beneficiaries filling more
prescriptions, thus increasing spending,
as prescriptions that were once
unaffordable are now attainable. It could
also lead to lower total costs-of-care, if
increased adherence led to improved
health outcomes. The Department is
unable to estimate the extent to which
this rule would reduce abandonment
across all drug markets or the resulting
health benefits of higher adherence of
prescription drugs.82
In addition, the reduction in
abandonment could benefit pharmacies
by reducing costs related to storage and
tracking of abandoned prescriptions.
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
F. Transfers
The provisions of this rule are
specifically aimed at incentives related
to pharmaceutical list prices as set by
manufacturers, increases in these prices
by manufacturers, rebates paid by
manufacturers to PBMs acting on behalf
of Part D plan sponsors, and the
misalignment of incentives caused by
concurrently increasing list prices and
rebates. A significant, though difficult to
quantify, potential transfer resulting
from this rule would be the reduction of
list prices and/or a reduction in the
annualized increases thereof.
Retrospective rebate-based contractual
arrangements between manufacturers
81 Stacie B. Dusetzina, et al. ‘‘Cost Sharing and
Adherence to Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors for
Patients with Chronic Myeloid Leukemia.’’ 32:4
Journal of Clinical Oncology. Feb. 2014.
82 Given data available at this time, it is not
possible to calculate any particular impact from the
COVID–19 public health emergency on these
effects. However we note that the Medicare Current
Beneficiary Survey (MCBS) COVID–19 Summer
2020 Supplement and preliminary 2019 MCBS
data’’, available at https://www.cms.gov/files/
document/medicare-current-beneficiary-surveycovid-19-data-snapshot.pdf, indicates that only 8%
of Medicare beneficiaries surveyed between June
10, 2020 and July 15, 2020 had forgone prescription
drugs or medications during the COVID–19 public
health emergency. We would expect such a figure
to decrease by the time this rule is implemented in
2022. These points, considered alongside the
expected increase in prescriptions from plans’
relaxation of ‘refill too soon’ edits, suggest there is
no particular reason to believe the effects of this
rule will be materially different as a result of the
COVID–19 public health emergency.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
and PBMs and health insurers may be
renegotiated to match these regulations’
new conditions. Manufacturers may
reset their pricing strategies to better
match net pricing trends and strategies.
Changes in list prices could flow
throughout the entire pharmaceutical
supply chain and reimbursement
system.
Medicare Part D
If manufacturers reduced their current
list prices to an amount equal or similar
to their current net prices, there would
be less impact on premiums and a
decline in net prices could result in a
decrease in premiums. If manufacturers
did not reduce their list prices,
beneficiary and Federal spending on
premiums might increase and
beneficiary cost-sharing might not
decrease.
If Part D plans changed their benefit
structures (e.g., increased formulary
controls, greater use of generic drugs),
and sought to prevent or ameliorate
premium increases, they may be able to
obtain additional price concessions
from manufacturers. If list price
reductions and increased price
concessions led to lower net prices and
gross drug costs in Part D plans,
beneficiary and Federal spending on
premiums and cost-sharing could
decrease. If Part D plans were unable to
achieve additional price concessions,
and net prices increased, beneficiary
and Federal spending on premiums and
cost-sharing could increase.
Under the Part D program, plan
sponsors pay network pharmacies a
negotiated rate for a covered Part D drug
that is intended to cover a pharmacy’s
acquisition cost (termed the negotiated
price at section 1860D–2(d) of the Act),
plus a dispensing fee. Currently,
pharmacies are not a part of the
financial flow related to rebates that are
paid after the point of sale, nor do
beneficiaries receive any out-of-pocket
benefit from these rebates. This means
that beneficiaries, whose cost-sharing
for Part D covered drugs is calculated as
coinsurance, or a percentage of the price
of the drug dispensed, are charged a
percentage of the price paid to
pharmacies (or the full price prior to
meeting their deductible), which almost
always does not include the rebates
plans receive through PBMs from
manufacturers. Removing the existing
safe harbor protection for
retrospectively paid rebates that are not
reflected in the prices paid at the point
of sale may reduce beneficiary out-ofpocket spending for Part D covered
drugs. If list prices did not decrease or
point-of-sale chargebacks were not
reflected in the prices paid at the point
PO 00000
Frm 00060
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
of sale, beneficiaries could see an
increase in premiums without the
benefit of decreased cost-sharing.
Below, this section discusses the
potential specific effects within Part D
on premiums, benefit design thresholds,
and Federal outlays for the portions of
the benefit subsidized by the Medicare
Part D program.
The Department’s Medicare Part D
analysis is based on OACT’s work
commissioned specifically for this
rulemaking 83 and two commissioned
actuarial analyses independent of
OACT.84 OACT ‘‘directs the actuarial
program for CMS and directs the
development of and methodologies for
macroeconomic analysis of health care
financing issues.’’ The two external
actuarial firms were chosen based on
their commercial experience assisting
plan sponsors with their plan bids. We
have not asked these organizations to
revise the estimates they prepared
before release of the Proposed Rule.
There are significant differences in
the assumptions the respective actuaries
used to estimate stakeholder behavior.
OACT predicts that while some current
rebates will be retained by
manufacturers, future price increases
will be smaller and fewer. Per OACT’s
assumption, rather than reducing list
prices and offering discounts to achieve
current net prices, the expected
behavior is to reduce future price
increases so that post-rule net prices
converge over time to meet the trend on
pre-rule net price forecasts. As such,
OACT predicts that the Federal
government would increase spending on
premium subsidies for Medicare
beneficiaries, and that consumers and
private businesses would experience
decreased overall spending.
Because drug manufacturers pay a
portion of the drug costs incurred by
beneficiaries in the Part D coverage gap,
their expenses would be reduced in
relation to the reduction of beneficiary
spending in the coverage gap. The
Milliman non-behavioral analysis
estimates gross drug costs would
83 CMS Office of the Actuary, Proposed Safe
Harbor Regulation (Aug. 30, 2018). The OACT
analysis is posted as supplementary material in the
docket for this rule at regulations.gov.
84 Wakely Consulting Group, Estimates of the
Impact on Beneficiaries, CMS, and Drug
Manufacturers in CY2020 of Eliminating Rebates for
Reduced List Prices at Point-of-Sale for the Part D
Program (Aug. 30, 2018); Milliman, Inc., ‘‘Impact of
Potential Changes to the Treatment of Manufacturer
Rebates’’ (Jan. 31, 2019). The Wakely and Milliman
analyses were posted as supplementary material in
the docket for this rule at regulations.gov. Certain
discussions of the Milliman analysis, including
some citations and figures, in the Proposed Rule
contained unintentional errors that we have
corrected throughout this section of the final rule.
These corrections do not materially change the RIA.
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
decrease by $679.7 billion and coverage
gap discount payments would decrease
by $20.6 billion over the same period.85
Federal spending would increase by
$34.8 billion, and beneficiary spending
would decrease by $14.5 billion.86
In addition to the actuarial analysis
described above, the economic analysis
of this rule is also informed by
stakeholder comments and meetings in
response to the drug pricing blueprint.87
All three of these analyses
contemplate and quantify the behavioral
changes by plans in the form of changes
to benefit offerings, or by manufacturers
in the form of changes to pricing
processes but differed in their
assumptions. All three assessed
pharmaceutical manufacturers’ unique
opportunity to adjust their overall
pricing and rebate strategy but differed
in the assumed amount of rebates that
would be retained by manufacturers, if
any, and the effect on list and net prices.
The OACT analysis assumed
manufacturers would retain 15 percent
of the existing Medicare Part D rebates,
that 75 percent of the remaining rebates
would be applied as discounts to
beneficiaries, and that manufacturers
would apply the remaining 25 percent
to lower list prices. OACT based this
assumption on the belief that consumer
discounts provide less return on
investment to drug manufacturers than
rebates and that resetting the rebate
system would allow manufacturers to
recapture forgone revenue streams such
as those that occurred from the changes
in the Coverage Gap Discount Program
included in the Bipartisan Budget Act of
2018. OACT’s assumption would lead to
higher net prices in Medicare Part D at
the beginning of time period analyzed,
while the reduced-price increase trend
would lead to post-rule net prices
eventually converging to pre-rule net
price forecasts. Each of the analyses
took varying approaches to the
treatment of discounts and acknowledge
uncertainty around this assumption.
The Milliman and Wakely analyses
assumed that all existing manufacturer
rebates would be passed along as either
list price reductions or discounted
prices at the point of sale.
Milliman provided six additional
scenarios based on a range of strategic
86 Milliman, Inc., Impact of Potential Changes to
the Treatment of Manufacturer Rebates (Jan. 31,
2019). See Appendix A1, Scenario 1A, page 1.
87 Comments are available for viewing at https://
www.regulations.gov/document?D=CMS-2018-00750001.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
behavior changes by stakeholders,
including increased formulary controls,
increased price concessions, reduced
price concessions in Part D to offset list
price decreases in other markets,
decreased brand unit cost trend, and
increased utilization and decreased
brand unit cost trend. These scenarios
are intended to bookend the baseline
analysis by showing a range of possible
scenarios, given the uncertainty
inherent in such a policy change. Tables
2 and 4 later in this section present the
main assumptions and findings of the
analyses we discuss.
Only one analysis contemplated, but
did not seek to quantify, the behavioral
change of beneficiaries choosing lowercost plans, switching from PDPs to MA–
PDs, or in the form of increased
persistence and adherence caused by
induced demand due to decreased outof-pocket costs.
We note that all the actuaries who
submitted analyses developed different
results based on differing, yet plausible,
assumptions. The sheer size of the
Medicare Part D program makes these
results sensitive to small differences in
assumptions, particularly over a tenyear period. As such, there are often
good reasons for small differences in
assumptions that are neither right nor
wrong but may be reasonable within a
plausible range of outcomes. The
different assumptions made include the
initial values used for the direct subsidy
and base beneficiary premium, the
pattern of future costs, the granularity
with which growth rates or future
effects are applied uniformly or based
on product type. The actuarial analyses
used to prepare this impact analysis are
posted as supplementary material in the
docket for this rule at regulations.gov.
Effect on Beneficiary Spending
This rule will likely impact
beneficiary spending on the Part D
program. As noted above, the
Department is presenting three actuarial
analyses (six total scenarios) conducted
under various behavioral assumptions.
The projected decrease in beneficiary
spending on premiums and cost-sharing
that would have occurred in 2020 was
$1.0 to $1.6 billion. The projected
decrease in beneficiary spending on
premiums and cost sharing that would
have occurred from 2020 to 2029 ranges
from a decrease of $59.5 billion to an
increase of $12.3 billion. Individuals
who qualify for the LIS pay low or no
premiums to enroll in the Part D benefit
PO 00000
Frm 00061
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
76725
and have their cost-sharing obligations
under each benefit phase reduced
significantly (called the Low Income
Cost Sharing Subsidy or LICS). We
expect a smaller effect among these
enrollees (about 30 percent of total Part
D enrollees) than among those not
receiving the LIS and LICS.
All three actuarial reports support the
conclusion that non-LIS Medicare
beneficiaries enrolled in, and actively
utilizing, plans with coinsurance-based
cost-sharing structures for covered
outpatient drugs for which their
respective plan has negotiated a rebate,
will likely see lower out-of-pocket costsharing at the pharmacy counter as a
result of this regulatory change.
OACT, Wakely and five of the six
Milliman scenarios considered by the
Department suggest total beneficiary
cost-sharing would decrease and that
the decrease in total beneficiary costsharing would offset any increase in
premiums across all beneficiaries,
regardless of assumptions regarding
whether or not manufacturers retained
rebates or applied a percentage of them
as list price reductions, or PBMs and
plan sponsors changed formularies or
obtained additional price concessions.
However, the analyses that estimated
higher premiums found that more
beneficiaries would pay more for
premiums than they would save in costsharing, suggesting that out-of-pocket
impacts are likely to vary by individual
and the greatest benefit of these
transfers accrues to sicker beneficiaries
(e.g., those with more drug spending
and/or those using high-cost drugs).
However, it is important to note that
the effect of this rule on individual
beneficiaries depends on whether they
use medications, what behavioral
responses manufacturers and plans
adopt in response to the rule, and
whether the manufacturers of the drugs
in their regimen are paying rebates.
Analyses that contemplated increased
price concessions or benefit design
changes predicted beneficiaries having
lower premiums and out of pocket costs
overall. Table 2 describes the net
beneficiary impact predicted by each
analysis and assumption. (Scenarios 5,
6, and 7 in the Milliman analysis are
available online rather than reproduced
here, since they are not referenced
further in our write-up.)
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
76726
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 2—BENEFICIARY IMPACTS, PER BENEFICIARY PER MONTH, ESTIMATED FOR CY 2020 TO CY 2029
OACT
Milliman, scenario 1
Milliman, scenario 2
Milliman, scenario 3
Milliman, scenario 4
Wakely
• 100 percent of current Part D rebates
are converted into
list price concessions (agnostic on
list price reductions versus up
front discounts).
• 100 percent of current rebates are
converted into list
price concessions.
• Part D plans exert
greater formulary
control.
• More than 100
percent of rebates
are converted into
list price concessions (same agnosticism on how
applied).
• Part D plans exert
greater formulary
control.
• 20 percent of current Part D rebates
are retained by
manufacturers
(same agnosticism
on how applied).
• 80 percent of current Part D rebates
are converted to
price concessions
(list price or discounts).
• 100 percent of current manufacturer
rebates are converted into reductions in drug costs
at the point of
sale.
• No beneficiary or
plan behavioral
changes are assumed.
Premium 88 ..................
Cost-sharing ...............
• 15 percent of current Part D rebates
retained by manufacturer.
• 75 percent of remaining amount
applied to persponsor/PBM negotiated discounts.
• 25 percent of remainder applied as
reduction to list
price.
• No beneficiary or
plan behavioral
changes are assumed.
+25% ........................
¥18% ......................
+$4.03, +13% ..........
¥$6.23, ¥12% .......
+$1.27, +4% ............
¥$9.85, ¥19% .......
+$0.61, +2% ............
¥$9.68, ¥19% .......
+$6.84, +21% ..........
¥$4.97, ¥10% .......
N/A.
N/A.
Total .....................
¥4% ........................
¥3% ........................
¥10% 89 ..................
¥11% ......................
+2% ..........................
N/A.
Modeled Assumptions
Premiums
As explained in the Proposed Rule, all
analyses that assumed no behavioral
changes that would reduce net prices
below current net prices would have
seen Part D premiums increase in 2020
and beyond. The estimated increase in
2020 Part D premiums ranged from
$3.20 per beneficiary per month to $5.64
per beneficiary per month (PBPM).
The Milliman analyses that
contemplated behavioral changes that
increased price concessions beyond
current levels and/or greater formulary
controls predicted a significant decrease
in premiums compared to the baseline
scenarios presented in Table 3 of the
Milliman analysis. (That is, premiums
would increase 2 percent to 4 percent
over the ten-year period, a de minimis
level of variation, rather than 6 percent
to 21 percent without such
assumptions.)
Out-of-Pocket Spending
Absent behavioral changes leading to
lower list and net prices, two groups of
beneficiaries would benefit most from
this rule: (1) Beneficiaries that are
prescribed and dispensed high cost
drugs and (2) beneficiaries with total
drug spending into the coverage gap.
The range of total decreased beneficiary
cost-sharing that would have occurred
in 2020 was estimated to be ¥$8.01
PBPM to ¥$4.85 PBPM.
However, reductions in cost-sharing
would only accrue to beneficiaries using
drugs for which manufacturers are
currently paying rebates. For example, a
beneficiary taking a brand-name drug in
a competitive class may see his or her
coinsurance-based cost-sharing for the
drug reduced significantly, if behavioral
changes in response to this policy result
in rebates largely being converted to
point-of-sale reductions in price. By
contrast, a beneficiary using high-cost
drugs in protected classes is less likely
to benefit from a reduced pharmacy
purchase price, because manufacturers
generally offer low or no rebates to
plans for these drugs, since drugs in
protected classes must be included on
Part D plan formularies.
The analysis by OACT estimated the
annual changes in benefit parameters as
a result of the proposed rule; this
analysis has not been updated to reflect
the change in effective date for reasons
discussed above. See Table 3 below.
TABLE 3—PART D STANDARD BENEFIT DESIGN PARAMETERS WITH AND WITHOUT THIS RULEMAKING
Year
2020
Baseline:
Deductible .....................................................
Initial Coverage Limit ....................................
Catastrophic Limit .........................................
2022
2023
. . .
2029
$435
4,010
6,350
$460
4,250
6,750
$490
4,520
7,150
$520
4,800
7,600
............
............
............
$725
6,690
10,600
9,296
9,874
10,470
11,126
............
15,515
435
4,010
6,350
405
3,740
5,950
395
3,630
5,750
420
3,840
6,100
............
............
............
580
5,310
8,400
Total Drug Costs at TrOOP Limit ..........
Difference (Percent):
Deductible .....................................................
Initial Coverage Limit ....................................
Catastrophic Limit .........................................
9,296
8,699
8,416
8,919
............
12,297
0%
0%
0%
¥12.0%
¥12.0%
¥11.9%
¥19.4%
¥19.7%
¥19.6%
¥19.2%
¥20.0%
¥19.7%
............
............
............
¥20.0%
¥20.6%
¥20.8%
Total Drug Costs at TrOOP Limit ..........
0%
¥11.9%
¥19.6%
¥19.8%
............
¥20.7%
Total Drug Costs at TrOOP Limit 90 ......
Under Rule:
Deductible .....................................................
Initial Coverage Limit ....................................
Catastrophic Limit .........................................
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
2021
88 Since 2010, Medicare has published guidance
defining de minimis variation in Medicare Part D
plan bids. The de minimis amount was $2 for the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
2020 plan year. Milliman scenarios 2 and 3 estimate
a de minimis level of variation from existing
premium estimates.
PO 00000
Frm 00062
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
89 Corrected
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
from the Proposed Rule.
30NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
Under OACT’s analysis, the majority
of beneficiaries would see an increase in
their total out-of-pocket payments and
premium costs; reductions in total costsharing will exceed total premium
increases. The minority of beneficiaries
who utilized drugs with significant
manufacturer rebates would experience
a substantial decrease in costs, causing
average beneficiary cost across the
program to decline.
Medicare beneficiaries with lower
levels of drug spending were expected
to benefit by way of a lowered
deductible. Following the first year of
this new environment, and into the
second year as well, the Part D benefit
design thresholds are projected to
change to the benefit of lower-cost
beneficiaries, providing lower out-ofpocket payments for these beneficiaries.
Because the Part D benefit design’s
parameters are calculated annually to
account for aggregate growth in Part D
spending, and because the estimated
potential effects of this regulation would
be to reduce aggregate spending levels
to more closely match net spending
trends, the applicable deductible would
decrease for plan year 2021.
Beneficiaries whose spending is above
the current deductible amount but lower
than the coverage gap would benefit
from a reduced deductible.
OACT also found that while the
deductible and initial coverage limit
would decrease, the patient out-ofpocket spending threshold to enter
catastrophic coverage would increase
significantly in the second year as the
full effects of reduced purchase prices
are incorporated. The out-of-pocket
threshold is set in statute and updated
annually by aggregate Part D program
growth. Because overall beneficiary
spending levels would now match the
net price of drugs rather than their list
prices, progress toward the out-ofpocket limit would be slowed, though
total dollars paid by beneficiaries would
not change aside from statutory and
annual updates.
Milliman’s analysis did not
incorporate changes to the Part D benefit
thresholds, and these actuaries based
their break-even analyses on the 2019
threshold amounts. Their analysis
projects that the distribution of changes
is far from uniform, and that the impact
of the change is concentrated around the
non-LIS beneficiaries who account for
about 70 percent of the benefit. The
break-even point would be $3.20 per
beneficiary per month in cost-sharing
reductions. Beneficiaries with costsharing reductions above that point
would save money, and those with costsharing reductions below that figure
would spend more on premiums than
they saved in cost-sharing. Their
analysis also projects about 7 percent of
non-LIS beneficiaries do not use any
medication, and therefore would see
premium costs exceeding reductions in
cost-sharing ($0 reductions in costsharing). Up to 30 percent of non-LIS
beneficiaries have drug costs such that
they could directly benefit from the
changes in the point-of-sale costs by
enough to make up for the average
increase in premium. The remaining 63
percent of beneficiaries may or may not
have their out-of-pocket costs reduced
enough to offset any potential premium
increase, depending on the mix of brand
and generic drugs used. All else
constant, these members generally do
not have enough cost-sharing savings to
fully offset the increase in premium.
However, they may benefit from
changes to copayments made by plan
sponsors to maintain the minimum
required actuarial value of 25 percent.
76727
Taken together, the actuarial analyses
project reductions in total cost-sharing
would exceed total premium increases;
however, impact on beneficiaries will
vary greatly with some beneficiaries
seeing savings while others experience
increases in out-of-pocket spending.
Effect on Federal Government Spending
This rule will impact Federal
spending on Part D direct premium
subsidies, reinsurance, low income costsharing subsidies, and low income
premium subsidies.
If there were no behavioral changes by
manufacturers and Part D plans (e.g.,
drug prices and benefit designs were
held constant), all three actuarial
analyses previously described predicted
increased Federal spending. As
explained in the Proposed Rule, the
projected increase in 2020 Federal
spending ranged from $2.8 billion to
$13.5 billion. The projected increase in
Federal spending from 2020 to 2029
ranged from $34.8 billion to $196.1
billion.
The Milliman analyses that
contemplated behavior changes that
would lower net prices from current
levels predicted Federal spending from
2020 to 2029 could decrease by $78.9
billion if Part D plan sponsors increased
formulary controls, decrease by $99.6
billion if Part D plan sponsors increased
formulary controls and obtained
additional price concessions, but
increase by $139.9 billion if
manufacturers reduced price
concessions in Part D to offset list price
decreases in other markets.
Table 4 describes the impacts on
Federal spending predicted by each
analysis and assumption at the
proposed rule stage.
TABLE 4—GOVERNMENT SPENDING IMPACTS, AS ESTIMATED FOR CY 2020 THROUGH 2029
[$Billions]
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
Modeled Assumptions
OACT
Milliman, scenario 1
Milliman, scenario 2
Milliman, scenario 3
Milliman, scenario 4
Wakely
• 15 percent of current Part D rebates
retained by manufacturer.
• 75 percent of remaining amount
applied to persponsor/PBM negotiated discounts.
• 25 percent of remainder applied as
reduction to list
price.
• No beneficiary or
plan behavioral
changes are assumed.
• 100 percent of current Part D rebates
are converted into
list price concessions (agnostic on
list price reductions versus up
front discounts).
• 100 percent of current rebates are
converted into list
price concessions.
• Part D plans exert
greater formulary
control.
• More than 100
percent of rebates
are converted into
list price concessions (same agnosticism on how
applied).
• Part D plans exert
greater formulary
control.
• 20 percent of current Part D rebates
are retained by
manufacturers
(same agnosticism
on how applied).
• 80 percent of current Part D rebates
are converted to
price concessions
(list price or discounts).
• 100 percent of current Part D rebates
converted to up
front discounts.
• No beneficiary or
plan behavioral
changes are assumed.
90 This limit varies by beneficiary, according to
the mix of brand and generic drugs taken. As
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
presented here, this figure is calculated assuming
that only brand-name drugs are dispensed, which
PO 00000
Frm 00063
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
represents the lowest possible estimate for this
threshold.
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
76728
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 4—GOVERNMENT SPENDING IMPACTS, AS ESTIMATED FOR CY 2020 THROUGH 2029—Continued
[$Billions]
OACT
Milliman, scenario 1
Milliman, scenario 2
Milliman, scenario 3
Milliman, scenario 4
Direct subsidy .............
Low income premium
subsidy.
Low income cost-sharing subsidy.
Reinsurance ................
+$258.7, (+119%) ....
+$15.4, (+24%) ........
+$215.4, (+193%) ....
+$12.0, (+13%) ........
+$174.7, (+157%) ....
+$3.8, (+4%) ............
+$180.3, (+162%) ....
+$1.9, (+2%) ............
+$221.1, (+199%) ....
+$20.5, (+21%).
¥$57.7 (¥15%) ......
¥$89.5, (¥20%) .....
¥$118.3, (¥26%) ...
¥$118.5, (¥26%) ...
¥$71.4, (¥16%).
¥$20.3 (¥3%) ........
¥$103.1, (¥13%) ...
¥$139.1, (¥18%) ...
¥$163.2, (¥18%) ...
¥$30.2, (¥4%).
Total .....................
+$196.1, (+14%) ......
+$34.8, (+2%) ..........
¥78.8, (¥5%) .........
¥$99.6, (¥7%) .......
+$139.9, (+10%) ......
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
Direct Premium Subsidy Spending
The Medicare program provides a
direct subsidy to Part D plans of 74.5
percent of expected costs. Medicare
program payments for direct subsidies
would have increased by an estimated
$14.5 to $20.1 billion (128 percent to
154 percent) in 2020 and $174.7 to
$258.7 billion (119 percent to 199
percent) from 2020 to 2029. The
increase in program payments would
require plans to smooth the effects of
negotiated discounts across the entire
benefit, rather than concentrate them on
the initial coverage limit as is current
practice. As noted above, premiums
paid by beneficiaries are predicted to
increase overall in analyses without
behavioral changes that would reduce
net prices below current levels.
In the Milliman analysis, the two
scenarios that contemplated behavior
changes that would reduce net prices
compared to current levels predicted
that Federal spending on direct
premium subsidies from 2020 to 2029
could have increased less compared to
a scenario with no behavior change. In
these scenarios, Part D plan sponsors
increased formulary controls and/or
obtained additional price concessions.
Payments for direct premium subsidies
would be higher than under the scenario
with no behavior change, if
manufacturers reduced price
concessions in Part D to offset list price
decreases in other markets (as described
in the OACT analysis and Milliman
scenario 4). See Table 4 for magnitude
and percent changes.
Reinsurance Spending
Transforming rebates into upfront
reductions in price may result in fewer
beneficiaries reaching catastrophic
coverage. This would benefit the
government because the government
bears the majority of the cost (80
percent) for beneficiaries who reach
catastrophic levels of drug spending. As
such, all analyses suggested Medicare
payments for reinsurance would have
decreased by an estimated $3.0 to $7.9
billion (6 percent to 17 percent) in 2020
and 3 percent to 18 percent from 2020
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
to 2029. In the catastrophic coverage
phase, Medicare makes payments to Part
D plans for 80 percent of gross drug
costs incurred once the beneficiary
reaches the out-of-pocket threshold. As
discussed above, the effect of this rule
would be to reduce the effective
purchase price of drugs, which in turn
would require more prescriptions before
a beneficiary would enter the
catastrophic phase. If fewer
beneficiaries enter this benefit phase,
and the prices of the drugs they receive
in this benefit phase are reduced, the
Medicare Program would experience
lower reinsurance payments to Part D
plans.
Milliman’s scenarios that
contemplated behavior changes
predicted Federal spending on
reinsurance from 2020 to 2029 could
have decreased by $139.1 billion if Part
D plan sponsors increased formulary
controls, decreased by $163.2 billion if
Part D plan sponsors increased
formulary controls and obtained
additional price concessions, and
decreased by only $30.2 billion if
manufacturers reduced price
concessions in Part D to offset list price
decreases in other markets.
Low Income Subsidy Spending
Medicare payments for LIS enrollees
would on net have decreased by an
estimated $0.9 to $5.5 billion in 2020
and $42.3 to $116.6 billion from 2020 to
2029. Generally, LIS enrollees will not
see the same out-of-pocket savings that
non-LIS enrollees will, because they are
assessed cost-sharing based almost
exclusively on copayments. However,
payments for the LICS will decrease for
the same reasons that Medicare
payments for reinsurance will decrease.
Under the provisions of LICS, the
Medicare program makes payments to
plans to cover the difference between
the LIS enrollee’s copayment and the
otherwise applicable coinsurance. As
prices are reduced to account for
discounts rather than applied to the
plan liability exclusively, Medicare
payments for these amounts will
decrease. These savings were estimated
PO 00000
Frm 00064
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Wakely
Not avail.
N/A.
to be $57.7 to $118.5 billion over ten
years.
Analyses that contemplated behavior
changes predicted Federal spending on
low income cost-sharing subsidies from
2020 to 2029 could have decreased by
$118 billion if Part D plan sponsors
increased formulary controls, decreased
by $119 billion if Part D plan sponsors
increased formulary controls and
obtained additional price concessions,
and decreased by $71 billion if
manufacturers reduced price
concessions in Part D to offset list price
decreases in other markets.
Other Stakeholder Impacts
Based on the provisions of this
rulemaking, the actuarial estimates we
received estimated that drug
manufacturers would have seen
revenues, as measured by changes in
gross drug costs and Coverage Gap
Discount Program payments, decrease
beginning in CY2020 and each year
thereafter. However, when drug costs
net of all discounts and rebates are
considered, the actuarial analyses
results converged in finding net
increases in total drug spending.
Milliman’s Scenario 1 analysis also
estimated an increase in government
costs of $34.8 billion over ten years,
with beneficiary costs decreasing by
$14.5 billion.91 These changes in
revenue will predominantly affect
brand-name drugs more so than generic
drugs. Since 2011, brand-name drug
manufacturers have been required to
provide a discount applied at the point
of sale to beneficiaries whose claims
occur during the coverage gap. Since the
intent of this rulemaking is to reduce
the negotiated prices paid by plans to
pharmacies by incorporating up front
discounts into them, both the frequency
of beneficiaries entering the coverage
gap, and the length of the coverage gap
itself, are potentially reduced by the
rule’s effects.
Comment: A commenter suggested
that the Proposed Rule did not
91 Milliman, Inc., Impact of Potential Changes to
the Treatment of Manufacturer Rebates, (Jan. 31,
2019). Appendix A1, Scenario 1A, page 1.
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
adequately account for entities in the
pharmaceutical supply chain, Federal
purchases, the 340B program, or the
uninsured. The commenter also
suggested that the Proposed Rule did
not account for existing discount
programs such as GoodRx when
estimating savings for the uninsured.
Response: The impact on the
uninsured is implicitly included in our
Household estimates. We did not
explicitly model the effects for those in
the pharmaceutical supply chain,
Federal direct purchases, or the 340B
program.
Likewise, this rule will affect the way
pharmacies are reimbursed. If list prices
come down, pharmacies will experience
lower acquisition costs, and their
combined reimbursement from plan
sponsors and beneficiaries will be
reduced by the amount of discount
provided by manufacturers to
beneficiaries of each plan sponsor. The
use of chargebacks to make pharmacies
whole for the difference between
acquisition cost, plan payment, and
beneficiary out-of-pocket payment is
described earlier in this rule. The
actuarial analyses we commissioned
were not designed to evaluate the effects
on the pharmacy supply chain by
moving from a system where
reimbursement rates were divorced from
actual negotiated prices after accounting
for rebates.
Summary of Part D Impacts
This rule will significantly redirect
the dollars flowing through the Part D
program. Several of the positive and
negative transfers are imperfect offsets
of one another. For example, the
analyses commissioned for this rule
estimated that the amount saved by
reducing cost-sharing exceeds the cost
of any increase in premiums for
beneficiaries overall. However, more
beneficiaries would pay more for
premiums, if premiums rise, than they
would save in cost-sharing, suggesting
that out-of-pocket impacts are likely to
vary by individual and the greatest
benefit of these transfers accrues to
sicker beneficiaries (e.g., those with
more drug spending and/or those using
high cost drugs).
It is difficult to predict the full extent
of the transfers created by this rule in
the absence of information about
strategic behavior changes by
manufacturers and Part D plan sponsors
in response to this rule. In scenarios
without behavioral changes, enrolled
beneficiaries might have seen premiums
increase in 2020 (had the rule become
effective then) by $3.15 PBPM to $5.64
PBPM (8 percent to 19 percent) but
average cost-sharing under their benefits
would have declined by $4.85 PBPM to
$8.01 PBPM (10 percent to 14
percent).92 However, the revised
effective date of January 1, 2022 for the
amendment to § 1001.952(h)(5) of the
discount safe harbor will provide
manufacturers and plans with
additional time to conduct negotiations
and adjust any business practices as
necessary based on the amended safe
harbor. Premium and cost-sharing
estimates were calculated on a different
basis by each firm. OACT estimated
actual beneficiary paid amounts for all
enrollees on average. Milliman
estimated beneficiary payments based
upon the basic benchmark amounts. We
present the range across these
calculation types.
In the absence of the stakeholder
behavior changes described often in this
section, government payments to plans
for direct subsidies, subsidies for low
income enrollees’ premiums and cost
sharing will likely increase and be
partially offset by reduced payments to
plans for reinsurance, increasing overall
by 3 percent to 14 percent in the 2020
estimates.
If manufacturer and plan behavior
caused net prices to decrease in
response to this rule, enrolled
beneficiaries might have seen premiums
increase 12 percent ($2.70 to $2.77
PBPM) in the first year with a very
accelerated implementation timeline,
and average cost sharing under their
benefits may have declined by 12
percent to 13 percent ($5.22 to $5.44
PBPM) in 2020. Total government
payments to plans would have
increased 1 percent to 3 percent, as the
net result of increased payments for
direct subsidies (144 percent to 149
percent) and low-income premium
subsidies (12 percent to 14 percent) and
decreased payments for low income
cost-sharing (¥18 percent to ¥20
percent) and reinsurance (¥16 percent
to ¥17 percent).
If manufacturer and plan behavior
caused Part D net prices to increase in
response to this rule, enrolled
beneficiaries would have seen
published premiums increase 22
percent ($5.11) and average cost-sharing
under their benefits might have
declined by 9 percent to 14 percent
(¥$5.22 to ¥$8.01). Government
payments to plans for direct subsidies
and subsidies for low income enrollees’
premiums and cost-sharing would have
increased and reinsurance payments
would have decreased.
Medicaid and State Impacts
OACT estimated that the rule would
result in estimated aggregate savings of
$4.0 billion for states over ten years, as
follows.93 The impact of the rule on
Medicaid prescription drug rebates,
MCO premiums, and prescription drug
prices could have resulted in net
Federal Medicaid costs of $1.7 billion
between 2020 and 2029, and net state
Medicaid costs of $0.2 billion over the
same period. OACT also estimated that
state governments would have saved
$4.3 billion between 2020 and 2029
through lower prescription drug prices
for state employees. These estimates are
at the national level; Medicaid costs,
state employee savings, and the net of
the two may vary among states.
G. Accounting Statement
Present value over 5 years by
discount rate
(millions of 2016 dollars)
3 Percent
76729
Annualized value over 5 years by
discount rate
(millions of 2016 dollars)
7 Percent
3 Percent
7 Percent
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
BENEFITS:
Non-quantified Benefits
Improved information for consumers regarding the characteristics of their health insurance plans
92 Wakely Consulting Group, Estimate of the
Impact on Beneficiaries, CMS, and Drug
Manufacturers in CY2020 of Eliminating Rebates for
Reduced List Prices at Point-of Sale for the Part D
Program (Aug. 30, 2018); Milliman, Inc., Impact of
Potential Changes to the Treatment of Manufacturer
Rebates’’ (Jan. 31, 2019) Scenario 1.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
93 CMS Office of the Actuary. ‘‘Proposed Safe
Harbor Regulation.’’ August 30, 2018. The OACT
analysis was posted as supplementary material in
the docket for this rule at regulations.gov in
February 2019. The estimated impacts on MCO
premiums in the OACT analysis do not apply to the
Final Rule because we are not finalizing the
PO 00000
Frm 00065
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
proposal to remove the existing safe harbor for
Medicaid MCOs. Most of the estimated Medicaid
costs in the OACT analysis, however, are associated
with the impacts on rebates and drug prices rather
than the impacts on MCO premiums from the
removal of MCO from the existing safe harbor.
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
76730
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
Present value over 5 years by
discount rate
(millions of 2016 dollars)
3 Percent
COSTS:
Quantified Costs ...............................................................
Annualized value over 5 years by
discount rate
(millions of 2016 dollars)
7 Percent
1,591
3 Percent
1,448
7 Percent
347
Transfers
($billions)
10 years (as
estimated for
CY 2020–2029)
Category
Decreased Medicare beneficiary spending ...................................................................................................................................
Decreased employee premium and OOP spending .....................................................................................................................
Decreased beneficiary premium and cost-sharing spending ........................................................................................................
Changes in Federal spending .......................................................................................................................................................
Decreased State spending (OACT only) .......................................................................................................................................
Decreased manufacturer coverage gap discount payments .........................................................................................................
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
H. Regulatory Alternatives
One option is no action. This means
that there would be no change in the
safe harbor regulations. None of the
costs or benefits of the rule would be
realized and Medicare drug plan
enrollees will continue to pay
deductibles and coinsurance based on
the list prices for prescription drugs.
This final rule adopts a delayed
effective date for the amendments to
§ 1001.952(h)(5) of the discount safe
harbor consistent with an alternate
described in the proposed rule.
Another option contemplated by the
Department, unrelated to safe harbor
rulemaking, would require sponsors to
incorporate into the point-of-sale price
for a covered drug a specified minimum
percentage of the average rebates
expected to be received for the
therapeutic class of drugs to which that
covered drug belongs. This option,
described in an RFI contained in the
proposed rule proposing Contract Year
2019 Part C & D policy and technical
changes,94 would require sponsors to
report the point-of-sale price for a
covered drug as the lowest possible
reimbursement that a network pharmacy
could receive for that drug, inclusive of
all pharmacy price rebates and
concessions.
I. Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
As discussed above, the RFA requires
agencies that issue a regulation to
analyze options for regulatory relief of
small entities if a rule has a significant
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. HHS considers a rule to have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities if at
least 5 percent of small entities
experience an impact of more than 3
94 82
FR 56336, 56419–28 (Nov. 28, 2017).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
percent of revenue. At the proposed rule
stage, the Department calculated the
costs of the changes per affected
business between 2020 and 2024. The
estimated average costs of the rule per
business according to this estimate
peaked in 2020 at approximately
$18,900 and are approximately $2,800
in subsequent years. The Department
notes that relatively large entities are
likely to experience proportionally
higher costs and that costs will occur at
a later point in time than if the rule had
been finalized with a 2020 effective
date. The U.S. Small Business
Administration establishes size
standards that define a small entity. For
entities with standards based on
revenue, they ranged from $17.5 million
to $38.5 million in 2017. Since the
estimated average costs of the rule are
a small fraction of these thresholds, the
Department anticipates that the rule
would not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
VI. Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995, we are required
to solicit public comments, and receive
final OMB approval, on any information
collection requirements set forth in
rulemaking. This rule imposes
documentation and disclosure
requirements on PBMs. Specifically, for
one of the new safe harbors, PBMs and
pharmaceutical manufacturers must
have a written agreement that specifies
their contractual arrangements and
interactions with health plans, and
PBMs must disclose their services
rendered and compensation associated
with transactions with pharmaceutical
manufacturers related to interactions
between the PBM and the health plan.
In addition, PBMs may be required to
PO 00000
Frm 00066
Fmt 4701
353
Sfmt 4700
¥25.2 to ¥59.5
¥11.7
¥14.5 to ¥25.2
¥99.6 to 196.1
¥4.0
17 to 39.8
disclose this information to the
Secretary upon request.
We believe that the documentation
requirements necessary to enjoy safe
harbor protection do not qualify as an
added paperwork burden, because the
requirements deviate minimally, if at
all, from the information PBMs and
manufacturers would routinely collect
in their normal course of business. We
believe it is usual and customary for
PBMs and manufacturers to
memorialize contracts and other similar
agreements in writing. Ensuring that
such writings are comprehensive and
that the actual business activities are
accurately reflected by documentation
are standard prudent business practices.
However, we recognize that the
disclosure of this information to plans,
and potentially to the Secretary, is not
a routine business practice.
List of Subjects in 42 CFR Part 1001
Administrative practice and
procedure, Fraud, Grant programs—
health, Health facilities, Health
professions, Maternal and child health,
Medicaid, Medicare, Social Security.
Accordingly, 42 CFR part 1001 is
amended as set forth below:
PART 1001—PROGRAM INTEGRITY—
MEDICARE AND STATE HEALTH
CARE PROGRAMS
1. The authority citation for part 1001
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302; 1320a–7;
1320a–7b; 1395u(j); 1395u(k); 1395w–
104(e)(6); 1395y(d); 1395y(e);
1395cc(b)(2)(D), (E), and (F); 1395hh;
1842(j)(1)(D)(iv), 1842(k)(1), and sec. 2455,
Pub. L. 103–355, 108 Stat. 3327 (31 U.S.C.
6101 note).
■
2. Section 1001.952 is amended:
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
a. Effective January 1, 2022, by
revising paragraphs (h)(5)(vi) and (vii)
and adding paragraph (h)(5)(viii); and
■ b. Effective January 29, 2021, by
adding paragraphs (h)(6) through (9),
(cc), and (dd).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
■
§ 1001.952
Exceptions.
TKELLEY on DSKBCP9HB2PROD with RULES2
*
*
*
*
*
(h) * * *
(5) * * *
(vi) Services provided in accordance
with a personal or management services
contract;
(vii) Other remuneration, in cash or in
kind, not explicitly described in this
paragraph (h)(5); or
(viii) A reduction in price or other
remuneration in connection with the
sale or purchase of a prescription
pharmaceutical product from a
manufacturer to a plan sponsor under
Medicare Part D either directly to the
plan sponsor under Medicare Part D, or
indirectly through a pharmacy benefit
manager acting under contract with a
plan sponsor under Medicare Part D,
unless it is a price reduction or rebate
that is required by law.
(6) For purposes of this paragraph (h),
the term manufacturer carries the
meaning ascribed to it in Social Security
Act section 1927(k)(5).
(7) For purposes of this paragraph (h),
the terms wholesaler and distributor are
used interchangeably and carry the
same meaning as the term ‘‘wholesaler’’
defined in Social Security Act section
1927(k)(11).
(8) For purposes of this paragraph (h),
the term pharmacy benefit manager or
PBM means any entity that provides
pharmacy benefit management on behalf
of a health plan that manages
prescription drug coverage.
(9) For purposes of this paragraph (h),
a prescription pharmaceutical product
means either a drug or biological
product as those terms are described in
Social Security Act section
1927(k)(2)(A), (B), and (C).
*
*
*
*
*
(cc) Point-of-sale reductions in price
for prescription pharmaceutical
products. (1) As used in section 1128B
of the Act, ‘‘remuneration’’ does not
include a reduction in price from a
manufacturer to a plan sponsor under
Medicare Part D or a Medicaid Managed
Care Organization for a prescription
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Nov 27, 2020
Jkt 253001
pharmaceutical product that is payable,
in whole or in part, by a plan sponsor
under Medicare Part D or a Medicaid
Managed Care Organization, provided
the following conditions are met with
regard to that reduction in price:
(i) The manufacturer and the plan
sponsor under Medicare Part D, a
Medicaid MCO, or the PBM acting
under contract with either, set the
reduction in price in advance, in
writing, by the time of the first purchase
of the product at that reduced price by
the plan sponsor or Medicaid MCO on
behalf of an enrollee;
(ii) The reduction in price does not
involve a rebate unless the full value of
the reduction in price is provided to the
dispensing pharmacy by the
manufacturer, directly or indirectly,
through a point-of-sale chargeback or
series of point-of-sale chargebacks, or is
required by law; and
(iii) The reduction in price must be
completely reflected in the price of the
prescription pharmaceutical product at
the time the pharmacy dispenses it to
the beneficiary.
(2)(i) For purposes of this paragraph
(cc), the terms manufacturer, pharmacy
benefit manager or PBM, prescription
pharmaceutical product, and rebate
have the meanings ascribed to them in
paragraph (h) of this section.
(ii) For purposes of this paragraph
(cc), a point-of-sale chargeback is a
payment by a manufacturer made
directly or indirectly (through a PBM or
other entity) to a dispensing pharmacy
equal to the reduction in price agreed
upon in writing between the Plan
Sponsor under Part D, the Medicaid
MCO, or a PBM acting under contract
with either, and the manufacturer of the
prescription pharmaceutical product.
(iii) For purposes of this paragraph
(cc), the term Medicaid Managed Care
Organization or Medicaid MCO carries
the meaning ascribed to it in section
1903(m) of the Social Security Act.
(dd) PBM service fees. (1) As used in
section 1128B of the Act,
‘‘remuneration’’ does not include any
payment by a pharmaceutical
manufacturer to a pharmacy benefit
manager (PBM) for services the PBM
provides to the pharmaceutical
manufacturer related to the pharmacy
benefit management services that the
PBM furnishes to one or more health
plans as long as the following
conditions are met:
PO 00000
Frm 00067
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
76731
(i) The PBM has a written agreement
with the pharmaceutical manufacturer,
signed by the parties, that covers all of
the services the PBM provides to the
manufacturer in connection with the
PBM’s arrangements with health plans
for the term of the agreement and
specifies each of the services to be
provided by the PBM and the
compensation associated with such
services.
(ii) The services performed under the
agreement do not involve the counseling
or promotion of a business arrangement
or other activity that violates any State
or Federal law.
(iii) The compensation paid to the
PBM is:
(A) Is consistent with fair market
value in an arm’s-length transaction;
(B) Is a fixed payment, not based on
a percentage of sales; and
(C) Is not determined in a manner that
takes into account the volume or value
of any referrals or business otherwise
generated between the parties, or
between the manufacturer and the
PBM’s health plans, for which payment
may be made in whole or in part under
Medicare, Medicaid, or other Federal
health care programs.
(iv) The PBM discloses in writing to
each health plan with which it contracts
at least annually the services rendered
to each pharmaceutical manufacturer
related to the PBM’s arrangements to
furnish pharmacy benefit management
services to the health plan, and to the
Secretary upon request, the services
rendered to each pharmaceutical
manufacturer related to the PBM’s
arrangements to furnish pharmacy
benefit management services to the
health plan and the fees paid for such
services.
(2) For purposes of safe harbor in this
paragraph (dd), the terms manufacturer,
pharmacy benefit manager or PBM, and
prescription pharmaceutical product
have the meanings ascribed to them in
paragraph (h) of this section, and health
plan has the meaning ascribed to it in
paragraph (l) of this section.
Dated: November 16, 2020.
Christi A. Grimm,
Principal Deputy Inspector General.
Dated: November 17, 2020.
Alex M. Azar II,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020–25841 Filed 11–20–20; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4152–01–P
E:\FR\FM\30NOR2.SGM
30NOR2
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 230 (Monday, November 30, 2020)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 76666-76731]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-25841]
[[Page 76665]]
Vol. 85
Monday,
No. 230
November 30, 2020
Part II
Department of Health and Human Services
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Office of Inspector General
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
42 CFR Part 1001
Fraud and Abuse; Removal of Safe Harbor Protection for Rebates
Involving Prescription Pharmaceuticals And Creation of New Safe Harbor
Protection for Certain Point-of-Sale Reductions in Price on
Prescription Pharmaceuticals and Certain Pharmacy Benefit Manager
Service Fees; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 85 , No. 230 / Monday, November 30, 2020 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 76666]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Office of Inspector General
42 CFR Part 1001
RIN 0936-AA08
Fraud and Abuse; Removal of Safe Harbor Protection for Rebates
Involving Prescription Pharmaceuticals and Creation of New Safe Harbor
Protection for Certain Point-of-Sale Reductions in Price on
Prescription Pharmaceuticals and Certain Pharmacy Benefit Manager
Service Fees
AGENCY: Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Inspector
General (OIG), HHS.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Discounts for prescription pharmaceutical products are central
to this final rule, in which the Department of Health and Human
Services (Department or HHS) amends the safe harbor regulation
concerning discounts. Amending this regulation changes the definition
of certain conduct that is protected from liability under the Federal
anti-kickback statute of the Social Security Act (the Act). New
regulatory text in the amendment revises the discount safe harbor. By
excluding from the definition of a discount eligible for safe harbor
protection certain reductions in price or other remuneration from a
manufacturer of prescription pharmaceutical products to plan sponsors
under Medicare Part D or pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) under
contract with them, the Department modifies the existing discount safe
harbor in particular contexts. Existing safe harbors otherwise remain
unchanged. Safe harbors are also created for two additional types of
arrangements. The first protects certain point-of-sale reductions in
price on prescription pharmaceutical products, and the second protects
certain PBM service fees.
DATES: This final rule is effective on January 29, 2021, except for the
amendments to 42 CFR 1001.952(h)(5), which are effective on January 1,
2022.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Aaron Zajic, (202) 619-0335.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Social Security Act citation United States Code citation
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1128B..................................... 42 U.S.C. 1320a-7b
1128D..................................... 42 U.S.C. 1320a-7d
1102...................................... 42 U.S.C. 1302
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose and Need for Regulatory Action as Determined by the
Secretary
B. Summary of the Major Provisions
i. Discount Safe Harbor
ii. Point-of-Sale Reductions in Price for Prescription
Pharmaceutical Products Safe Harbor
iii. PBM Service Fees Safe Harbor
II. Background
A. The Anti-Kickback Statute and Safe Harbors
B. Summary of the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
III. Summary of Public Comments and Responses
A. General
i. Antitrust
ii. Transparency
iii. Relationship to Part D
(a) Non-Interference
(b) Impact on Part D Program
iv. Medicaid
v. Commercial Market
vi. Value-Based Arrangements
vii. Enforcement Issues
viii. State Law Issues
ix. Other Legal Issues
x. Formularies
(a) Formulary Placement
(b) Impact on Formulary
xi. Impact on List Price
xii. Definitions
xiii. Comments Outside the Scope of Rulemaking
B. Discount Safe Harbor Amendment
i. Statutory Exception
ii. Effective Dates
iii. Expand to other Federal Health Care Programs
iv. Scope of Amendment
v. Impact on Volume or Prompt Pay Discounts
vi. Impact on Beneficiary Access
vii. Additional Safeguards
viii. Alternative Recommendations
C. Safe Harbor for Certain Price Reductions on Prescription
Pharmaceutical Products
i. Point-of-Sale Chargebacks
ii. Reverse Engineering
iii. Common Ownership
iv. Incentives for Point-of-Sale Reduction in Price
v. During 100 Percent Cost Sharing
vi. Additional Safeguards
D. Safe Harbor for Certain PBM Service Fees
i. Scope of Protected Fees
ii. Fair Market Value
iii. Take Into Account Volume or Value
iv. Fixed Fees
v. Disclosure Requirement
vi. Scope of Agreement
vii. Statutory Exception and Safe Harbor for Group Purchasing
Organizations
viii. Additional Recommendations
E. Technical Comments
IV. Provisions of the Final Regulation
A. Revision to the Discount Safe Harbor
B. New Safe Harbors
C. Technical Corrections
V. Regulatory Impact Statement
A. Need for Regulation
B. Background on Costs, Benefits, and Transfers
C. Affected Entities
D. Costs
E. Benefits
F. Transfers
G. Accounting Statement
H. Regulatory Alternatives
I. Regulatory Flexibilities Analysis
VI. Paperwork Reduction Act
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose and Need for Regulatory Action as Determined by the
Secretary
On February 6, 2019, the Department published a Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking in the Federal Register (84 FR 2340) (Proposed Rule). In
that Proposed Rule, the Secretary set forth his concerns with the
modern prescription drug distribution model and, in particular, how the
current rebate-based system may be increasing financial burdens for
beneficiaries. We refer readers to and incorporate by reference Section
I of the Proposed Rule, which sets forth in detail the Secretary's
determination of the purpose and need for this rulemaking.
The Trump Administration's American Patients First blueprint
described a new, more transparent drug pricing system that would lower
high prescription drug prices and bring down out-of-pocket costs.\1\
The blueprint described four strategies: Boosting competition,
enhancing negotiation, creating incentives for lower list prices, and
reducing out-of-pocket spending.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ American Patients First: The Trump Administration Blueprint
to Lower Drug Prices and Reduce Out-of-Pocket Costs, Dep't Health &
Human Servs. (May 2018), available at https://www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/AmericanPatientsFirst.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On July 24, 2020 the President signed an Executive Order \2\
directing the Secretary of Health and Human Services to complete the
rulemaking process that was commenced with the Proposed Rule. Section 4
of this Executive Order directs the Secretary of the Department of
Health and Human Services to confirm--and make public such
confirmation--that the action is not projected to increase Federal
spending, Medicare beneficiary premiums, or patients' total out-of-
pocket costs. The Secretary's confirmation is available at: https://www.hhs.gov/about/leadership/secretary/priorities/drug-prices/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Executive Order on Lowering Prices for Patients by
Eliminating Kickbacks to Middlemen, Whitehouse.gov (July 24, 2020),
available at https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/executive-order-lowering-prices-patients-eliminating-kickbacks-middlemen/. See 85 FR 45759 (July 29, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This final rule is an important element to achieving the goals of
the blueprint and the Executive Order and
[[Page 76667]]
also works in concert with other regulatory provisions finalized by the
Department. For example, this final rule creates new safe harbor
protection for point-of-sale reductions in price, which will directly
reduce beneficiary out-of-pocket spending at the pharmacy counter. It
also increases price transparency, which will enable Medicare
beneficiaries to better choose a plan that best meets their needs. This
final rule addresses a practice that has increased patient costs at the
pharmacy counter and will create incentives for drug companies to lower
the list prices of their drugs.
This final rule is also important to beneficiary and government
spending in Medicare Part D. Part D rebates and other price concessions
grew more than three times faster than gross drug expenditures from
2014-2016. Price concessions, including rebates, have the potential to
reduce Part D costs for the Federal government, because Part D plan
sponsors subtract their estimated rebates from their plan bids. Lower
plan bids contribute to lower premiums, and lower premiums contribute
to lower government spending on premium subsidies. However, the
Proposed Rule described how rebates also may create a perverse
incentive that rewards manufacturers for increasing their list price,
while subjecting consumers to higher out-of-pocket costs. Since
beneficiary out-of-pocket costs are often calculated based on the list
price of the drug (i.e., before rebates are paid), beneficiaries pay
higher cost-sharing than they would if discounts were reflected at the
point of sale. Furthermore, high list prices may result in more
beneficiaries more quickly reaching the catastrophic phase, where the
Federal government bears 80 percent of the drug costs and the Part D
plans only cover 15 percent of the drug costs.
The Department is issuing this final rule to create incentives for
manufacturers to lower their list prices; reduce the incentives for
Part D plans to choose high-cost, highly rebated drugs over comparable
drugs with lower prices; lower beneficiary out-of-pocket spending; and
increase transparency to improve plan choice and program integrity.
B. Summary of the Major Provisions
i. Discount Safe Harbor
In this final rule, we amend 42 CFR 1001.952(h) to remove safe
harbor protection for reductions in price in connection with the sale
or purchase of prescription pharmaceutical products from manufacturers
to plan sponsors under Part D, either directly or through PBMs acting
under contract with them, unless the reduction in price is required by
law. We note that reductions in price negotiated between manufacturers
and plan sponsors under Part D (or through PBMs under contract with the
plan sponsors) in the form of upfront discounts, rather than after-sale
rebates, are eligible for protection under the new safe harbor for
point-of-sale reductions in price for prescription pharmaceutical
products at Sec. 1001.952(cc).
ii. Point-of-Sale Reductions in Price for Prescription Pharmaceutical
Products Safe Harbor
We are finalizing a new safe harbor at Sec. 1001.952(cc) for
certain point-of-sale reductions in price offered by manufacturers on
prescription pharmaceutical products that are payable under Medicare
Part D or by Medicaid managed care organizations (MCOs) that meet
certain criteria.
iii. PBM Service Fees Safe Harbor
In this final rule, we create a new safe harbor at Sec. Sec.
1001.952(dd) for fixed fees that manufacturers pay to PBMs for services
rendered to the manufacturers that meet specified criteria.
II. Background
A. The Anti-Kickback Statute and Safe Harbors
Section 1128B(b) of the Act, the anti-kickback statute, provides
for criminal penalties for whoever knowingly and willfully offers,
pays, solicits, or receives remuneration to induce or reward the
referral of business reimbursable under any of the Federal health care
programs, as defined in section 1128B(f) of the Act. The offense is
classified as a felony and is punishable by fines of up to $100,000 and
imprisonment for up to 10 years. Violations of the anti-kickback
statute may also result in the imposition of civil monetary penalties
(CMPs) under section 1128A(a)(7) of the Act (42 U.S.C. 1320a-7a(a)(7)),
program exclusion under section 1128(b)(7) of the Act (42 U.S.C. 1320a-
7(b)(7)), and liability under the False Claims Act (31 U.S.C. 3729-33).
Congress's intent in placing the term ``remuneration'' in the
statute in 1977 was to cover the transfer of anything of value in any
form or manner whatsoever. The statute's language makes clear that
illegal payments are prohibited beyond merely ``bribes,''
``kickbacks,'' and ``rebates,'' which were the three terms used in the
original 1972 statute. The illegal payments are covered by the statute
regardless of whether they are made directly or indirectly, overtly or
covertly, in cash or in kind, and regardless of the label that parties
may affix to the payment. In addition, prohibited conduct includes not
only the payment of remuneration intended to induce or reward referrals
of patients but also the payment of remuneration intended to induce or
reward the purchasing, leasing, or ordering of, or arranging for or
recommending the purchasing, leasing, or ordering of, any good,
facility, service, or item reimbursable by any Federal health care
program.
Because of the broad reach of the statute, concern was expressed
that some relatively innocuous commercial arrangements were covered by
the statute and, therefore, potentially subject to criminal
prosecution.\3\ In response, Congress enacted section 14 of the
Medicare and Medicaid Patient and Program Protection Act of 1987,
Public Law 100-93, which specifically requires the development and
promulgation of regulations, the so-called safe harbor provisions, that
would specify various payment and business practices that would not be
subject to sanctions under the anti-kickback statute, even though they
may potentially be capable of incenting referrals of business for which
payment may be made under a Federal health care program.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ See, e.g., Medicare and State Health Care Programs: Fraud
and Abuse; OIG Anti-Kickback Provisions, 56 FR 35952 (July 29,
1991).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 205 of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability
Act of 1996, Public Law 104-191, established section 1128D of the Act,
which includes criteria for modifying and establishing safe harbors.
Specifically, section 1128D(a)(2) of the Act provides that, in
modifying and establishing safe harbors, the Secretary may consider
whether a specified payment practice may result in:
An increase or decrease in access to health care services;
an increase or decrease in the quality of health care
services;
an increase or decrease in patient freedom of choice among
health care providers;
an increase or decrease in competition among health care
providers;
an increase or decrease in the ability of health care
facilities to provide services in medically underserved areas or to
medically underserved populations;
an increase or decrease in the cost to Federal health care
programs;
an increase or decrease in the potential overutilization
of health care services;
[[Page 76668]]
the existence or nonexistence of any potential financial
benefit to a health care professional or provider, which benefit may
vary depending on whether the health care professional or provider
decides to order a health care item or service or arrange for a
referral of health care items or services to a particular practitioner
or provider; or
any other factors the Secretary deems appropriate in the
interest of preventing fraud and abuse in Federal health care
programs.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ See also section 1102 of the Act (vesting the Secretary with
the authority to make and publish rules and regulations, not
inconsistent with the Act, as may be necessary to the efficient
administration of his functions under the Act).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Since July 29, 1991, there have been a series of final regulations
published in the Federal Register establishing safe harbors in various
areas.\5\ These safe harbor provisions have been developed ``to limit
the reach of the statute somewhat by permitting certain non-abusive
arrangements, while encouraging beneficial or innocuous arrangements.''
\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Medicare and State Health Care Programs: Fraud and Abuse;
OIG Anti-Kickback Provisions, 56 FR 35952 (July 29, 1991); Medicare
and State Health Care Programs: Fraud and Abuse; Safe Harbors for
Protecting Health Plans, 61 FR 2122 (Jan. 25, 1996); Federal Health
Care Programs: Fraud and Abuse; Statutory Exception to the Anti-
Kickback Statute for Shared Risk Arrangements, 64 FR 63504 (Nov. 19,
1999); Medicare and State Health Care Programs: Fraud and Abuse;
Clarification of the Initial OIG Safe Harbor Provisions and
Establishment of Additional Safe Harbor Provisions Under the Anti-
Kickback Statute, 64 FR 63518 (Nov. 19, 1999); Medicare and State
Health Care Programs: Fraud and Abuse; Ambulance Replenishing Safe
Harbor Under the Anti-Kickback Statute, 66 FR 62979 (Dec. 4, 2001);
Medicare and State Health Care Programs: Fraud and Abuse; Safe
Harbors for Certain Electronic Prescribing and Electronic Health
Records Arrangements Under the Anti-Kickback Statute, 71 FR 45109
(Aug. 8, 2006); Medicare and State Health Care Programs: Fraud and
Abuse; Safe Harbor for Federally Qualified Health Centers
Arrangements Under the Anti-Kickback Statute, 72 FR 56632 (Oct. 4,
2007); Medicare and State Health Care Programs: Fraud and Abuse;
Electronic Health Records Safe Harbor Under the Anti-Kickback
Statute, 78 FR 79202 (Dec. 27, 2013); and Medicare and State Health
Care Programs: Fraud and Abuse; Revisions to the Safe Harbors Under
the Anti-Kickback Statute and Civil Monetary Penalty Rules Regarding
Beneficiary Inducements, 81 FR 88368 (Dec. 7, 2016).
\6\ Medicare and State Health Care Programs: Fraud and Abuse;
OIG Anti-Kickback Provisions, 56 FR at 35958.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Healthcare providers and others may voluntarily seek to comply with
safe harbors so that they have the assurance that their business
practices will not be subject to any anti-kickback enforcement action.
In giving the Department the authority to protect certain arrangements
and payment practices under the anti-kickback statute, Congress
intended the safe harbor regulations to be updated periodically to
reflect changing business practices and technologies in the healthcare
industry.
B. Summary of the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
On February 6, 2019, we published the Proposed Rule setting forth
certain proposed amendments to the safe harbors under the anti-kickback
statute. The Proposed Rule also provided substantial background
information to explain why the Department believes these amendments are
necessary.
With respect to the proposed amendment to the existing discount
safe harbor, we explained that it was designed to address evolving
business arrangements and align with the statutory exception's intent
to encourage price competition that benefits the Medicare and Medicaid
programs.\7\ We also emphasized our longstanding position that a
discount must be in the form of a reduction in the price of a good or
service based on an arms-length transaction. With respect to rebates,
we explained the regulatory history regarding our treatment of
``rebates'' under the discount safe harbor. Finally, we noted that the
discount safe harbor was finalized in 1991 and has not been updated
since 2002, and we highlighted that both the Medicare Part D program
and comprehensive regulations governing Medicaid managed care delivery
systems were enacted in the intervening years. For a more comprehensive
discussion of why these amendments to the discount safe harbor are
necessary, we incorporate by reference and refer readers to the
discussion in the Proposed Rule.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ 54 FR 3092.
\8\ 84 FR 2345-47.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Proposed Rule also identified certain specific harms that may
be caused by the current rebate framework. First, some beneficiaries
experience increased financial burdens. For example, if a beneficiary
is paying coinsurance on a drug subject to a rebate, the beneficiary
pays a percentage of a price that more closely resembles the list price
than the net price. Second, the Proposed Rule explained that rebates
may be harming Federal health care programs by increasing list prices,
preventing competition to lower drug prices, discouraging the use of
lower-cost brand or generic drugs, and skewing formulas used to
determine pharmacy reimbursement or Medicaid rebates.\9\ Finally, the
Proposed Rule expressed concerns about a lack of transparency in the
current system. With respect to rebates, we explained that OIG work
showed that some Part D plan sponsors had limited information about
rebate contracts and rebate amounts that their PBMs negotiated. A lack
of transparency could create a potential program integrity
vulnerability because compliance with program rules may be more
difficult to verify. We also sought to address a lack of transparency
to health plans when the health plans' PBMs are being paid by
manufacturers for services that the PBMs render to manufacturers
related to pharmacy benefit management services that the PBM furnishes
to the health plans.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ 84 FR 2343.
\10\ 84 FR 2349-50.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To address the Department's concerns with the current rebate
system, the Department proposed and solicited comments on three
revisions to the safe harbors. First, the Department proposed to amend
the discount safe harbor at 42 CFR 1001.952(h) to exclude from the
definition of ``discount'' at Sec. 1001.952(h)(5) all price reductions
from manufacturers on prescription pharmaceutical products in
connection with their sale to or purchase by plan sponsors under
Medicare Part D, Medicaid MCOs, or PBMs acting under contract with plan
sponsors under Medicare Part D or Medicaid MCOs, unless the reduction
in price is required by law (e.g., rebates under the Medicaid Drug
Rebate Program). The Proposed Rule also proposed definitions at Sec.
1001.952(h)(6)-(10) of the terms ``manufacturer,'' ``wholesaler,''
``pharmacy benefit manager,'' ``prescription pharmaceutical product,''
and ``Medicaid Managed Care Organization.''
Second, the Proposed Rule proposed to add a new safe harbor at
Sec. 1001.952(cc) to protect reductions in price between the entities
that would be removed from the discount safe harbor at Sec.
1001.952(h) if such reductions in price are given at the point of sale
and meet certain other criteria. As proposed, this safe harbor would
protect reductions in price on prescription pharmaceutical products
offered to plan sponsors under Medicare Part D, Medicaid MCOs, or
through a PBM acting under contract with either if: (1) The reduction
in price is set in advance; (2) the reduction in price does not involve
a rebate, unless the full value of the price reduction is accomplished
through chargebacks or is a rebate required by law; and (3) the
reduction in price is completely reflected in the price the pharmacy
charges to the beneficiary at the point of sale.
Finally, the Proposed Rule proposed to add a second new safe harbor
at Sec. 1001.952(dd) specifically designed to protect certain fees a
pharmaceutical
[[Page 76669]]
manufacturer pays to a PBM for services rendered to the manufacturer
that relate to the PBM's arrangements to provide pharmacy benefit
management services to health plans. As proposed, the safe harbor would
protect a payment a pharmaceutical manufacturer makes to a PBM for
services the PBM provides to the manufacturer, for the manufacturer's
benefit, when those services relate to the PBM's arrangements to
provide pharmacy benefit management services to health plans. To
receive protection, the proposed safe harbor would require that: (1)
The services and compensation be set out in a written agreement; (2)
the compensation be consistent with fair market value in an arm's-
length transaction; be a fixed payment, not based on a percentage of
sales; and not be determined in a manner that takes into account the
volume or value of any referrals or business otherwise generated
between the parties, or between the manufacturer and the PBM's health
plans, for which payment may be made in whole or in part under
Medicare, Medicaid, or other Federal health care programs; and (3) the
PBM makes annual written disclosures to each health plan with which it
contracts regarding the services rendered to each pharmaceutical
manufacturer related to the PBM's arrangements to furnish pharmacy
benefit management services to the health plan, and make such
disclosures to the Secretary upon request.
The Department solicited comments on a range of topics in the
course of describing the new proposed safe harbors. For instance, for
the proposed safe harbor for point-of-sale reductions in price, the
Proposed Rule solicited comments on the sufficiency of the proposed
definitions as well as any effects of the proposed safe harbor on
competition to the extent pharmacies have sufficient data to reverse
engineer the manufacturer's or the PBM's discount structure. For the
proposed safe harbor for certain PBM service fees, the Proposed Rule
solicited comments on the interpretation of pharmacy benefit management
services and the transparency-related requirements that would be a
condition of the safe harbor.
III. Summary of Public Comments and Responses
We received responsive comments from approximately 26,000 distinct
commenters, including, but not limited to, individuals, pharmaceutical
manufacturers, pharmacies, PBMs, wholesalers, plan sponsors under Part
D, Medicaid MCOs, and trade associations representing various
individuals and entities. Many of these individuals and entities
provided comments on multiple topics. Commenters generally agreed with
the Department on the need to lower out-of-pocket costs for consumers
on prescription drugs, but they diverged in terms of whether they
supported or opposed the Proposed Rule. Comments from both those who
opposed the rule and those who supported the rule recommended certain
changes or requested certain clarifications. We appreciate the robust
feedback from the commenters. We have divided the public comment
summaries and our responses into discrete sections: The first section
covers general comments and responses that may apply to more than one
of our proposals, and the following sections summarize and respond to
the comments specific to our proposed amendments to the discount safe
harbor and our two new proposed safe harbors.
A. General
i. Antitrust
Comment: Several commenters were supportive of the Proposed Rule
and contended that antitrust laws do not affect the Proposed Rule or
that the Proposed Rule will not lead to anti-competitive discriminatory
pricing. A commenter explained that antitrust laws related to
differential pricing apply equally to upfront discounts as they do to
retrospective rebates. Another commenter explained that the Proposed
Rule will result in lower cost-sharing amounts for beneficiaries at the
point of sale and will allow for the reestablishment of the nexus
between price concessions on a product and the actual price paid by
consumers for that product.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' support for the Proposed
Rule.
Comment: Several commenters addressed whether and how the policies
underlying the Proposed Rule intersect with the Robinson-Patman Act.
Some commenters that opposed the proposal suggested that the risk of
liability under the Robinson-Patman Act will hinder manufacturers'
ability to negotiate up-front discounts. Several of these commenters
claimed that the current rebate system resulted from a settlement in
the In re Brand Name Prescription Drugs litigation, in which pharmacies
sued brand-name prescription drug manufacturers and wholesalers for
discriminatory pricing practices that favored large, institutional
purchasers. These commenters pointed out that under the terms of the
1996 settlement, manufacturers agreed to give pharmacies the same
opportunity to earn the favorable discounts given to institutional
purchasers, provided that the pharmacies can demonstrate an ability to
affect market share in the same or similar manner as the institutional
purchasers. The commenters argued that the Department failed to
consider this settlement, and stated that absent Congressional action
to amend or repeal the Robinson-Patman Act, manufacturers will move to
offering lower, unvaried discounts.
Other commenters, however, contended that the antitrust laws do not
pose an obstacle to or hinder implementation of the Proposed Rule and
that the Proposed Rule would, in fact, further the ultimate goal of
antitrust law, which is to promote competition. For instance, one
commenter pointed out that the antitrust laws apply equally to up front
discounts and retrospective rebates, and the In re Brand Name
Prescription Drugs litigation did not result in any change in the
ability of a prescription drug manufacturer to offer an upfront
discount, or create any precedent suggesting that upfront discounts are
illegal and retrospective rebates are legal. Another comment similarly
questioned the conclusion that moving from a world of PBM rebates to
point-of-sale chargebacks would result in anti-competitive
discriminatory pricing and pointed out that the Proposed Rule would
result in individuals paying less at the pharmacy counter. Yet another
commenter contended that transitioning away from rebates to upfront
discounts achieves the intended goals of the 1996 settlement.
Response: The Department is not persuaded that the threat of
Robinson-Patman Act litigation will dissuade manufacturers from
offering pro-competitive price concessions in the form of upfront
discounts. In fact, comments submitted by the major association
representing pharmaceutical manufacturers rejected the notion that the
Robinson-Patman Act prevents prescription pharmaceutical manufacturers
from offering upfront discounts and pointed out that rebates do not
occupy a unique position insulated from antitrust scrutiny. The
Department agrees that neither the 1996 settlement nor the subsequent
court rulings made any distinction between retrospective rebates and
upfront discounts and did not result in any decision suggesting that
the former are less problematic than the latter. Both retrospective
rebates and upfront discounts, to the extent that they are true price
concessions, could theoretically be applied in a
[[Page 76670]]
discriminatory fashion. The Department does not administer antitrust
law. However, as the Department understands its application, whether
the price discrimination is achieved by something labeled a ``rebate''
versus something labeled a ``discount'' would not be relevant for
purposes of Robinson-Patman Act liability.
Comment: A commenter requested, and believed it would be helpful
for, the Antitrust Division at the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) or
Department of Justice (DOJ) to analyze the Proposed Rule and provide a
Competition Advisory Opinion upon which stakeholders could rely.
Response: Parties that want greater certainty may request an
advisory opinion from the FTC.
ii. Transparency
Comment: Numerous commenters reiterated the need for greater
transparency in our current rebate system, with various commenters
asserting that the proposed point-of-sale reduction in price safe
harbor would increase transparency and ensure that patients benefit
from price reductions. A commenter stated that greater transparency
would enable independent pharmacies to negotiate more favorable terms
with PBMs and health plan sponsors and inform patients about their drug
coverage options, while another commenter stated that greater
transparency may put plan sponsors in a better position to exert more
influence to lower net drug spending and PBM administrative fees.
Another commenter asserted that transparency surrounding discounts
would be likely to lower list prices and reduce misaligned incentives.
This commenter also stated that patients who know the amount of a
plan's discount for a product would be in a better position to select
the right plan. Another commenter asserted that this increased
transparency surrounding the rebates provided to PBMs and plans would
place significant pressure on pharmaceutical manufacturers to lower
list prices, stating that manufactures would no longer be able to point
to rebates as the reason for high drug prices.
Conversely, other commenters stated that the changes reflected in
the Proposed Rule would not increase transparency. Specifically, some
commenters asserted that pharmaceutical manufacturers establish drug
prices, and that if the rule aims to create transparency, then it
should apply to all parties, including pharmaceutical manufacturers,
instead of only PBMs and health plans. Another commenter asserted that
health plans already provide meaningful transparency surrounding
rebates through mechanisms like direct and indirect remuneration (DIR)
reporting to CMS, while pharmaceutical manufacturers do not
systematically disclose their rebates. Another commenter opposed the
proposed point-of-sale reductions in price safe harbor and stated that
as long as rebates are a part of our drug pricing system, there will
still be confusion among patients and plan sponsors surrounding drug
prices.
Response: We appreciate support from commenters who agree that
applying manufacturer reductions in price to drug prices at the point
of sale would increase transparency. Additionally, we concur that
greater transparency surrounding price reductions can enable
stakeholders in the drug supply chain to support patients in selecting
drugs and plans that minimize their out-of-pocket costs and can lead to
lower drug prices.
Many publications document that many Medicare beneficiaries do not
make what might appear to be the best decisions when choosing a Part D
plan. If the plan premium is the monthly cost of having access to drugs
that best meet a beneficiary's needs, then the beneficiary should have
visibility into what kind of discounts are being negotiated on their
behalf.
While we understand that plan sponsors under Part D already have
DIR reporting requirements, we believe that by excluding certain
rebates paid by manufacturers from the discount safe harbor and
creating a new safe harbor for point-of-sale reductions in price, there
will be enhanced transparency regarding reductions in price that
pharmaceutical manufacturers negotiate with plan sponsors under
Medicare Part D and PBMs under contract with these plans, especially
for the consumer, and create new incentives for manufacturers to lower
drug prices.
Comment: Other commenters asserted that blaming PBMs for the lack
of transparency in the rebate system is misdirected. A PBM commenter
stated that its plan sponsors see their respective drug costs at a unit
cost level, as well as the savings the PBM generates for plan sponsors,
including rebates, and that its plan sponsors have full audit rights to
ensure complete transparency. Another commenter noted that PBMs already
offer transparent contracts that allow many large employers to pull
through some of the value of negotiated rebates to reduce enrollees'
drug-related costs, while another commenter noted that the Proposed
Rule did not account for these innovative and transparent models that
are taking place within the PBM industry.
Conversely, other commenters claimed that the PBM market lacks
transparency. Some commenters indicated that rather than excluding
certain rebates from the discount safe harbor, OIG should focus on
ensuring that PBMs are completely transparent with health plans
regarding rebate payments and pass through 100 percent of all rebate
payments to Part D plan sponsors, with a commenter noting that
increased transparency with respect to PBM rebates may enable plan
sponsors to retain some of these rebates that can be used to benefit
plan participants and beneficiaries.
Other commenters discussed the impact of increased transparency on
the PBM industry generally. Specifically, a commenter advised OIG to
ensure the proposed transparency requirements on top of the other
regulations that apply to Medicare and Medicaid will not
unintentionally stifle new entrants in the PBM market, noting that more
choice in PBMs would benefit patients and the government. Conversely,
another commenter asserted that greater transparency will invite
competition from new PBM entrants, such as nonprofit PBMs and employer
self-administered PBMs.
Response: We understand that some programmatic mechanisms are
already in place to foster transparency of rebates and drug prices
between PBMs and plan sponsors and to CMS. PBMs will need to consider
the new requirements in this final rule and may need to adjust their
operations in order to comply with the terms of the applicable safe
harbor. However, we are persuaded by the comments suggesting that the
additional transparency provided by this final rule would be useful.
Further, as stated in the Proposed Rule, a 2011 evaluation indicated
that certain Part D plan sponsors had limited information regarding
rebate contracts and rebate amounts negotiated by their PBMs.\11\ A
lack of transparency could contribute to program integrity
vulnerabilities by making compliance with program rules harder to
verify and by allowing hidden incentives that result in higher list
prices. We believe that excluding certain rebates paid by manufacturers
from the discount safe harbor and creating a new safe harbor for point-
of-sale reductions in price will increase transparency, including
transparency to plans and beneficiaries, and improve alignment of
incentives among parties
[[Page 76671]]
that could result in lower list prices and out-of-pocket costs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ 84 FR 2343.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: A commenter recommended restricting or banning PBM spread
pricing because spread pricing detracts from the goals of transparency
and fair pricing by enabling PBMs to profit by charging plans a higher
cost for drugs than they reimburse to pharmacies and retaining the
difference. To this end, the commenter recommended that OIG or the
Department implement penalties for PBMs to discourage this practice and
ensure that the full value of price reductions is passed on to plans.
Response: The scope of the changes that we proposed to the discount
safe harbor was limited to remuneration from pharmaceutical
manufacturers to plan sponsors under Part D, Medicaid MCOs, and PBMs
operating on their behalf. Comments about profits that PBMs may retain
by negotiating a difference between what they charge plans and what
they reimburse pharmacies are beyond the scope of this rulemaking.
Comment: A commenter suggested that the healthcare system explore
other policy actions focused on high list prices, such as prohibiting
brand pharmaceutical companies from effectively preventing low-cost
generic medications from coming to market. Other commenters noted that
our current drug pricing system can only be transparent if
beneficiaries are able to predict their out-of-pocket costs and
recommended locking in the price of prescription drugs that require
coinsurance or requiring at least one drug in each class to be subject
to a flat copayment in order to create more stability.
Response: While we appreciate commenters' suggestions for other
actions to address high list prices and encourage stability in
beneficiaries' out-of-pocket costs, such policy initiatives are outside
the scope of this rulemaking.
Comment: Several commenters recommended various additional measures
to help promote transparency in the prescription drug supply chain.
Specifically, a commenter's recommendations included: Standardized
contract terms relating to PBM services and compensation; requiring
additional regular disclosures by PBMs to health plans with which they
contract regarding their business arrangements with drug manufacturers;
disclosure by PBMs to public programs and private plans of discount
amounts and other revenue paid to the PBM or related third parties
based on the plan sponsor's drug utilization; and an auditable
structure that allows plan sponsors to have a complete picture and
conduct more fulsome analyses of their drug-related costs and
contractual relationships. Another commenter emphasized the need for
stakeholders in the prescription drug supply chain to disclose rebate
and discount information, financial incentive information, and pharmacy
and therapeutics committee information, which the commenter asserted
would further improve transparency in this area. Another commenter
stated that to further transparency, CMS and OIG should identify,
collect, and disseminate data and information that would enable the
evaluation of the impact of changes under this rule on beneficiaries.
Other commenters recommended requiring prescription drug
manufacturers to be more transparent by making list prices public, with
a commenter asserting that patient-level information related to drug
pricing must be transparent, democratized, and open source.
Another commenter noted that under the current framework, Medicaid
MCOs may negotiate supplemental rebates directly with pharmaceutical
manufacturers to minimize costs based on the net cost to the MCO, but
the lowest net cost product for the MCO may not always align with the
lowest net cost product for the Medicaid program. This commenter
recommended mandating transparency of the unit rebate amount (URA) and
unit rebate offset amount (UROA) to Medicaid MCOs to help Medicaid MCOs
drive toward the lowest net costs to the system.
Response: We appreciate these commenters' feedback. We note that
the new safe harbor for PBM service fees requires PBMs to disclose in
writing to each health plan with which it contracts at least annually
the services rendered to each manufacturer related to the PBM's
arrangements to furnish pharmacy benefit management services to the
plan. We are not adopting the commenter's recommendation to require
additional regular disclosures by PBMs to health plans regarding
business arrangements with drug manufacturers. We believe the
requirements under the PBM service fees safe harbor allow for
appropriate transparency between the parties in order for the
remuneration protected under the safe harbor to be sufficiently low
risk. We also are not adopting any of the commenters' other
recommendations to increase transparency because they are beyond the
scope of the Proposed Rule and, in some cases, outside the authorities
under the anti-kickback statute. We are mindful of the importance of
monitoring the impact of the final rule on beneficiaries.
iii. Relationship to Part D
a. Non-Interference
Comment: A number of commenters contended that the Proposed Rule
was an impermissible exercise of the Secretary's authority because it
violates the Medicare Part D noninterference provision, section 1860D-
11(i) of the Act. These commenters asserted the Proposed Rule seeks to
interfere with how manufacturers and Part D plan sponsors negotiate and
pay for prescription drugs through the elimination of rebates and the
prohibition on using formulary placement as leverage to reduce prices,
which are well-established negotiating tools. Commenters also asserted
that, by requiring that reductions in price be applied at the point of
sale and not applied to premiums, the Proposed Rule violates the
prohibition on instituting a price structure for the reimbursement of
covered Part D Drugs. A commenter asserted that the proposal, if
finalized, also would interfere in Part D plan sponsors' negotiations
with pharmacies by mandating that Part D sponsors ensure that pharmacy
reimbursement is reduced by the amount of any discounts received by the
pharmacy from the manufacturer. In addition, multiple commenters cited
CMS rulemakings, which they concluded previously interpreted the non-
interference clause as prohibiting the agency from adopting the
policies proposed by this rule and asserted that the changed statutory
interpretation would require notice and comment.
Response: This rule does not interfere in any negotiations between
Part D sponsors, manufacturers, and pharmacies. This final rule changes
the circumstances under which certain agreements that implicate the
anti-kickback statute fall within the protection of a safe harbor. The
parameters of the safe harbor do not institute a price structure, nor
do they interfere with negotiations between plans and pharmacies,
because they do not have any bearing on the ultimate prices negotiated
among the parties. CMS's longstanding position about the non-
interference provision is that all aspects of the non-interference
provision must be considered in light of other statutory requirements
to implement and oversee the Part D program.\12\ It has always been the
[[Page 76672]]
Department's view that the non-interference provision does not exist in
a vacuum and must be read in concert with Part D statutory obligations
in connection with, for example, pharmacy network adequacy, consistency
in treatment of drug costs, and the provision of adequate formularies.
It is no different when one views the non-interference provision in the
broader context of the Secretary's other statutory obligations under
the Act, including the mandate to establish and modify safe harbors.
This rule, as it is being finalized, does not change the Department's
interpretation of the Part D non-interference provision.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ See, e.g., 79 FR 29844, 29874-75 (May 23, 2014).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Impact on Part D Program
Comment: Some commenters made a variety of recommendations to
address pharmacy DIR fees. Other commenters recommended that OIG not
finalize the Proposed Rule because it would eliminate DIR.
Response: The administration of pharmacy DIR fees is outside the
scope of this rulemaking. Nothing in this final rule changes CMS's
rules with respect to DIR.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that HHS, CMS, and Congress
reform the Part D program by, for example: Implementing a rebate pass-
through requirement as part of the Part D program in lieu of the
Proposed Rule; allowing for greater flexibility in calculating
deductibles; redefining Average Manufacturer Price (AMP) or clarifying
how point-of-sale price concessions or chargebacks might apply to AMP;
making adjustments to certain cost-sharing requirements for partial
point-of-sale rebate and formulary design options; and permitting
manufacturers to offer copayment and coinsurance assistance for single-
source drugs.
Response: Comments that request Congressional action, pertain to
changes to the administration of the Part D program, or ask for
guidance with respect to Medicaid pricing rules are outside the scope
of this rulemaking. Manufacturer-sponsored copayment assistance
programs are also outside the scope of this rulemaking.
Comment: A commenter recommended that OIG work with the Department
to develop guidance and procedures for how to identify and avoid 340B
and point-of-sale duplicate discounts in Part D and Medicaid managed
care prior to implementation of the proposed safe harbor. For example,
the commenter recommended similar requirements that the Department of
Defense has implemented, such as (1) requiring the use of a National
Council for Prescription Drug Programs (NCPDP) modifier to identify
340B transactions within the new system, or (2) requiring, in the safe
harbor text or otherwise, that the PBM or other chargeback
administrator must exchange information and cooperate as necessary to
enable manufacturers to determine whether any 340B discounts are also
implicated in the transaction. Another commenter requested confirmation
that manufacturers may continue traditional duplicate discount
avoidance arrangements and that doing so will not put the safe-harbored
status of a point-of-sale reduction in price arrangement at risk. The
commenter noted that the new point-of-sale reductions in price safe
harbor should not require that manufacturers pay chargebacks for Part D
point-of-sale reductions in price when doing so would generate 340B
duplicate discounts.
Response: We appreciate commenters' feedback on 340B and the
potential for point-of-sale duplicate discounts in Part D.
Establishment of mechanisms for avoiding duplicate discounts or
resolving disputes or errors regarding rebates is outside the scope of
this rule, as is compliance with CMS requirements relating to
Prescription Drug Event (PDE) reporting for when a claim is re-
processed as a result of such mechanisms. The point-of-sale reduction
in price safe harbor requires, as a condition of qualifying for the
safe harbor, that the reduction in price be completely reflected at the
time the pharmacy dispenses the prescription pharmaceutical product to
the beneficiary; it does not specifically require chargebacks. In
addition, we note that a violation of the anti-kickback statute must be
knowing and willful. Good faith efforts to avoid duplication of
discounts or resolve disputes or errors, where such practices are not
intending to offer or pay remuneration to induce or reward purchases of
federally payable goods or services, likely would not constitute
violations.
Comment: Some commenters recommended that OIG review whether and
explain how the changes proposed in its Proposed Rule are consistent
with a rule that CMS previously proposed, ``Modernizing Part D and
Medicare Advantage to Lower Drug Prices and Reduce Out-of-Pocket
Expenses.'' \13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ See 83 FR 62152 (Nov. 30, 2018).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Response: We thank commenters for their recommendation and note
that the rule we are finalizing here makes certain changes to the
regulatory safe harbors to the anti-kickback statute, which may impact
business arrangements of parties participating in the Part D program
but do not amend any program requirements.
Comment: A commenter urged CMS and OIG to advance, in both the
final rule and corresponding CMS-issued guidance, plan designs or
financing pathways for Medicare Advantage plans that allow for the
continuation of Medicare Advantage supplemental benefit programs by
offsetting the reduction in rebates that the commenter predicted would
result from this rule.
Response: This final rule amends the discount safe harbor and adds
two new safe harbors to specify types of arrangements that would be
protected from liability under the anti-kickback statute. Additional
guidance on plan design or financing pathways for Medicare Advantage
plans are outside the scope of this rule.
Comment: A number of commenters identified issues related to
beneficiary rights that they asserted will require rulemaking or
guidance in order to implement the Proposed Rule. These issues include,
but are not limited to: How CMS would expect plans to apply formulary
and tiering exceptions policies; how CMS will handle beneficiary
complaints, appeal rights, and transition fills; application of
percentage price concessions to the higher-tier drug; how CMS would
expect plans to apply formulary exceptions when approving a no price
concession drug; what changes will be reported in the language of the
Evidence of Coverage and model marketing materials; whether enrollees
will be told the price concession amount at the point of sale, and how
it will be accounted for in the cost component of Medication Therapy
Management (MTM) (e.g., might previously qualified enrollees no longer
qualify as they no longer meet the cost threshold?); whether a plan's
Advance Notice of Changes will have to be revised to reflect changes in
rebate status.
Response: To the extent parties elect to structure arrangements to
fit into the new point-of-sale reduction in price safe harbor,
questions may arise about implementation. Questions related to CMS's
administration of the Part D program, however, are outside the scope of
OIG's authority and this rulemaking. We have coordinated with CMS in
the promulgation of this rule and are informed that their formulary
review processes will continue to protect beneficiary access and
choice. CMS provides Part D plan sponsors with guidance related to
bidding, formulary submission, and Medicare Plan Finder instructions,
and will continue to work
[[Page 76673]]
with plan sponsors to ensure a smooth transition and minimize
disruption.
Comment: Commenters expressed several concerns about formulary
structure and benefit design, which the commenters asserted will
require rulemaking or guidance from CMS in order to implement changes
included in the Proposed Rule, if finalized. For example, a commenter
identified various issues related to formulary structure, which the
commenter asserted will require rulemaking or guidance by CMS in order
to implement the new or amended safe harbors, if finalized. These
included: Any potential changes to CMS's formulary review process; what
the potential effects will be on formularies due to new arrangements;
manufacturers using alternate National Drug Codes for existing drugs
(e.g., to allow for price concessions or to reauthorize a branded drug
as generic or biosimilar); what happens when an LIS enrollee is in
different phases of benefit or tiers of a formulary; whether the de
minimis premium policy for LIS will be increased. Commenters also
suggested that CMS finalize its proposal in the 2020 Draft Call Letter
to restrict brand and generic drugs to respective brand and generic
tiers and more actively track formularies.
Response: As discussed above, questions about CMS's administration
of the Part D program (which includes oversight of policies regarding
LIS beneficiaries) are outside the scope of OIG's authority.
Comment: A commenter asked if new costs associated with the
Proposed Rule (e.g., to update systems, contracts, and staff call
centers) will be included in administrative costs for purposes of
medical loss ratio compliance. The commenter stated that plans will
need to collect higher premiums and make larger claims payments if
there is no exception for new costs.
Response: Whether administrative costs should be taken into account
when calculating medical loss ratios are outside the scope of this
rulemaking.
Comment: Other commenters predicted that the proposal may result in
higher premiums for individuals in self-insured plans. In particular, a
commenter asserted that self-funded employer group waiver plans (EGWPs)
that enroll Medicare Advantage beneficiaries use rebate dollars to
reduce premiums and that with fewer rebate dollars, self-funded EGWPs
would have to increase premiums substantially for all enrollees by the
amount received in rebates.
Response: The intent of the rule includes the elimination of the
distortions in the market that drive up pharmaceutical list prices for
EGWPs as well as other MA and Part D plans. As discussed elsewhere in
this rule, list prices have been rising to increase the rebates. This
change will bring transparency to the plan design and allow
beneficiaries and employers funding EGWPs to better understand and
negotiate, prior to the effective date of this rule, the benefits they
are paying for.
Comment: A commenter stated that MA and Part D plan sponsors should
have additional flexibility regarding what drugs to exclude from
coverage formularies, what criteria and guidance to follow for coverage
decisions, and what restrictions they should be subject to. Because
plan sponsors must certify the accuracy, completeness, and truthfulness
of all data, another commenter stated that CMS should provide plan
sponsors with an alternative good faith compliance approach.
Response: Comments requesting that plan sponsors have increased
flexibility in the MA and Part D programs are outside the scope of this
rulemaking.
Comment: Commenters suggested that the catastrophic phase of the
Part D benefit should be reformed or that a cap should be placed on
out-of-pocket costs to beneficiaries.
Response: Comments recommending policy changes to the Part D
program or amendments to the governing law are outside the scope of
this rulemaking.
Comment: A number of commenters expressed concern about the impact
of the Proposed Rule on the Part D bid process and stated that
rulemaking or guidance by CMS will be necessary to implement the
Proposed Rule, including: How would CMS require plan sponsor negotiated
price concessions to be allocated in the bid and when would the Bid
Pricing Tool be updated for such price concessions; how would CMS
revise the out-of-pocket cost values and Total Beneficiary Cost
metrics; how will changes in Part D bid amounts be incorporated into
MA-PD submission; will CMS adjust the bidding schedule and beneficiary
enrollment period to allow entities to bring their arrangements into
compliance; and would CMS require other plan types (e.g., EGWPs) to
follow its lead on the bid process? A commenter also recommended
certain protections for the 2020 bid submission to limit program
disruption and instability such as: Adjust the de minimis threshold,
rebate reallocation process, supporting documentation requirements for
bids, and risk corridor protections; waive the Total Beneficiary Cost
and Medicare Part D out-of-pocket cost rules; allow more flexibility in
aggregate and product margin tests as well as the desk review and bid
audits; and give consideration to the impact of change on EGWP plans.
Response: Comments related to CMS's administration of the Part D
program are outside the scope of this rulemaking. We consulted with CMS
in the promulgation of this final rule and anticipate that by
finalizing this rule with a January 1, 2022 implementation date for the
amendments to the discount safe harbor at Sec. 1001.952(h)(5), we have
addressed concerns related to the 2020 bid submission.
Comment: A commenter stated that CMS should oversee plan actuarial
equivalence determinations to ensure that beneficiaries with copayments
receive the intended benefits of the rule through reduced cost sharing.
The commenter further stated that CMS should ensure that plan sponsors
and PBMs ``reduce copayments for the tier on which the prescribed
medicine is placed that maintains actuarial equivalence with the
standard benefit design.''
Response: Comments related to CMS's administration of the Part D
program are outside the scope of this rulemaking. However, we are aware
that actuarial equivalence requirements in the Part D program may
require that plans adjust copayment amounts to reflect discounts that
are protected under the point-of-sale safe harbor. Specifically, if the
negotiated prices change, the benefit (i.e., cost-sharing structure)
must be adjusted to meet actuarial equivalence. Under the defined
standard benefit design, lower negotiated prices would result in
beneficiaries paying less cost sharing, in absolute terms, in each
benefit phase. Under a tiered benefit design, the copayment or
coinsurance amounts for the different tiers in each phase could be
changed in various ways, as long as the overall cost-sharing structure
results in beneficiaries being projected to pay no more in each phase
than the beneficiaries' share required under the defined standard for
that phase.
Comment: Commenters raised concerns about the impact that changes
included in the Proposed Rule could have on data reporting.
Specifically, the commenter identified the following issues that the
commenter asserted will require rulemaking or guidance by CMS in order
to implement the Proposed Rule, citing Medicare Part D reporting
requirements: Whether there would be changes to the PDE report, and how
claims would be reported where a rebate was provided; what the Proposed
Rule's
[[Page 76674]]
effect is on PDE data reporting procedures; whether point-of-sale price
concessions would be reported on the estimated rebate fields, how they
would be used on market shares, or what process would be used to
reconcile over- or under-payments of point-of-sale price concessions to
enrollees; how PDEs would be reported when wholesalers are involved;
how claims would be reported when a rebate was provided that was later
determined to be ineligible (e.g., due to 340B, denial, patient
recoupment or duplicate claims); how point-of-sale price concessions or
rebates would be reflected in DIR reports, and whether DIR reporting
procedures would be revised, including to account for new requirements
for PBM service fees; and would CMS need to create an agreement to
allow for information to be shared by manufacturers to CMS since
confidential data are being collected and reported.
Response: Establishment of mechanisms for avoiding duplicate
discounts or resolving disputes or errors regarding rebates is outside
the scope of this rule. Comments about CMS's administration of the Part
D program, including compliance with CMS requirements relating to PDE
reporting for when a claim is re-processed as a result of such
mechanisms, are outside the scope of this rulemaking.
Comment: A commenter asked whether CMS will adopt the same
definitions as OIG, including the definition of a rebated or discounted
drug.
Response: Comments about CMS's administration of the Part D program
are outside the scope of this rulemaking. This question would be best
addressed by CMS.
Comment: Several commenters stated that D-SNP beneficiaries \14\
qualify for low income subsidies that reduce their cost-sharing
responsibilities for brand and generic drugs to nominal amounts, so the
Proposed Rule will most likely not result in a material change in their
experience. These commenters are concerned that if premiums increase it
could impact coverage affordability for D-SNP beneficiaries. Other
commenters requested adopting a broad interpretation of the term ``plan
sponsor under Medicare Part D.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ Dual Eligible Special Needs Plans (D-SNPs) enroll
beneficiaries who are entitled to both Medicare and Medicaid.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Response: We are finalizing the revisions to the safe harbors as
they apply to reductions in price or other remuneration in connection
with the sale or purchase of a prescription pharmaceutical product from
a manufacturer to a plan sponsor under Medicare Part D, without
distinguishing among Part D plan types.
Comment: Several commenters sought guidance on the interaction of
the changes in the Proposed Rule with the Part D definition of
``negotiated price.'' A commenter stated that CMS should update its
cost-sharing rules to align with the proposed point-of-sale reductions
in price safe harbor. The commenter urged CMS to finalize its
definition of negotiated price in the MA and Part D proposed rule,
``Modernizing Part D and Medicare Advantage to Lower Drug Prices and
Reduce Out-of-Pocket Expenses,'' and to provide additional guidance.
Some commenters stated that the definition of ``negotiated price'' at
42 CFR 423.100 would need to be revised for several reasons, including:
To incorporate price reductions processed via chargebacks itemized at
the point of sale, because changes to the Proposed Rule would eliminate
a portion of the DIR currently negotiated, or to ensure stakeholders
can comply with not only the new safe harbors, if finalized, but also
applicable Part D regulations.
Another commenter stated that CMS should clarify the definition of
negotiated price to clearly reflect the discounts protected by the new
safe harbor. The commenter also stated that CMS should adjust the Part
D benefit design to accommodate the reduced negotiated prices. The
commenter further asserted that CMS should recalculate the portion of
the overall program cost that beneficiaries are responsible for paying
by using the reduced negotiated prices. This adjustment, the commenter
stated, would lower the deductible, the initial coverage limit, and the
catastrophic threshold to reflect the reduced cost of the standard
benefit package. The commenter stated that this adjustment also would
likely result in Part D plans lowering copayment amounts on specific
formulary tiers, since those are also calculated based on the portion
of the negotiated price for drugs placed on those tiers.
Response: Comments related to CMS's administration of the Part D
program, including the definition of negotiated price, are outside the
scope of this rulemaking. However, we are aware that actuarial
equivalence requirements in the Part D program may require that plans
adjust copayment amounts to reflect discounts that are protected under
the point-of-sale safe harbor. This rule does not change the definition
of ``negotiated price'' at 42 CFR 423.100.
Comment: A commenter requested guidance on the application of the
provisions of the Proposed Rule to various kinds of pharmacies that the
commenter indicated will have different applications and expectations,
including LTC, mail-order, and specialty pharmacies.
Response: As the commenter did not provide information on which
provisions included in the Proposed Rule would affect categories of
pharmacies differently, we are unable to respond more fully to this
comment. We note that the amendment to the discount safe harbor does
not affect discounts on prescription pharmaceutical products offered to
entities such as pharmacies,\15\ as long as the arrangement meets all
the existing requirements of the safe harbor; the amendment only
impacts discounts from a manufacturer directly to a plan sponsor under
Medicare Part D or indirectly to the plan sponsor, through a PBM acting
under contract with it.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ 84 FR 2348.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: A commenter recommended that independent community
pharmacies should assume no liability for implementation of the changes
included in the Proposed Rule. For example, if the system required
fees, the commenter stated, the fees should not be paid by pharmacies.
The commenter also suggested that independent community pharmacies'
reimbursements should not be affected by price reductions that are
agreed upon between the plan or PBM and the manufacturer.
Response: The final rule does not require fees, but only provides a
safe harbor from liability under the anti-kickback statute for certain
fees or other remuneration, under certain conditions. Whether pharmacy
reimbursements are affected by price reductions agreed to between
manufacturers and PBMs or plans for purposes of compliance under this
rule will depend on the particulars of private contracting between the
parties.
Comment: Commenters raised questions about implementing the new
safe harbor for point-of-sale reductions in price in light of Part D
requirements. A commenter stated that CMS should provide guidance on
how point-of-sale discounts apply to Medicare Secondary Payer claims,
how point-of-sale discounts will impact vaccine administration fees,
and whether point-of-sale discounts would change enrollment eligibility
for MTM programs based on exceeding a set annual out-of-pocket cost.
Response: We have coordinated with CMS on the promulgation of the
point-
[[Page 76675]]
of-sale safe harbor to ensure that this rule can operate effectively in
conjunction with the Part D program rules. Requests for CMS to issue
guidance regarding the Part D program matters raised by the commenters
are outside the scope of this rule.
Comment: A commenter recommended amending the proposed safe harbor
for point-of-sale reductions in price to require plans' compliance with
tiering and coverage requirements for generic and biosimilar products,
including automatic coverage of generic and biosimilar medicines
immediately after launch, placement of generic-only tiers, and a
dedicated specialty tier for specialty generics and biologics.
Response: We do not believe we can make the suggested changes to
the proposed point-of-sale safe harbor because we did not propose them.
Moreover, even had we proposed them, we do not believe it would be
necessary to include compliance with Part D tiering and coverage
requirements for generic and biosimilar products in the safe harbor. We
believe the conditions in the final safe harbor are sufficient to
address program integrity risk with respect to the specific
remuneration being protected. Nothing in the final rule changes any
requirement of the Part D program, and parties are required to comply
with all applicable CMS rules.
iv. Medicaid
Comment: The majority of commenters who addressed Medicaid in their
comments strongly opposed including Medicaid MCOs in the scope of the
proposed changes to the discount safe harbor, with commenters positing
that the change could harm state Medicaid programs, could impose
unnecessary costs on states, and could lead states to make significant
cuts to other parts of their Medicaid programs. A commenter highlighted
that the changes we proposed would introduce significant uncertainties
to states without any clear benefit. Another commenter requested that
the Department instead focus on reforming the Medicaid Drug Rebate
Program (MDRP).
Several commenters also objected to, or did not understand, the
inclusion of Medicaid in the proposed revisions to the discount safe
harbor because, according to the commenters, the changes would not
achieve the Department's goal of lowering beneficiaries' out-of-pocket
spending. Per the commenters, beneficiaries are charged only nominal
copayments in Medicaid and, except for a few plans, do not have
coinsurance obligations. According to various commenters, because of
the limited role of rebates in Medicaid managed care, passing through
reductions in price for Medicaid beneficiaries will benefit only a few
enrollees by a marginal amount or will be irrelevant. These commenters
further questioned whether there would be any incentive for
manufacturers to provide point-of-sale price reductions in Medicaid at
a level equal to or similar to the savings leveraged through the
current framework.
Response: Upon consideration of the comments received, we are
persuaded that we should not move forward with our proposal to revise
the discount safe harbor to exclude rebates offered to Medicaid MCOs.
In the Proposed Rule, the Department articulated its concern that
``rebates are often not applied at the point of sale to offset the
beneficiary's deductible or coinsurance or otherwise reduce the price
paid at the pharmacy counter,'' which the Department hypothesized could
be increasing financial burdens for beneficiaries.\16\ For these
reasons, the Department proposed to eliminate protection for rebates
provided to Medicaid MCOs and to offer protection for point-of-sale
reductions in price for a prescription pharmaceutical product payable,
in whole or in part, by a Medicaid MCO. As noted by commenters,
however, Medicaid beneficiaries generally have nominal cost-sharing
obligations for prescription pharmaceutical products. Additionally,
although State Medicaid agencies have flexibility to design alternative
cost-sharing arrangements for Medicaid beneficiaries, generally
Medicaid MCO contracts must meet cost-sharing requirements for drugs in
42 CFR 447.53. See 42 CFR 438.108. These requirements set maximum
allowable cost-sharing amounts for preferred and non-preferred drugs.
Given these circumstances and existing regulatory requirements, we
believe that eliminating discount safe harbor protection for reductions
in price offered to a Medicaid MCO would have minimal, if any, effect
on the amount a Medicaid beneficiary pays when he or she purchases
prescription pharmaceutical products at the pharmacy.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ 84 FR 2341-42.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under this final rule, Medicaid MCOs seeking safe harbor protection
for discounts have the option to use either the discount safe harbor or
the new safe harbor for point-of-sale reductions in price at Sec.
1001.952(cc). As discussed in more detail below, however, we note that
neither the discount safe harbor nor the new safe harbor protects
rebates or other reductions in price from a manufacturer that are
retained by a PBM, even if that PBM is operating on behalf of a
Medicaid MCO.
Comment: Some commenters supported application of the changes to
the discount safe harbor to Medicaid as well as to Medicare, other
Federal health care programs, and the commercial markets.
Response: For the reasons stated above, we have decided not to move
forward with our proposal to revise the discount safe harbor as it
applies to Medicaid MCOs.
Comment: Several commenters stated that the changes in the Proposed
Rule, if finalized, would create an unlevel playing field in Medicaid
programs because they would eliminate safe harbor protection for
supplemental rebates negotiated by Medicaid MCOs (or PBMs with which
they have contracted) while continuing to protect supplemental rebates
received by states directly under Medicaid fee-for-service programs.
According to several commenters, because states would be able to
negotiate supplemental rebates even if the Proposed Rule were
finalized, the changes in the Proposed Rule would incentivize states to
carve out the outpatient prescription drug benefit or to adopt a state-
mandated preferred prescription drug list to maximize supplemental
rebates. A commenter also stated that states may seek larger
supplemental rebates, which a commenter noted do not count towards Best
Price. Commenters that raised this issue listed several concerns with
this result. For example, they noted that carve-out arrangements
inhibit Medicaid MCOs' ability to manage the full range of healthcare
items and services for beneficiaries under their care.
Response: We are not finalizing the changes to the discount safe
harbor with respect to Medicaid MCOs, which addresses the commenters'
concerns.
Comment: Multiple commenters discussed the importance of
supplemental rebates to the Medicaid program and Medicaid MCOs.
Numerous commenters noted that Medicaid supplemental rebates are an
important tool for states in controlling drug spending, with a
commenter noting that 46 states and the District of Columbia have
supplemental rebate agreements and collected about $1.2 billion in
supplemental rebates during fiscal year 2017.
Additionally, various commenters requested clarification relating
to the treatment of supplemental rebates paid by manufacturers to
Medicaid MCOs and supplemental rebates paid by manufacturers to state
Medicaid
[[Page 76676]]
agencies. Specifically, several commenters sought clarification as to
how Medicaid drug payment provisions in section 1927 of the Act relate
to protection for supplemental rebates under the Proposed Rule and, in
particular, whether such supplemental rebates are ``required by law,''
which was a carve out to our exception in our proposal to eliminate
discount safe harbor protection for reductions in price from
manufacturers to Medicaid MCOs. Certain commenters asserted that
manufacturers' legal obligations under the MDRP also extend to Medicaid
supplemental rebates, which the commenters used to support the position
that the discount safe harbor would continue to protect supplemental
rebates negotiated between states and manufacturers. Other commenters
recommended that, if OIG moves forward with including Medicaid MCOs in
the changes to the discount safe harbor, OIG should clarify that
supplemental rebates negotiated by Medicaid MCOs but received directly
by state Medicaid agencies are protected.
In addition, several commenters noted that Medicaid MCOs often
retain full risk in connection with prescription drug coverage and use
supplemental rebates to lower overall costs for state Medicaid programs
or to defray capitation costs. Another health plan commenter asserted
that with reduced flexibilities to manage drug costs through Medicaid
supplemental rebates, the Medicaid program may become less attractive
to MCOs, which may decrease health insurance choices for consumers. In
the alternative, a commenter recommended that OIG prohibit all
supplemental rebates negotiated across Medicaid fee-for-service and
Medicaid managed care.
Commenters noted their concerns about the potential for state
Medicaid program drug expenditures to increase if the changes in the
Proposed Rule limit the existing ability of Medicaid programs to
negotiate supplemental rebates. Other commenters estimated that
Medicaid costs may rise because of the loss of safe harbor protection
for supplemental rebates to Medicaid MCOs, which could lead states to
decrease other benefits, cut provider payments, or make other cuts to
state Medicaid programs to make up for these higher costs. Another
commenter raised concerns that in the absence of PBMs, states will not
be able to adapt and negotiate directly with manufacturers for
supplemental rebates. Another commenter noted that many PBMs operating
on behalf of Medicaid MCOs already pass through the entire supplemental
rebate to health plans they contract with, which are bound by federal
and state rate setting and reporting requirements, so eliminating
supplemental rebates to Medicaid MCOs will not create any additional
transparency in this area. However, another commenter stated that more
transparency regarding supplemental Medicaid rebates collected by PBMs
and Medicaid MCOs is still needed for states to completely capture the
value of Medicaid supplemental rebates paid to PBMs.
Response: As discussed in detail above, we are not finalizing the
changes to the discount safe harbor with respect to Medicaid MCOs,
which addresses many of the commenters' concerns. We reiterate that
this final rule does not alter obligations under the statutory
provisions for Medicaid prescription drug rebates under section 1927 of
the Act, including without limitation the provisions related to best
price, the additional rebate amounts required for certain drugs based
on the rate of increase in AMP and the increase in the consumer price
index for all urban consumers (CPI-U), or provisions regarding
supplemental rebates negotiated between states and manufacturers.
Comment: Several commenters raised a number of concerns about
administrative burdens that would be imposed on states and Medicaid
MCOs with respect to implementing and operationalizing this rule; for
example, a commenter noted that states would be required to set and
certify new Medicaid MCO rates. Another commenter stated that affected
entities (e.g., Medicaid MCOs, states, PBMs, pharmacies) will all need
to renegotiate their contracts, some of which may require state
legislative or agency approval. Another commenter explained that
Medicaid managed care contracts are generally effective for several
years and states often operate on a fiscal year that differs from the
calendar year. The commenter believes that providing states limited
time to renegotiate multi-year contracts, or to make midyear
adjustments, would be potentially unfeasible.
Response: We are not finalizing the changes to the discount safe
harbor with respect to Medicaid MCOs, which addresses the commenters'
concerns.
Comment: A number of commenters raised various questions or
concerns with respect to the implications of the changes included in
the Proposed Rule for calculations of AMP, Best Price, and Federal
Upper Limits. For example, several commenters stated that the Proposed
Rule would result in increased costs to taxpayers because of changes to
AMP calculations. According to a number of commenters, if changes in
the Proposed Rule lower the AMP, it will result in reductions to drug
rebate revenue under the MDRP, which will increase Medicaid program
costs. Similarly, commenters expressed concern that a lower AMP might
reduce Federal Upper Limits or the National Average Drug Acquisition
Cost invoice pricing data and, in turn, could reduce Medicaid
reimbursement to pharmacies. A commenter contended that it is critical
that the change to point-of-sale discounts not affect AMP.
As a result of these concerns and questions, a number of commenters
requested that CMS issue guidance regarding whether point-of-sale
chargebacks are included in calculations of AMP. Commenters who did not
want these chargebacks to be included in AMP calculations generally
recommended that such guidance explain that point-of-sale chargebacks
fit into one of several types of statutorily excluded discounts to AMP.
Another commenter posited that the Proposed Rule was ambiguous and
could allow a point-of-sale discount to be construed as a PBM or payor
concession, a pharmacy concession, or a direct-to-patient concession,
which could have AMP and Best Price implications.
With respect to the calculation of Best Price, a commenter stated
its position that point-of-sale chargebacks fall within an exemption to
Best Price. Other commenters raised concerns that removing the
protection for Medicaid supplemental rebates and moving toward point-
of-sale discounts would raise Best Price, which the commenters posited
would ultimately reduce the amount manufacturers pay in rebates under
the MDRP. Another commenter requested that OIG or HHS confirm whether,
and how, the final rule may affect existing regulations regarding the
calculations for the Medicaid fee-for-service program Federal Upper
Limit calculations as it relates to the formula for the National
Average Drug Acquisition Cost and the Cost to Dispense pharmacy
dispensing fee.
Response: The Department recognizes that the final rule has the
potential to affect calculations of AMP, Best Price, and Federal Upper
Limits in ways and to an extent that may be difficult to anticipate.
However, we are not finalizing the changes to the discount safe harbor
with respect to Medicaid MCOs. We reiterate that the final rule does
not alter obligations under the statutory provisions for Medicaid
prescription drug rebates under section 1927 of the Act, including AMP,
Best Price, and Federal Upper Limits.
[[Page 76677]]
Comment: A commenter asserted that brand-name manufacturers launch
authorized generics to lower a brand drug's AMP (and thus lower the
manufacturer's statutorily required discounts under the MDRP).
Response: We did not propose to alter obligations under the MDRP
and the issue raised by the commenters is out of scope of this final
rule.
Comment: Commenters raised concerns about the potential effects on
value-based arrangements in several Medicaid programs if the Proposed
Rule were to be finalized. Several commenters highlighted three value-
based contracting models that allow states to align supplemental
rebates with outcomes-based and value-based measures.
Response: We believe our decision not to finalize the changes to
the discount safe harbor with respect to Medicaid MCOs addresses the
commenters' concern.
Comment: A commenter requested that the Department clarify in the
final rule that entities that operate under contract with a state are
protected under the revised discount safe harbor. The commenter
provided an example of multi-state purchasing organizations that create
preferred drug lists, and the commenter explained that it is not clear
whether these entities would be protected under the revised discount
safe harbor because they are not ``states.''
Response: Because we are not moving forward with the proposed
changes to the discount safe harbor with respect to Medicaid MCOs, we
believe the commenter's concerns are addressed.
Comment: A commenter specifically requested that OIG clarify
whether the final rule would explicitly exclude Puerto Rico's Medicaid
rebate system from the amendment to the discount safe harbor, because
Puerto Rico's Medicaid program does not currently participate in the
MDRP.
Response: Because we are not moving forward with the proposed
changes to the discount safe harbor with respect to Medicaid MCOs, we
believe the commenter's concerns are addressed.
v. Commercial Market
Comment: Numerous commenters supported the extension of this
proposal to the commercial market, stating that plans and drug
companies will be motivated to maintain high list prices if rebate
arrangements continue to permeate the commercial market. According to
the commenters, the benefits associated with the proposal, such as
reduced out-of-pocket costs and improved access to medication, will be
limited if the proposal is not extended to the commercial market. For
example, a pharmaceutical-manufacturer commenter in favor of
eliminating rebates in the commercial sector explained that rebates and
discounts for its products have increased in Part D and the commercial
sector, even though the affordability of drugs continues to be a public
health issue. Another commenter was opposed to extending the provisions
of the Proposed Rule to the commercial market and stated that rebates
are an important tool used by PBMs to negotiate lower prices from drug
companies on behalf of employers and private health plans.
Response: The scope of the anti-kickback statute is limited to
remuneration that is offered, paid, solicited, or received in order to
induce or reward Federal health care program business. Commercial,
private pay, or self-pay arrangements that do not touch Federal health
care program beneficiaries in any manner do not implicate the Federal
anti-kickback statute (except in the context of swapping arrangements
or pull-through type arrangements in which discounts might be given
only on private pay business to induce the referral of Federal health
care program business). In other words, the anti-kickback statute
generally does not extend to arrangements involving purely commercial
business; as a result, it is beyond the scope of this rulemaking to
extend such safe harbors to the commercial market.
Comment: Several commenters supported future efforts to extend this
proposal to the commercial market but recommended ensuring successful
implementation of the rule in Medicare Part D before addressing rebates
in the commercial market. A commenter noted that the wholesale
conversion of both Federal health care programs and the commercial
market could cause confusion in the marketplace and disrupt patient
access to medications. Specifically, the commenter noted there would be
many new operational and system requirements for applying the point-of-
sale discount. In addition, the commenter explained that it is vital to
see how health plans may change their benefit designs in response to
the rule, which could include changes to formularies and greater cost
sharing, before this proposal is extended to the commercial market.
Response: Extension of the revised discount safe harbor and the two
new safe harbors to the commercial market is beyond the scope of this
rulemaking.
Comment: Several commenters asserted that if the Proposed Rule is
finalized, drug-related costs will shift to the commercial market, with
a commenter noting that employers may change plan offerings for
prescription drugs as a result of these increased costs, which could
harm individuals in private plans.
Response: Since the changes under the final rule may result in a
range of market responses, the Department respectfully disagrees that
drug-related costs will necessarily shift to the commercial market and
result in harm to individuals in private plans. Instead, the Department
expects that manufacturers will lower list prices, which could result
in lower costs across both the Part D and the commercial markets.
Comment: A commenter requested guidance on when rebates that are
offered to commercial plans, but not to Medicare or Medicaid, may
implicate the anti-kickback statute. Specifically, the commenter
requests acknowledgement that OIG rules relating to ``swapping'' do not
apply as long as there is no quid pro quo between a manufacturer price
concession offered on a plan's or PBM's commercial utilization and a
price concession offered on such a plan's or PBM's Federal health care
program utilization.
Another commenter raised concerns about the statements in the
Proposed Rule that indicated commercial rebates outside of Federal
health care programs tied to formulary placement across all plans,
including Federal health care programs, may not be protected by the
current discount safe harbor or proposed revisions. The commenter
claimed that this statement could have a chilling effect on
negotiations between private health plans and employers or individuals.
Other commenters expressed concern that if the conditions of safe
harbors included the Proposed Rule do not apply to the commercial
market, rebates in the commercial market could still be used to induce
the purchase of products reimbursed by Federal health care programs. To
address this concern, commenters recommended that the Department
clearly indicate that rebates in the commercial market will be
scrutinized to ensure that they are not being offered to influence the
purchase of products by Federal health care programs.
Response: While the anti-kickback statute is not implicated in
arrangements that involve only commercial, private pay, or self-pay
arrangements, we noted in the Proposed Rule that we have ``a long-
standing concern about arrangements that `carve out' referrals of
Federal health care
[[Page 76678]]
program beneficiaries or business generated by Federal health care
programs from otherwise questionable financial arrangements.'' \17\ We
would have similar concerns with arrangements that involve remuneration
offered under the guise of an arrangement limited to commercial-pay or
private-pay patients but is, in reality, part of a broader arrangement
to induce referrals of Federal health care program business or
patients. As we noted in our final rule published in 1999, ``such
`swapping' arrangements, which essentially shift costs to the Federal
health care programs, continue to be of concern to this office.'' \18\
In any of these circumstances, arrangements would need to be reviewed
for compliance with the anti-kickback statute, but whether a specific
arrangement constitutes a problematic swapping arrangement depends on
the facts and circumstances, and we decline to adopt the quid pro quo
standard suggested by a commenter. Individuals or entities are free to
request protection from sanctions under the anti-kickback statute for
specific arrangements through our advisory opinion process.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ 84 FR 2347.
\18\ 64 FR 63528.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: A commenter asserted that the Department should not
attempt to reform the current commercial market rebate system through
the anti-kickback statute and noted that due to the complexity of the
commercial market, any changes to the commercial market rebate system
should be undertaken carefully and incorporate feedback from a range of
stakeholders.
Response: As discussed above, the anti-kickback statute only
prohibits remuneration that is offered, paid, solicited, or received to
induce or reward Federal health care program business. The statute
generally is not implicated when the arrangements involve purely
private-pay business.
Comment: Several commenters noted that certain PBMs and insurers
have recently announced point-of-sale rebate sharing in the commercial
market, which may signify that the infrastructure and capacity to adopt
these reforms in the commercial market already exist. However, a
commenter indicated that these point-of-sale rebate benefit designs are
being offered at a higher premium than standard designs and that it is
too early to determine if enrollment in these options will be robust or
limited.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' insights into the dynamics
of this market. As we discuss above, we understand that some commercial
plans may be operationalizing point-of-sale benefit designs and, as the
commenters suggest, we believe that some industry stakeholders have the
capabilities to operationalize point-of-sale reductions in price that
would be protected under the new safe harbor.
vi. Value-Based Arrangements
Comment: Some commenters stated that value-based arrangements would
not neatly fit into the new safe harbor for point-of-sale reductions in
price because they typically rely on gathering data after the point of
sale and making payments after the point of sale. Commenters expressed
an interest in allowing value-based arrangements to be protected by a
safe harbor, stating that value-based arrangements provide an important
opportunity to address drug prices by paying the value of a drug if it
achieves the desired outcome, while paying a lower price if it does not
work. Other commenters expressed concern that if the changes to the
discount safe harbor are finalized but an exception is made so that
value-based arrangements continue to receive protection under the
discount safe harbor, parties might recast rebate arrangements that
otherwise would be prohibited as ``value-based arrangements'' in order
to continue to receive protection under the discount safe harbor.
Response: The Department recognizes the importance of value-based
contracting for prescription pharmaceutical products as an evolving
tool to improve quality of care and potentially reduce costs.\19\ Upon
reflection, we agree that not all value-based pharmaceutical
arrangements for Part D prescription drugs would fit into the revised
discount safe harbor or the new safe harbor for point-of-sale
reductions in price. We believe that some value-based arrangements
involving prescription pharmaceutical products might qualify for
protection under the new point-of-sale safe harbor but also could
qualify under other safe harbors (e.g., the personal services and
management contracts safe harbor, warranties safe harbor). To the
extent manufacturers wish to use the new point-of-sale safe harbor for
value-based arrangements, the reduction in price on prescription
pharmaceutical products must be in the form of a point-of-sale
discount. Any value-based arrangement (whether under Part D or another
Federal health care program) must be analyzed on a case-by-case basis
under the statute and with respect to available safe harbor protection.
With respect to the concern about recasting rebate arrangements as
value-based arrangements, we note that labeling an arrangement as
``value-based'' does not necessarily make it so, and any arrangement
(whether labeled as value-based or otherwise) must still comply with
all conditions of a safe harbor.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ See, e.g., 84 FR 55694, 55704 (Oct. 17, 2019).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: Some commenters expressed concern that excluding value-
based arrangements from the discount safe harbor may limit the
effectiveness of PBMs, plan sponsors, or other third parties that play,
or could play, a valuable role in designing effective prescription drug
programs, treatments, and therapies, and in ensuring drug manufacturers
are held accountable for certain outcomes-based metrics.
Response: We thank the commenters for raising these concerns. As
described above, the Department remains committed to promoting value-
based arrangements that have the potential to improve the quality of
care provided to beneficiaries while lowering overall costs to Federal
health care programs. The final rule does not prohibit those entities
highlighted by the commenters, including but not limited to PBMs and
plan sponsors under Part D, from being able to continue to negotiate
value-based arrangements with manufacturers that aim to achieve these
goals.
Comment: A commenter suggested that, because value-based
arrangements would remain within the safe harbor, value-based
arrangements will expand.
Response: As described above, we recognize that the changes to the
discount safe harbor may result in certain value-based arrangements no
longer being eligible for protection under the discount safe harbor.
However, the Department continues to encourage the development and
implementation of arrangements that work to transform the health care
system into one that better pays for value.
Comment: Several commenters expressed concern that the proposed
revision to the discount safe harbor, without further guidance from OIG
on its applicability to value-based arrangements, may deter, chill, or
impede drug manufacturers, PBMs, or plans from entering into,
developing, implementing, negotiating, or continuing under value-based
arrangements. Several commenters expressed concern about and described
examples of value-based arrangements that may implicate the anti-
kickback statute and not be protected under the safe harbors set forth
in the Proposed Rule. For example, under an outcomes-based arrangement,
drug manufacturers may or must, contractually, provide rebates or
refunds if a specific
[[Page 76679]]
medication is not effective--or not as effective as indicated--after an
individual has used the specific medication. The commenter then posited
that a point-of-sale discount would not be practical or possible
because the rebate or refund is contingent upon or influenced by a
specific outcome and is provided after the point of sale has already
occurred. Other commenters requested that OIG allow flexibility or
sufficient time after the effective date of the final rule for drug
manufacturers, PBMs, and plans to re-negotiate or terminate value-based
arrangements that may not satisfy the conditions of the proposed
revisions to the existing discount safe harbor or the new safe harbor
at 42 CFR 1001.952(cc). Another commenter expressed concern that, even
if value-based arrangements are protected under the proposed amendments
to the discount safe harbor and the proposed new safe harbor for point-
of-sale reductions in price, drug manufacturers may be deterred from
offering certain discounts if competitors know or can determine each
other's discount values.
Response: Value-based arrangements, like all arrangements that
implicate the anti-kickback statute, must be analyzed on a case-by-case
basis. We agree with commenters that not all value-based pharmaceutical
arrangements for Part D prescription drugs may qualify for protection
under the revised discount safe harbor or the new safe harbor for
point-of-sale reductions in price. As we note above, other safe harbors
could apply, such as the personal services and management contracts
safe harbor or warranties safe harbor. The fact that an arrangement
does not fit in a safe harbor does not mean it is necessarily unlawful.
The terms of a particular arrangement would drive whether the anti-
kickback statute is implicated and any safe harbor that might apply. We
remind stakeholders seeking protection for value-based arrangements
that the advisory opinion process remains available. Concerns about the
effective date and transparency are addressed elsewhere in this
preamble.
Comment: Another commenter requested that OIG clarify whether the
revised discount safe harbor and/or the safe harbor for GPOs would, in
appropriate circumstances, protect value-based contracting between
manufacturers and healthcare institutions or wholesalers/distributors,
such as contractual arrangements with hospitals and integrated delivery
networks.
Response: Whether the GPO safe harbor is appropriate for value-
based contracting is beyond the scope of this rulemaking. Whether a
value-based arrangement could use the GPO safe harbor would be a fact-
specific determination.
vii. Enforcement Issues
Comment: In discussing the operational challenges of implementing
the Proposed Rule, several commenters noted that it would create a new
regulatory structure and that any mistakes are subject to criminal
penalties under the anti-kickback statute. According to a commenter,
this risk may prevent stakeholders from proceeding with implementation.
As an example, the commenter explained that pharmacies may not
operationalize the chargeback proposal because of potential liability
under the anti-kickback statute.
Response: Compliance with a safe harbor is voluntary, and
arrangements that do not comply with a safe harbor--because of mistakes
or otherwise--are analyzed based on their facts and circumstances. The
failure to meet the conditions of a new safe harbor does not
automatically subject one to criminal penalties. The anti-kickback
statute is an intent-based statute; mere errors or mistakes would not
trigger concerns absent other facts evidencing unlawful intent to
induce referrals. In addition, as with our other safe harbors, the
advisory opinion process remains available for parties that seek to
determine if an arrangement or proposed arrangement satisfies the
criteria of the safe harbor.
Comment: A commenter recommended that OIG work with several
agencies, including the DOJ and the FTC, to develop guidance for the
industry with respect to a final rule. The commenter explained that
this guidance is particularly important as it renegotiates contracts in
order to avoid possible civil and criminal penalties. As one example,
the commenter requested guidance on various types of swapping
arrangements. Another commenter asked for affirmative guidance from OIG
on a number of enforcement-related topics. For example, the commenter
requested that OIG declare in the final rule that it expects industry-
wide compliance with the anti-kickback statute with respect to the
reductions in price and service fee arrangements covered under the new
safe harbors. The commenter also asked OIG to state that it will
subject PBMs to heightened scrutiny for any arrangements conditioned on
formulary placement that do not fit within the new safe harbors.
Response: The Department regularly collaborates with our government
partners, as appropriate. Any requests for the Secretary to issue sub-
regulatory guidance jointly with other agencies or to issue affirmative
guidance is outside the scope of this safe harbor rulemaking. OIG
publishes guidance from time to time on its web page.
OIG agrees with the commenter that the proper question is whether
entities are in compliance with the anti-kickback statute; we
reiterate, however, that compliance with a safe harbor is voluntary.
Any arrangement that implicates the anti-kickback statute and does not
satisfy an exception or safe harbor would be subject to scrutiny; as
discussed in more detail below, we reiterate our concern about any kind
of payment to buy or provide remuneration tied to formulary placement
that is not a safe harbored reduction in price.
Comment: Several pharmaceutical manufacturer commenters raised
concerns with respect to PBMs' response to the new safe harbor, stating
that PBMs may take aggressive positions on interpretations of the anti-
kickback statute or the new safe harbors and require manufacturers to
accept that legal position to access the PBMs' beneficiaries. For
example, the commenters stated that a PBM might interpret the anti-
kickback statute to permit rebates to PBMs or might take the position
that safe harbor compliance is not required.
Response: With respect to the commenters' concerns surrounding
PBMs' interpretation of changes to the safe harbor provisions, we
emphasize that, while compliance with the terms of a safe harbor is
voluntary, an arrangement is protected only if all conditions of a safe
harbor are met. We want to take this opportunity to confirm our
position, as stated in the preamble to the Proposed Rule, that any
portion of a payment (whether it is called a ``rebate'' or something
else) that a manufacturer pays to a PBM that is retained by the PBM and
not passed through to the buyer never was protected under the discount
safe harbor.\20\ The discount safe harbor protects a reduction in price
to a buyer. A PBM is not a buyer, and the portion of a payment from a
manufacturer to a payor that is retained by a PBM is not a reduction in
price. Dating back to the 1991 Final Rule,\21\ we have made a
distinction between (i) fees that would fall under personal services
contracts and (ii) discounts; a discount is a reduction in price, not
payment for a service. Payments to a PBM for services could be
protected under other safe
[[Page 76680]]
harbors if all relevant safe harbor conditions are met.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ 84 FR 2343 n.36.
\21\ 56 FR 35952.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
PBMs can provide valuable services for health plans and
manufacturers and can be compensated for those services. To the extent
such compensation implicates the anti-kickback statute, it can be
structured to comply with a safe harbor (such as the personal services
and management contracts safe harbor or new PBM service fee safe
harbor). However, we note generally that we would have significant
concerns with arrangements for services that are not necessary, are
worthless, or are duplicative and that operate as shams designed to
reward a party for referrals of Federal health care program items or
services; these concerns apply with equal force to both the payor and
the recipient of remuneration, and our approach to enforcement has and
will, as business practices and incentives evolve, continue to reflect
that. Such arrangements would not be protected under any safe harbor.
Comment: Several commenters requested that OIG engage in some type
of enforcement discretion during implementation of a final rule, with a
commenter citing to the final rules in 1991 and 1999 as examples of
instances where the Department has considered enforcement discretion. A
commenter suggested that, if the rule is finalized, OIG should issue a
statement of non-enforcement for a period of two years because Part D
bids will be based on safe harbor rules in effect at the time of the
bids, while the plans may operate under different safe harbors in the
plan year. A commenter requested that OIG publish a policy statement
that it will not enforce the anti-kickback statute where PBMs serve as
point-of-sale chargeback administrators that implement the point-of-
sale discounts. Another commenter asked that the Department permit the
distribution of rebates where the terms of the rebate arrangement were
set prior to January 1, 2020.
Response: As explained elsewhere in this final rule, the amendments
to the discount safe harbor at Sec. 1001.952(h)(5) do not take effect
until January 1, 2022. We recognize that many parties have previously
structured their arrangements based on the advice of an attorney and in
good-faith belief that their arrangements were legal under the discount
safe harbor, and any arrangements that comply with that safe harbor
remain protected until that effective date. The new safe harbor for
point-of-sale reductions in price will be effective and available for
use 60 days after publication of this final rule. The Department
encourages parties to use the new safe harbor as rapidly as possible.
We are not issuing an enforcement discretion policy given the length of
time parties have under the final rule to come into compliance with the
amended safe harbor. We also decline to adopt the commenter's
suggestion to exercise enforcement discretion where PBMs serve as
point-of-sale chargeback administrators that implement the point-of-
sale discounts.
viii. State Law Issues
Comment: Several commenters raised concerns about various state
laws, such as state trade secrets or privacy laws, that could be
implicated by the Proposed Rule.
Response: We are not in a position to respond to comments on state
laws. As we stated in our 1991 rulemaking, ``[i]ssues of state law are
completely independent of the federal anti-kickback statute and these
[safe harbors]. . . . Thus, conduct that is lawful under the federal
anti-kickback statute or [safe harbors] may still be illegal under
State law.'' \22\ Similarly, state laws governing trade secrets or
privacy issues are outside the scope of this rulemaking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ 56 FR 35957.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ix. Other Legal Issues
Comment: Some commenters raised Administrative Procedure Act (APA)
concerns. For example, a commenter urged the Department to adhere to
the duty to review and take into account public comments received.
Another commenter stated that the Proposed Rule fails to provide clear
examples of the harm that it would remediate. In particular, the
commenter claimed that the rule describes a policy rationale, but it
does not explain what type of ``inducement'' the Proposed Rule would
prevent. A commenter suggested that aspects of the Proposed Rule do not
meet the APA's requirement to include sufficient detail to allow for
meaningful comment. For example, the commenter stated that the preamble
does not provide enough detail to explain how chargebacks would work so
that industry stakeholders can meaningfully comment.
Response: The Department reviewed all comment letters, took into
account all relevant public comments, and considered relevant impacts
and program integrity concerns in developing this final rule. With
respect to the questions set forth by commenters about the substantive
sufficiency of the Proposed Rule, we respectfully disagree. Discounts
of any kind serve as an inducement to purchase an item or service, and
the anti-kickback statute specifies that a ``rebate'' is a form of
inducement. The Proposed Rule sets forth the authority from Congress
for establishing or modifying safe harbors, two of which include an
increase or decrease in access to healthcare services and any other
factors that the Secretary deems appropriate in the interest of
preventing fraud and abuse in Federal health care programs.\23\ The
Proposed Rule extensively describes the problematic incentives with the
current rebate system, including, but not limited to, the incentive to
include higher-priced prescription drugs on formularies to capture
larger rebates and the impact of higher list prices on
beneficiaries.\24\ In other sections of the Proposed Rule, such as the
discussion of ``chargebacks'' that a commenter referenced, we not only
made specific proposals but we also solicited comments on a number of
issues. In fact, we received detailed and meaningful comments on
chargebacks from almost 50 commenters, to which we respond elsewhere in
this final rule. We did not include in the proposed safe harbor overly
technical requirements about the administration of the chargeback
process in order to provide private parties with the flexibility to
design these systems, while offering numerous opportunities to comment.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ 84 FR 2345.
\24\ See, e.g., 84 FR 2340-44.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: Some commenters alleged that the Proposed Rule is
arbitrary and capricious for a variety of reasons. For example, a
commenter asserted that the Proposed Rule is arbitrary and capricious
because it treats similar situations differently by continuing to
protect rebates in Medicare Parts A and B without an adequate
explanation. A commenter also asserted that there is not a rational
connection between the concerns identified in the Proposed Rule and the
proposed changes to the safe harbors. In support of this claim, the
commenter asserted that a stated objective of the Proposed Rule is to
reduce government program costs, but the regulatory impact analysis
shows that costs will rise and noted that the rule expresses concern
for beneficiary out-of-pocket costs while the impact analysis predicts
increased beneficiary premiums. This commenter also claimed the
proposed rule was asserting contradictory purposes in seeking to reduce
the spread between list and net prices while also seeking to replace
rebates from manufacturers to PBMs with discounts provided to
beneficiaries at the point of sale. Another commenter expressed concern
that the Proposed Rule may be arbitrary and capricious because, in the
commenter's view,
[[Page 76681]]
significant impacts, consequences, and results were overlooked or
discarded in developing the Proposed Rule, such as potential effects on
future enrollment in Part D and Medicaid MCOs, possible impacts on MCO-
negotiated supplemental rebates and the antitrust implications of up-
front discount negotiations. A commenter suggested that estimates of
the time entities will spend updating systems to comply with the rule
was underestimated.
Response: We believe the changes to the safe harbor protections
that we are finalizing here are a reasonable and appropriate response
to address harmful effects of rebates on beneficiaries in Medicare Part
D and other Federal health care programs and will help to ensure that
safe harbor protection is available only for non-abusive arrangements
that are transparent and reflect an alignment of incentives among plan
sponsors, manufacturers, beneficiaries, and the government. We
appreciate the concern that the changes we proposed could be construed
as treating similar situations differently by removing protection for
rebates in some Federal health care programs but not others. However,
this characterization disregards the fact that many safe harbors,
including the discount safe harbor, differentiate between the
protection afforded to arrangements involving different Federal health
care programs in order to target protection to non-abusive
arrangements. The Proposed Rule was developed in response to certain
abusive rebate arrangements that have been identified in the specific
context of Medicare Part D, and therefore the proposal was structured
to remove protection for those abusive arrangements. Moreover, we
solicited comments on whether the amendment also should apply to
prescription pharmaceutical products payable under other Federal health
care programs.\25\ As we discuss elsewhere in this final rule,
commenters agreed that the amendment should not be expanded to other
programs. Accordingly, we concluded that the amendment should not be
expanded to other programs. In particular, as explained above, we are
not finalizing our proposal to apply the amendment to Medicaid MCOs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ 84 FR 2347.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Similarly, we believe the final rule rationally and effectively
advances the regulatory goals of transparency and ``alignment of
incentives.'' \26\ Specifically, the rule addresses the problem that
rebate arrangements among Part D plan sponsors, pharmacy benefit
managers, and pharmaceutical manufacturers are not transparent to the
government or beneficiaries and incentivize higher list prices for
drugs contrary to the interests of the Federal health care programs or
beneficiaries. Accordingly, we proposed to eliminate the existing safe
harbor protection for those abusive arrangements. We disagree that
there is any conflict between seeking to lower list prices and
concurrently working to ensure that any negotiated reductions to the
list prices of drugs are provided in the form of discounts to
beneficiaries at the point of sale. As discussed in the Proposed Rule,
the current rebate framework for prescription pharmaceutical products
does not appear to translate into lower Medicare per beneficiary
spending on prescription drugs, when age and inflation are accounted
for. The existing structure may be one of the factors driving list
prices higher, which harms patients and Federal health care programs.
The final rule directly addresses these issues.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ 84 FR 2343-44.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Likewise, we disagree with the commenter who suggested that we
ignored or disregarded certain impacts of the proposed changes to safe
harbor protection for rebates. In the Proposed Rule, we expressly
identified and solicited comment on the potential impacts of our
proposals in the areas the commenter alleged we overlooked, including
potential effects on future enrollment in Part D and Medicaid MCOs,
possible impacts on MCO-negotiated supplemental rebates, and the
antitrust implications of up-front discount negotiations. Furthermore,
as discussed elsewhere in this final rule, we have taken commenters'
feedback into account and have made adjustments to our proposals to
ensure that in each of these areas, the impact of the policies adopted
in this final rule is not inconsistent with the Department's policy
goals, including by narrowing the scope of the amendment to the
existing discount safe harbor to allow for continued safe harbor
protection of rebate arrangements between manufacturers and Medicaid
MCOs.
Comment: Some commenters questioned OIG's authority to promulgate
this rule because commenters suggested that the resulting rule would
conflict with other Federal laws. For example, a commenter asserted
that the Secretary is proposing a rule under one section of the Act
that the commenter contends conflicts with another section of the Act,
and in doing so it violates a tenet of administrative law (that an
agency exceeds its authority when it promulgates a regulation that
conflicts with a Federal statute). Another commenter asserted that even
if section 1102 of the Act allows the Secretary to interpret terms in a
criminal statute, such authority is limited to establishing rules
consistent with the Act. This commenter stated that the Proposed Rule
is inconsistent with the statutory discount exception and with
statutory provisions governing Part D that are within the Act.
Response: We respond to comments highlighting differences between
the Proposed Rule and specific statutes elsewhere in this rule. In
general, however, we note that the safe harbor regulations are
voluntary. Individuals and entities that choose to comply with a
particular safe harbor have assurance that their business practice will
not be subject to an anti-kickback enforcement action. However, the
safe harbor regulations ``impose[] no requirements on anyone'' and
therefore do not put stakeholders in a position where they cannot
comply with both a safe harbor and a Federal law.
Comment: Certain commenters highlighted specific Federal statutes
with which they claim the proposed changes conflict and suggested that
the statutes would control. For example, a commenter stated that
Congress recognized when enacting the Medicare Prescription Drug,
Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003 (MMA) that ``price
concessions, such as discounts, . . . [and] rebates'' were important
factors with respect to providing Part D coverage. Because the MMA
specifically allows for different types of price concessions, the
commenter asserted that the Department does not have the authority to
require that all manufacturer price concessions be passed on at the
point of sale. Another commenter noted that the MMA was enacted decades
after the anti-kickback statute and includes several references to
rebates in the Part D program and, as such, if there was a conflict in
the Part D statute and the anti-kickback statute, then Part D's
approval of rebates would control, both because it is more specific and
because it was later-enacted. Several commenters stated that the
proposed changes to the discount safe harbor directly conflict with the
Part D program's statutory definition of ``negotiated price.''
Commenters stated that CMS has consistently interpreted the definition
of ``negotiated price'' and related Part D disclosure requirements as
permitting Part D sponsors to choose how much of the price concessions
they negotiate with manufacturers would be passed through to
beneficiaries. A commenter stated that Congress confirmed CMS's
interpretation in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care
[[Page 76682]]
Act (PPACA) when it established the Coverage Gap Discount Program,
which defines ``negotiated price'' to include rebates that the Part D
sponsor has elected to pass through at the point of sale.
Response: For reasons stated elsewhere in this final rule, we
disagree that the amendment of the safe harbor regulations conflicts
with other Federal statutes. As stated previously, the safe harbor
regulations impose no requirements and do not mandate any particular
behavior, and thus do not conflict with other laws. The Department
acknowledges that the Part D statute references manufacturer rebates
and that CMS has viewed manufacturer rebates as an important factor in
Part D sponsors' provision of the Part D benefit. However, it does not
follow that because the Part D statute contemplates, and the Part D
program historically has involved, manufacturer rebates, such rebates
are always legitimate. Similarly, neither the statutory definition of
``negotiated price'' enacted in the MMA nor the subsequent adoption of
another definition of ``negotiated price'' in the PPACA have any
bearing on whether manufacturer rebates pose a risk of program abuse.
As noted elsewhere in this rule, in recent years manufacturer rebates
have become problematic.
It would be unreasonable to construe the Part D statute to permit
under the anti-kickback statute rebates that the Secretary has
determined pose a risk of program abuse pursuant to authority under the
anti-kickback statute simply because they are mentioned in the Part D
statute. Therefore, comments contending that the Part D statute
``controls'' are unpersuasive. The Part D statute does not--either
expressly or by implication--limit the Secretary's authority to
establish and revise safe harbors to curb rebating practices that the
Secretary determines are abusive to Federal health care programs and
beneficiaries.
Comment: Certain commenters claim that aspects of the Proposed Rule
conflict with OIG guidance documents. For example, a commenter was
concerned that the language in the point-of-sale reduction in price
safe harbor requiring that the reduction in price must be completely
applied to the price of the prescription pharmaceutical product charged
to the beneficiary at the point of sale could lead manufacturers to
apply the entire rebate to a beneficiary's cost sharing, which is
contrary to OIG guidance on the use of coupons. Similarly, a commenter
requested that the final rule preserve certain pricing exclusions, for
example, the value of manufacturer-sponsored drug discount card
programs, manufacturer coupons, manufacturer copayment assistance
programs, and manufacturer-sponsored programs providing free goods if
the benefit is not contingent on other purchases, which are excluded
from AMP, Average Sales Price, and Best Price reporting. Other
commenters cited the 2003 Compliance Program Guidance for
Pharmaceutical Manufacturers,\27\ noting that this guidance implicitly
acknowledges that price reductions can be contingent on formulary
placement by explicitly stating that lump sum payments for formulary
placement would be subject to scrutiny. A commenter also stated that
OIG has not previously challenged the practice of conditioning
discounts on formulary placement. Another commenter noted that the use
of formulary position to negotiate reductions in price is a long-
recognized practice by plans.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ 68 FR 23731 (May 5, 2003).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Response: We thank the commenters for their insights. In this final
rule we have revised the language of the safe harbor to clarify what we
meant in the Proposed Rule when we said that the reduction in price
must be completely reflected in the price the pharmacy charges the
beneficiary at the point of sale. As we further explain elsewhere, this
language was not intended to permit a beneficiary to have cost sharing
waived or for the beneficiary to receive the entire dollar value of a
discount (unless the beneficiary is in the deductible phase and
responsible for paying the full cost of the drug). Our intent was for
the reduction in price to be applied to the price of the drug upon
which any beneficiary cost sharing is calculated. The issues related to
AMP, ASP, and Best Price, and linking reductions in price to formulary
placement are addressed elsewhere in this preamble.
Comment: Certain commenters cited to fundamental rules of fairness
or generally urged OIG to acknowledge that the principles set out in
the Proposed Rule are a change in law and would apply only
prospectively. A commenter noted that OIG states in the Proposed Rule
that many financial arrangements would ``no longer'' meet the discount
safe harbor and that OIG has well-documented its awareness of rebates
paid to PBMs. Another commenter stated that the Proposed Rule is an
abrupt change in our longstanding interpretation of the statutory
exception.
Response: We agree with commenters and acknowledge that the
revisions to the discount safe harbor are a change with respect to
certain rebates that the discount safe harbor at Sec. 1001.952(h) will
no longer protect. Enforcement of these changes would be prospective.
However, as explained elsewhere in this final rule, not all payments
labeled ``rebates'' are (or ever were) reductions in price. We address
the statutory exception in section III.B.i below.
Comment: A commenter asserted that an agency's narrowing of
protected conduct, resulting in expansion of criminal conduct, is not
authorized and is impermissible. To the extent there is ambiguity, the
commenter noted that the Rule of Lenity should apply and resolve
ambiguity in favor of a defendant. The commenter cited to a Supreme
Court case that held that ``criminal laws are for courts, not for the
Government, to construe.''
Response: Revisions to the discount safe harbor at Sec.
1001.952(h) do not expand the scope of the anti-kickback statute or
remove protections offered under the statutory exceptions.
Comment: A commenter suggested that the Proposed Rule requires
disclosure of rebates and price information and that such disclosure
and potential for the public to access the information eliminates the
value of these trade secrets, thus extinguishing a property right.
Therefore, compliance with the Proposed Rule without compensation would
violate the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment. Similarly, a
commenter stated that any proposal that requires even a specific
portion of manufacturer rebates to be passed through at the point of
sale would expose confidential information in direct violation of the
Trade Secrets Act.
Response: As a threshold matter, we reiterate that safe harbors
were intended to evolve with changes in the health care industry, are
voluntary, and do not require any party to take any action, including
any disclosure of rebate or pricing information. Therefore, no property
right is being extinguished and this final rule does not implicate the
Takings Clause. Moreover, even for parties seeking to comply with the
point-of-sale reduction in price safe harbor, we fail to see how the
Trade Secrets Act at 18 U.S.C. 1905 would be implicated. That law
prohibits certain Federal officers or employees from disclosing certain
types of information received through the course of their employment or
official duties, except where authorized by law. Nothing about this
safe harbor requires disclosure of rebates or pricing information to a
Federal agency, so the law would not be implicated.
[[Page 76683]]
Comment: A commenter expressed concern that the chargeback system
set forth in the Proposed Rule might incentivize manufacturers to deal
only with a subset of pharmacies who agree to contract terms that are
more stringent than what safe harbor compliance would require. The
commenter noted that this would limit the effect of the any willing
pharmacy provisions of the Part D program.
Response: Nothing about this final rule exempts any party from
complying with other legal obligations, including any willing pharmacy
provisions. We further note the point-of-sale reduction in price safe
harbor requires that the reduction in price be completely reflected at
the time the pharmacy dispenses it to the beneficiary.
Comment: Some commenters requested that we implement procedures
outside of the advisory opinion process where parties can request
interpretive guidance regarding the new safe harbors.
Response: We decline to implement procedures for parties to request
individualized interpretive guidance related to the new safe harbors.
OIG periodically issues materials (e.g., special advisory bulletins,
special fraud alerts) that provide guidance on compliance with Federal
health care program standards to relevant stakeholders.
x. Formularies
c. Formulary Placement
Comment: We received a number of comments related in some way to
the Proposed Rule's statement that ``[r]ebates paid by drug
manufacturers to or through PBMs to buy formulary position are not
reductions in price.'' \28\ Several commenters stated that OIG's
assertion that rebates negotiated in exchange for formulary position do
not qualify as ``a discount or other reduction in price'' under the
statutory exception conflicts with the statutory exception and is
inconsistent with Federal price reporting rules and the agency's own
past statements. Commenters requested clear guidance on the extent to
which manufacturers and plans may consider formulary positioning and
other utilization management techniques in negotiating discounts under
the proposed point-of-sale reduction in price safe harbor, asserting
that negotiating point-of-sale discounts that are contingent on
formulary placement is an important tool for plans, or their PBMs,
under the new point-of-sale reduction in price safe harbor and would
provide an opportunity to lower patients' out-of-pocket expenses. A
commenter further requested that OIG clarify whether a reduction in
price for one drug contingent on formulary placement or other condition
related to another drug would be protected under the proposed safe
harbor, so long as the price reduction to patients applied at the
point-of-sale is consistent with, for example, the allocation
methodology used for price reporting purposes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ 84 FR 2340.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In contrast, other commenters recommended that OIG eliminate safe
harbor protection for point-of-sale reductions in price conditioned on
exclusive or preferred formulary placement when there are generic or
biosimilar competitors and for multi-year formulary arrangements that
preclude a plan sponsor or PBM from adding a generic or biosimilar to a
formulary. In particular, commenters requested that OIG preclude point-
of-sale discounts on a branded product in exchange for a plan not
covering a competing generic or biosimilar product or placing the
generic or biosimilar on the same or higher cost-sharing tier compared
to the brand.
Response: We recognize that some statements in the Proposed Rule
may have been misinterpreted, and we are taking this opportunity to
clarify that reductions in price given to Part D plan sponsors or
Medicaid MCOs that are conditioned on formulary placement of a
particular drug can qualify for protection under the new safe harbor
for point-of-sale reductions in price (and could have been protected
for Part D plan sponsors under the discount safe harbor, and can
continue to be protected under the discount safe harbor for Medicaid
MCOs if all safe harbor conditions are met). As noted by commenters, we
believe reductions in price contingent on formulary placement can
foster competition among manufacturers to the ultimate benefit of
beneficiaries and Federal health care programs, provided that safety
and efficacy considerations are not disregarded. Accordingly, under
this final rule, we confirm that point-of-sale reductions in price can
be conditioned on formulary placement and nonetheless qualify for
protection under the new safe harbor at Sec. 1001.952(cc), provided
that there are no required services (e.g., marketing or switching), and
all conditions of the safe harbor are met. Whether other arrangements
would be considered a ``service'' that would not be protected, such as
the scenario suggested by a commenter (conditioning a reduction in
price on a formulary not covering a competing drug), would be subject
to a case-by-case analysis.
Comment: Some commenters recommended prohibiting, through
additional safeguards in the proposed safe harbor for PBM Service Fees
or otherwise, drug manufacturers from tying any service fees or other
compensation paid to PBMs to formulary placement. A commenter
recommended this prohibition unless the compensation is paid by the
manufacturer in exchange for services a PBM performs on a
manufacturer's behalf to support the safe and effective use of
medicines, for example, through risk evaluation or mitigation
strategies. Another commenter recommended that OIG ensure payments for
chargeback processing related to point-of-sale reductions in price are
not disguised kickbacks related to formulary placement or exclusive
arrangements.
Response: We agree with the commenters' concern about linking PBM
service fees or point-of-sale chargeback administration fees to
formulary placement. As we stated in the 2003 Compliance Program
Guidance for Pharmaceutical Manufacturers (2003 CPG), ``[l]ump sum
payments for inclusion in a formulary or for exclusive or restricted
formulary status are problematic and should be carefully scrutinized.''
\29\ We reiterate here that any type of a ``fee'' (which would include
any payment retained by a PBM) is not a discount or other reduction in
price and therefore will not meet the discount safe harbor at Sec.
1001.952(h) or the new safe harbor for point-of-sale price reductions
at Sec. 1001.952(cc) if it is tied to formulary placement. Similarly,
the PBM service fee safe harbor protects fees for services that PBMs
provide to manufacturers; developing a formulary is a service that a
PBM provides to a plan. Therefore, those fees cannot be tied to
formulary placement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ Office of Inspector General, OIG Compliance Program
Guidance for Pharmaceutical Manufacturers, 68 FR 23726, 23731 (May
5, 2003), available at https://oig.hhs.gov/authorities/docs/03/050503FRCPGPharmac.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
d. Impact on Formulary
Comment: Several commenters raised concerns relating to narrow
formularies, with a commenter noting that plans may look for ways to
minimize some of the cost increases caused by the loss of rebates by
moving to exclusive contracts with manufacturers where only one
manufacturer will be on the formulary in exchange for keeping discount
levels stable. Another commenter posited that higher-cost prescription
drugs may be placed on higher tiers or removed from formularies
altogether.
[[Page 76684]]
Several commenters predicted that it could take several years
following the rule's implementation before formularies stabilize, while
other commenters noted that the possibility of major formulary changes
should be an essential aspect of any impact analysis and considered
before the rule is finalized.
Response: OIG does not administer the Part D program; this
responsibility lies with CMS. We are informed by CMS that they have and
will diligently oversee a robust formulary review process to ensure
sufficient inclusion of all necessary Part D drug categories or classes
for Medicare beneficiaries. As part of this review, CMS assesses the
adequacy of a Part D sponsor's formulary drug categories and classes
along with the plan's formulary drug list to ensure that the formulary
offers an appropriate range of Part D drugs.\30\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ 79 FR 1918, 1939 (Jan. 10, 2014).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: Another commenter asserted that the forced application of
point-of-sale reductions in price to brand drugs may lead beneficiaries
to use more expensive brand drugs instead of generics. The commenter
indicated that not only will this increase overall program costs and
disrupt efforts to promote the use of generics, but it may incentivize
plans to minimize the opportunity for brand drugs to capitalize on this
circumstance by developing narrower formularies with fewer brand drugs.
Response: First, we reiterate that safe harbors are voluntary and
do not mandate any conduct. In particular, the new safe harbor for
point-of-sale reductions in price provides a pathway to protect certain
types of price reductions, but it does not require price reductions.
Second, the final rule does not affect other drug utilization tools
that plans have at their disposal, such as moving generics to a lower
tier or moving brands to higher tiers. Furthermore, sponsors have an
incentive to promote utilization of the lower net cost drug, regardless
of whether the drug is a generic or brand. Reductions in price applied
at the point-of-sale will remove an incentive for plan sponsors to game
rebates in their bidding, as well as create an incentive for plans to
include more generic drugs of equal safety and efficacy on their
formularies.
Comment: A commenter indicated that under the Proposed Rule, Part D
plans could further reduce or even eliminate their use of fixed
copayments since simply converting all of their cost sharing to
coinsurance may make it considerably easier to pass through rebates at
the point of sale and ensure compliance with the changes included in
the Proposed Rule. This shift, the commenter further contended, would
directly expose beneficiaries to drug manufacturers' pricing and be
particularly problematic for beneficiaries taking brand drugs without a
rebate.
Response: We appreciate commenters' concern that there could be a
transition to coinsurance for more drugs. Nothing in this final rule
compels plans to discontinue their use of copayments, which many
consumers prefer; further, upfront discounts on drugs subject to
copayments can comply with the final point-of-sale safe harbor, so long
as the discounts are reflected in the point-of-sale price the
beneficiary is paying and accounted for when setting the copayment
amount at the time of bidding. Comments related to CMS's administration
of the Part D program are outside the scope of this rulemaking.
However, CMS has indicated that actuarial equivalence requirements in
the Part D program may require that plans adjust copayment amounts when
setting them at the time bids are submitted to reflect discounts under
the point-of-sale safe harbor. Additionally, for beneficiaries taking
brand drugs with a rebate, it is possible that the coinsurance amount
for some highly rebated drugs may be very close to the current
copayment amount and that even patients in plans with no deductibles
and paying only copayments could save as a result of this final rule.
When accounting for the trends in utilization and costs by phase for
Part D beneficiaries taking high-cost drugs with high rebates, these
analyses also suggest it is likely that beneficiaries taking high-cost,
high-rebate drugs in copayment-based plans will see a decrease in their
overall out-of-pocket costs.
Comment: Another commenter discussed the impact of the Proposed
Rule on those with rare diseases. Noting that manufacturers have less
of an incentive to offer rebates to secure placement on a formulary for
therapies for rare diseases since these treatments have fewer competing
products, and that within the context of Medicare, many rare disease
therapies fall within the six protected classes that must be included
on a formulary, the commenter asserted that as a result, there is
limited use of rebates for rare disease therapies, so any benefits
expected under the Proposed Rule would be diluted for patients on these
treatments.
Response: As stated in the Proposed Rule, we understand that
beneficiaries using high-cost drugs in protected classes may be less
likely to benefit from a reduced pharmacy purchase price, because
manufacturers generally offer low or no rebates to plans for these
drugs, since drugs in protected classes must be included on Part D plan
formularies.\31\ While we also recognize that manufacturers generally
do not offer rebates on drugs where there are no competing products,
the Proposed Rule was only intended to address circumstances where
rebates are used. Furthermore, the Department believes that reductions
in price that are completely reflected in the price of the prescription
pharmaceutical product at the time the pharmacy dispenses it to the
beneficiary may also benefit consumers in poorer health or with higher
drug costs who are on treatments where rebates are used by decreasing
their out-of-pocket spending at the pharmacy. The Department also
believes that the enhanced transparency of premiums and out-of-pocket
costs that the safe harbor encourages will support beneficiaries in
making more actuarially sound decisions.\32\ Thus, while the final rule
may have a differing impact on certain patient groups, the Department
believes many patients will experience benefits.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ 84 FR 2358 (Feb. 6, 2019).
\32\ 84 FR 2355 (Feb. 6, 2019).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: A health plan commenter requested that Medicare Advantage
and Medicare Part D plan sponsors have the ability to temporarily
exclude all new, high-cost medications from coverage formularies for at
least six months. According to the commenter, this approach prevents
pharmaceutical manufacturers from driving any utilization before
appropriate price concessions are negotiated to better reflect the new
drug's actual clinical value.
Response: Recommendations to change Part D program rules are beyond
the scope of this rulemaking.
Comment: Various commenters recommended that following the
implementation of the final rule, CMS actively monitor formulary
changes and utilization management protocols in order to prevent
patient discrimination and to ensure patients are able to access needed
treatments. Several commenters noted that the Proposed Rule, in
conjunction with previously proposed changes to allow greater
utilization management for the six protected classes of drugs within
Medicare Part D, could result in restrictions that would interrupt care
regimens for those with certain diseases.
A commenter noted that as a requirement for formulary approval, the
[[Page 76685]]
MMA requires that the Secretary of HHS cannot find that a plan's
categorization system discourages enrollment by a group of
beneficiaries. This commenter also recommended various guardrails that
CMS should consider when evaluating formularies under this proposal,
including tracking formularies for increases in product exclusions due
to the heightened potential for adverse selection, aligning formularies
to existing clinical guidelines, including a wide range of drug
treatments on formularies, and monitoring formularies for significant
changes from copay to coinsurance.
Response: We have coordinated with CMS, which administers the Part
D program, in promulgating this rule. We agree that it is critically
important that patients' access to needed treatments be protected, that
patients not be discriminated against, that patients receive critical
care uninterrupted, and that plans not discourage enrollment
impermissibly. Plans should comply with all Part D rules and take
appropriate actions to guard their enrollees against these harms. We
are informed by CMS that they have and will diligently use a robust
formulary review and approval process, which entails in-depth checks to
ensure sufficient inclusion of all necessary Part D drug categories or
classes for Medicare beneficiaries, preventing discriminatory benefit
designs. As part of this review, CMS assesses the adequacy of a Part D
sponsor's formulary drug categories and classes along with the plan's
formulary drug list to ensure that the formulary offers an appropriate
range of Part D drugs.\33\ The formulary review and approval process,
risk adjustment, and anti-discrimination rules each serve to mitigate
the incentive for health plans and PBMs to narrow prescription benefits
for vulnerable populations and to discourage enrollment among high-cost
patients.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ 79 FR 1918, 1939 (Jan. 10, 2014).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: In order to prevent narrower formularies and increased
cost sharing, a commenter recommended that in the next payment notice
for Medicare Part D plans, CMS include discussion of cost-sharing and
utilization management rules to ensure the changes included in the
final rule do not lead to violations of existing protections or result
in decreased access to necessary medicines.
Response: Suggestions for CMS to issue guidance in the next payment
notice are outside the scope of this rulemaking.
Comment: Other commenters discussed the influence of rebates on
formulary placement. A health plan commenter indicated that while net
prices factor into the overall value proposition of a drug, review of
clinical evidence is the essential first step of formulary development,
and a drug's clinical performance relates in this way to the potential
magnitude of a rebate, if any. Another health plan commenter stated
that rebates are only considered for drugs that are in competitive
classes, where two or more therapeutically similar or equivalent drugs
exist, and that in the overwhelming number of cases, plan
determinations regarding drug formulary treatment are well-justified by
the underlying drug characteristics and economics.
However, other commenters asserted our current rebate system may
result in PBMs placing more expensive products in a preferred formulary
position over less expensive equivalents and that eliminating rebates
would correct their impact on formulary design.
Other commenters discussed the influence of rebates on the
placement of biosimilars on formularies and asserted that PBMs
generally give preferred formulary placement not to the product with
the lowest list price, or to the product that provides the lowest cost
to the patients, but to the product that will provide the PBM with the
greatest rebate. These commenters stated that because of a biosimilar's
lower price, it may not have preferred placement on a formulary, which
can be particularly harmful to patients with chronic illnesses that
rely on biosimilars. Another commenter was concerned that the absence
of rebates, combined with the impacts of beneficiary cost-sharing
differences and Part D subsidies/program design, may make generic or
biosimilar drugs less lucrative to PBMs or plan sponsors, which could
result in Part D plans giving preferential or equivalent-tier placement
to higher-cost brand drugs.
Another commenter emphasized that decisions about which drugs are
chosen for formulary inclusion should be based upon the drug's
effectiveness, safety, and ease of administration, rather than
financial arrangements like rebates. Other commenters raised concerns
that PBMs lead to formulary disruptions.
Response: The Department agrees with commenters asserting that
clinical factors should be paramount in formulary development and with
commenters asserting that the current rebate system may result in more
expensive products or products offering PBMs the largest rebates
receiving preferred formulary placement, rather than products with
lower list prices or lower costs to beneficiaries. This concern about
inappropriate financial influence on formulary placement is an
important element of the Secretary's decision to finalize the Proposed
Rule. Nothing in this rule changes any Part D requirements with respect
to formularies, including which types of drugs should be included in a
formulary and criteria for including the drugs on the formulary. These
are matters for CMS under the Part D program. However, as we clarify
throughout this final rule, we agree with commenters' suggestion that
formulary placement may be a factor in determining the type or extent
of a reduction in price that may be available for a particular drug. As
we also clarify throughout this rule, any portion of a so-called
``rebate'' that was retained by a PBM was not and is not protected
under the discount safe harbor, nor will it be protected under the safe
harbor for point-of-sale reductions in price; such remuneration is a
payment for a service, not a reduction in price, for purposes of the
discount safe harbor.
Comment: Other commenters raised concerns relating to chargeback
services and formulary placement. A few commenters asked OIG to clarify
that when a third-party unrelated to a PBM is being paid to perform
point-of-sale chargeback administration services, PBMs cannot require
pharmaceutical manufacturers to pay chargeback administration fees,
chargeback adjudication fees, or similar service fees as a condition
for formulary placement or position, due to the potential chilling
effect on third-party chargeback administrators entering into the
market.
Response: Point-of-sale chargeback administration fees or similar
service fees would not be covered under the new safe harbor for point-
of-sale reductions in price at Sec. 1001.952(cc), regardless of
whether such fees are fair market value; however, payment for these
services might, depending on the facts and circumstances, be covered by
another safe harbor. We agree with the commenter that only the party
performing the point-of-sale chargeback administration should be paid
for that service. As explained elsewhere in this rule, payments to PBMs
for formulary placement, or any kind of payment for a service, are not
covered by either the discount safe harbor or the safe harbor for
point-of-sale reductions in price.
xi. Impact on List Price
Comment: Many commenters believed that removing rebates would
correct distorted incentives and lower list prices. These commenters
expect that
[[Page 76686]]
removing rebates and moving to upfront discounts will consolidate the
procurement process and lead to reduced costs, which could be passed on
to customers. These commenters also expected that manufacturers would
respond to added competitive pressures from plan sponsors with more
competitive pricing, and potentially introduce new drugs at lower price
points.
Response: We agree with commenters' suggestion that removing the
existing safe harbor and creating the two new safe harbors should
promote a more transparent and rational pharmaceutical market that may
reduce drug prices through competition.
Comment: Many commenters expressed concern that the rule would be
unlikely to lower list prices for new drugs or limit price increases
for existing drugs. These commenters felt that the rule would be more
likely to either increase drug prices or not significantly affect list
prices at all.
Response: We appreciate commenters' concern that the rule may not
lower list prices. There are a wide range of potential behavioral
changes from all parts of the prescription pharmaceutical product
supply chain. The amendment to the discount safe harbor removes the
positive incentives that come with higher list prices for
manufacturers, PBMs, and payors. With these incentives removed, and
with the incentive to get the drug for the lowest possible net price
retained, the Department believes it is likely that list prices will
decrease and price increases for existing drugs may be more limited.
Comment: Many other commenters expressed concern that the
expectation that the rule would result in lower list prices is not
supported by historical, economic, or competitive market analysis.
These commenters noted that there was not enough support for the
conclusion that rebates are the primary cause of high list prices and
that drug manufacturers have given no indication that they would lower
drug prices if the rule were finalized.
Response: We disagree with commenters' feedback that there is no
evidence that rebates are a primary cause of high list prices. Rebate
arrangements in the prescription drug supply chain have been cited as a
barrier to lowering drug costs.\34\ We also disagree that manufacturers
have given no indication that they would lower drug prices if the rule
were finalized.\35\ Finally, while we acknowledge that there are a
range of potential behavioral changes that could result from the rule,
we do not agree with the assumption that PBMs will start paying a
higher net price simply because of the transition from rebates to
point-of-sale discounts. PBMs and manufacturers already know the
current net prices that they have negotiated for drugs and PBMs have
proven to be extremely effective negotiators over the past 15 years.
Therefore, the Department expects PBMs to continue to work to get the
best possible deals for their customers, with one likely result being
lower list prices.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\34\ See, e.g., A perspective from our CEO: Gilead Subsidiary to
Launch Authorized Generics to Treat HCV. Gilead Pharmaceuticals,
available at https://www.gilead.com/news-and-press/companystatements/authorized-generics-for-hcv.
\35\ See Drug Pricing in America: A Prescription for Change,
Part II, Hearing Before the U.S. Senate Comm. on Finance (Feb. 26,
2019), available at https://www.finance.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/37143.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: Several commenters asserted that not only would the
Proposed Rule fail to lower list prices, but rebates do not contribute
to high list prices nor do they prevent manufacturers from lowering
prices. These commenters specifically argued that list price increases
are primarily driven by drug manufacturers' revenue and profit goals
and that rebates assist in keeping list prices from being even higher.
These commenters noted that list prices are increasing at a faster rate
for drugs with small rebates than for drugs with larger rebates.
Response: The Department believes rebates are an important driver
of increased list prices. Rebates and price protection payments
increase when list prices increase.\36\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ Pharmacy manufacturer rebate negotiation strategies: A
common ground for a common purpose. Milliman. Nov. 17, 2015.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: Many commenters remarked that the Proposed Rule contains
no mechanism to bring down list prices, and that absent additional
rulemaking, the changes included in the Proposed Rule would further
embolden manufacturers to keep prices high.
Response: We appreciate commenters' concern that the rule does not
have a mechanism to lower list prices. As discussed above, the
Department believes that rebates are a major driver of high list
prices, and that, by removing the incentives of the rebate system, PBMs
and payors will have a strong incentive to negotiate lower net prices
and manufacturers will lower list prices. The Department agrees with
the many commenters that commend the existing competitive market and
praise the effectiveness of PBMs as negotiators that have carefully
managed net prices. The amendment to the discount safe harbor should
add transparency to an extremely competitive market, which will
translate into lower list and net prices.
Comment: Several commenters suggested that high list prices and
drug costs would be better addressed through increased competition
among drug manufacturers. These commenters noted that most of the most
expensive drugs have no competition from other manufacturers and offer
no rebates. The commenters also noted that there are few meaningful
legal or economic restrictions on drug manufacturers' ability to set
and increase prices, arguing that drug manufacturers frequently engage
in anti-competitive behavior that must be addressed for list prices to
come down, such as securing longer periods of patent exclusivity and
pay-for-delay settlements.
Response: We agree with commenters that high list prices and drug
costs are an important issue that requires a multifaceted response. We
further agree that action taken to promote competition in the
prescription pharmaceutical product space has the potential to curb
rising drug prices. This final rule is one of many Department
initiatives that build on each other to lower list prices and reduce
out of pocket costs, as outlined in the American Patients First
blueprint.\37\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ American Patients First: The Trump Administration Blueprint
to Lower Drug Prices and Reduce Out-of-Pocket Costs, Dep't Health &
Human Servs. (May 2018), available at https://www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/AmericanPatientsFirst.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: Several other commenters remarked that because the safe
harbors and amendments included in the Proposed Rule would not apply to
commercial markets, list prices are not likely to be lowered. These
commenters noted that commercial markets represent a majority of the
U.S. drug market, and therefore, drug manufacturers have little
incentive to lower list prices where a majority of the industry would
remain unchanged.
Response: We acknowledge that the commercial market is not covered
by this final rule, and that there are a range of potential behavioral
responses as a result of this rule. While it is possible that the
market will respond by keeping rebates in the commercial market, as
commenters suggest, it is also possible that the commercial market will
follow the Medicare market without direct action. It may be difficult
to maintain a bifurcated market between commercial and Medicare Part D,
so plans may prefer to negotiate based on the same discount mechanism
for efficiency. We note that some commercial plans have already begun
to pass discounts on to
[[Page 76687]]
patients at the point of sale. While the commercial market is a larger
portion of U.S. spending on prescription pharmaceutical products than
Medicare, Medicare is an important part of the market and the
commercial market often tracks policies implemented in the Medicare
program. The Department believes it is likely that as parties change
their operating practices to comply with the safe harbors with respect
to Medicare Part D business, there may be a spillover effect on their
practices in the commercial market, and that list prices would decline
as a result.
Comment: A few commenters expressed skepticism that switching to
point-of-sale reductions in price would not translate to lower list
prices for various reasons, including: There is lack of meaningful
competition; intellectual property and Food and Drug Administration
laws empower monopolistic pricing; clinicians have a strong influence
over prescribing; coverage and reimbursement laws create price floors;
and the healthcare industry as a whole generally fails to assess
effective lower-cost alternative drugs.
Response: We agree with the commenters that there are a number of
complex factors that have led to high list prices for prescription
pharmaceutical products, and that the Department will have to use a
multifaceted approach that addresses many of these issues to
meaningfully lower list prices and reduce out-of-pocket costs for
patients. This final rule is addressing the incentives in the existing
rebate framework that drive up list prices while net prices stay
neutral or increase only slightly. The Department believes this is an
important and foundational step for other reforms that can help to
lower list prices and reduce out-of-pocket costs, as outlined in the
American Patients First blueprint. The Department will continue to
consider further reforms to address issues described by the commenters.
Comment: A commenter argued that the Proposed Rule seems to suggest
that HHS would prefer a lower list price drug with a net higher cost
over a drug with a lower net cost and that such a situation would
increase costs for both beneficiaries and taxpayers.
Response: We disagree. The Department expects that the net price of
prescription pharmaceutical products would largely be the same with
point-of-sale discounts as it has been through the use of rebates. The
Department expects that PBMs will continue to be effective negotiators
in a competitive market and does not see any reason why PBMs would
accept higher net prices. Instead, the Department expects that the rule
will result in lower list prices and lower out-of-pocket costs for
patients through point-of-sale reductions in price.
Comment: Several commenters expressed concern that because the MDRP
calculates mandatory rebates using the AMP of a product (which is
impacted by a product's list price), lower list prices could reduce
rebates states receive under this program.
Response: The Department recognizes that the final rule has the
potential to affect calculations of AMP in ways and to an extent that
may be difficult to anticipate. We reiterate that the final rule does
not alter obligations under the statutory provisions for Medicaid
prescription drug rebates under section 1927 of the Act, including AMP.
xii. Definitions
In the Proposed Rule, we asked for comments on the definitions that
are necessary to implement the new safe harbors. We received several
comments that we discuss below.
General Comments on Definitions
Comment: Many commenters suggest that a number of terms introduced
in the Proposed Rule, such as ``affiliate,'' ``negotiated price,''
``pharmacy negotiated price,'' ``fair market value,'' ``chargeback
administrators,'' ``administrative fees,'' and ``manufacturer reporting
requirements,'' must be more fully defined by the Administration to
ensure that operational changes that will be required by the Proposed
Rule are reflected in the common understanding of the rules for these
programs.
Response: We appreciate commenters' feedback on the terms that
require a definition to implement this final rule regulation. We
provide the definitions of the terms that are within the scope of this
rule below. We provide additional information on terms such as ``point-
of-sale chargebacks'' and ``value-based arrangements'' in other parts
of this rule. We believe this rule includes the necessary definitions
for affected entities to comply with the new safe harbors.
Pharmacy Benefit Manager
The Proposed Rule proposed to define ``pharmacy benefit manager''
as ``any entity that provides pharmacy benefits management on behalf of
a health benefits plan that manages prescription drug coverage.'' A
number of commenters provided feedback on the definition.
Comment: One commenter noted that health benefits plans may engage
PBMs to provide a limited suite of pharmacy benefits management
services, such as a limited authorization to provide rebate contracting
services on behalf of the plan. In addition, PBMs may be engaged to
provide services with regard to prescription drugs dispensed under the
medical benefit, such as physician administered drugs where a POS
discount could not be implemented, and thus, such engagements should
continue to be covered by the existing discount safe harbor. The
commenter recommended the following definition: ``For purposes of this
paragraph (h), the term pharmacy benefit manager or PBM means any
entity that provides pharmacy benefit management services, or a subset
thereof, to a prescription benefit plan.''
Response: The definition of a PBM requires that the PBM provide
``pharmacy benefit management.'' This definition does not require that
a PBM provide a full range of pharmacy benefit management services; it
might provide a subset of such services. This is consistent with the
definition we are finalizing, and we are not making a change to the
regulatory text.
Comment: Many commenters recommended that we use a functional
definition of ``PBM.'' While some of these commenters agreed that the
role of a PBM may evolve over time, they suggested that if we do not
use a more detailed definition, the scope of the safe harbor would be
unclear and PBMs would structure their arrangements to fall within or
outside of the safe harbor based on their preferences. To develop the
more detailed definition, commenters recommended including a non-
exhaustive list of PBMs services. Many commenters specifically
referenced the definition proposed by a trade association:
``Pharmacy Benefit Manager'' means any person, business, or
other entity that, pursuant to a written agreement with plan
sponsors under Medicare Part D, either directly or through an
intermediary, acts as a price negotiator on behalf of plan sponsors
under Medicare Part D or manages the prescription drug benefits
provided by plan sponsors under Medicare Part D, including but not
limited to, the processing and payment of claims for prescription
drugs, the performance of drug utilization review, the processing of
drug prior authorization requests, the adjudication of appeals or
grievances related to the prescription drug benefit, contracting
with network pharmacies, controlling the cost of covered
prescription drugs, or the provision of services related thereto.
Under this definition, any person, business, or other entity that
carries out one or more of the activities above or any entity that
is owned, affiliated, or related under a common ownership structure
with such a person, business, or entity is a ``pharmacy benefit
[[Page 76688]]
manager.'' Such entity is not a purchasing agent and therefore is
not a GPO as defined in paragraph (j) of this section.
Other commenters recommended additional services (discussed below)
be included in the definition. Commenters notes that the list should
not include ``services'' such as ``negotiating rebate arrangements,''
that are core functions of a PBM's job for its plan customers, because
the new safe harbor should protect only fees that are paid for a
specific service that the manufacturer legitimately needs and that are
provided to the manufacturer, independent of services a PBM provides to
its plan customers.
Response: We decline to define ``pharmacy benefit manager'' with
the level of specificity suggested by the commenter, e.g., by defining
a PBM through a list of pharmacy benefit management services, by
incorporating a common ownership element, or by referencing the
definition of ``GPO.'' We do not see value in including a list of
services in the regulatory text, given the variety of potential
services; we believe the term ``pharmacy benefit management'' is clear
and commonly understood, and would include both price negotiation and
management of benefits. We separately provide a non-exhaustive list of
potential pharmacy benefit management services in this preamble that
PBMs provide to health plans, and we are adopting some of the
commenters' suggestions for the preamble list. The list may be useful
to parties determining whether they are a PBM, and particularly,
whether the services they provide to a manufacturer for purposes of the
PBM services fee safe harbor are related to the pharmacy benefit
management services that the PBM furnishes to one or more health plans,
which is a requirement of that safe harbor. As commenters acknowledge,
the role of PBMs may evolve over time, which could make it problematic
to use a functional definition. We address common ownership elsewhere
in this preamble.
Comment: One commenter recommended that the PBM definition should
further distinguish between the functions of PBMs and GPOs to foreclose
protection of PBM services arrangements under the GPO safe harbor.
Response: We are not prohibiting PBMs from potentially qualifying
for the GPO safe harbor protection. As we explain in greater detail in
section III.D.vii below, if a PBM otherwise meets the qualifications,
and follows the limitations, for the GPO safe harbor, then it may be
able to use that safe harbor.
Comment: Some commenters noted that the Proposed Rule may lead
entities to vertically integrate. These commenters expressed concern
that as PBMs continue to evolve in the market, e.g., by vertical
integration, merging with other entities, and/or spinning off certain
business units, there could be new entities that fall outside the
Proposed Rule's definition for ``PBM,'' but that influence the PBM
negotiation process.
Response: This final rule relates only to safe harbor protection
under the anti-kickback statute; safe harbors protect specified
arrangements that implicate the anti-kickback statute. Any entity
seeking protection for an arrangement must meet all conditions of a
safe harbor, including any applicable definitions. If an arrangement
does not fit in a safe harbor, it would be subject to case-by-case
review under the anti-kickback statute. It strikes us as unlikely that
this final rule itself would lead parties to favor arrangements that do
not qualify for safe harbor protection.
Pharmacy Benefit Management Services
Under the Proposed Rule, the services provided to the manufacturer
must relate to the ``pharmacy benefit management services'' that the
PBM furnishes to one or more health plans.
The Proposed Rule proposed a non-exhaustive preamble list of
examples of pharmacy benefit management services furnished to plans,
such as contracting with a network of pharmacies; establishing payment
levels for network pharmacies; negotiating rebate arrangements;
developing and managing formularies, preferred drug lists, and prior
authorization programs; performing drug utilization review; and
operating disease management programs. In the Proposed Rule, we
proposed that we would not create a definition for ``pharmacy benefit
management services'' with the understanding that these services could
evolve over time. We did not propose a definition for the term
``pharmacy benefit management services.'' In the Proposed Rule, we
solicited comments on the approach of providing examples, but not
providing a definition.
Comment: Many commenters recommended including the list of the
pharmacy benefit management services in the definition. Services
recommended for the definition in addition to those listed in the
Proposed Rule include processing claims for prescription drugs,
adjudication of appeals or grievances related to the prescription drug
benefit, controlling the costs of covered prescription drugs, and
provision of services related to the services listed. These commenters
stated that ``negotiating rebate arrangements'' should not be included
in the list of services, since they are prohibited by the new safe
harbor.
Response: We accept, with a modification explained below, the
commenters' recommendations for additions to the preamble list of
potential pharmacy benefit management services that PBMs furnish to
plans and to change the listed service related to negotiation of rebate
arrangements to negotiation of discount arrangements. Accordingly, the
following is a non-exhaustive list of pharmacy benefit management
services that PBMs furnish to plans for purposes of this final rule:
Contracting with a network of pharmacies; establishing payment levels
for network pharmacies; negotiating rebates and discount arrangements;
developing and managing formularies, preferred drug lists, and prior
authorization programs; performing drug utilization review; operating
disease management programs; processing and payment of claims for
prescription drugs; adjudication of appeals or grievances related to
the prescription drug benefit; and controlling the costs of covered
prescription drugs. To be clear: This is not a list of services PBMs
furnish to manufacturers, but a list of examples of pharmacy benefit
management services that PBMs furnish to any type of health plan. For
the purposes of this rule, we are listing ``negotiate rebate or
discount arrangements'' in recognition that PBMs may negotiate both
discounts and some types of rebates.
Comment: Some commenters noted that it is unclear how the PBM
service fee amounts compare with the current definitions of ``Bona Fide
Service Fees'' (BFSFs) under the Medicare Part D and the MDRP. One
commenter noted that the definition of BFSFs includes additional
conditions, meaning that it is not entirely consistent with the terms
of the safe harbor, which creates questions regarding the reporting of
these fees by Part D sponsors under Part D as well as by drug
manufacturers in regards to their determinations of best price and AMP
under the MDRP. Likewise, PBMs are required to account for BFSFs in
reporting the aggregate amount of price concessions they negotiate that
are attributable to patient utilization under a Part D or MA-PD plan.
This commenter asked that CMS issue guidance regarding any differences
between these two types of fees and the reporting and FMV implications
under Part D and the MDRP.
Response: These comments are outside of the scope of this rule,
which
[[Page 76689]]
does not address compliance with CMS requirements relating to DIR
reporting for when a payment may be considered within the point-of-sale
safe harbor but not a bona fide service fee for purposes of DIR
reporting.
Comment: One commenter noted that PBMs do not conduct many of the
services outlined in the examples for pharmacy benefit management
services, listed in the Proposed Rule, on behalf of manufacturers. In
fact, some of the activities attributed to PBMs involve the practice of
pharmacy which is overseen by state boards of pharmacy. Specifically,
the commenter noted that negotiating pharmacy networks is an activity
that is typically done by PBMs on behalf of plans and for which
community pharmacies pay a type of pharmacy DIR fee to participate in
such a network (known as a pay-to-play fee). In the PBM-manufacturer
relationship, PBMs typically receive administration fees from
manufacturers for acting as a purchasing agent for the underlying plans
to which PBMs provide services (and also for the provision of data).
The commenter recommends revising definition of ``pharmacy benefit
management services'' and narrowing any further description of PBM
services to the actual services PBMs provide to manufacturers so that
PBMs do not create a de facto rebate composed of new classes of fees
charged to manufacturers.
Response: We clarify that term ``pharmacy benefit management
services'' as used in the safe harbor at 42 CFR 1001.952(dd), and the
non-exhaustive list of such services provided above, refers to services
furnished to health plans, not manufacturers. We agree that we do not
want to create de facto rebates composed of new classes of fees charged
to manufacturers. We believe that the condition in the new safe harbor
for PBM service fees that requires predetermined flat fees that are not
tied to volume provides a necessary safeguard to prevent abuse of these
fees.
Manufacturer
The Proposed Rule proposed to define ``manufacturer'' with the
meaning ascribed to it in Social Security Act section 1927(k)(5), which
defines manufacturer as any entity which is engaged in the production,
preparation, propagation, compounding, conversion, or processing of
prescription drug products, either directly or indirectly by extraction
from substances of natural origin, or independently by means of
chemical synthesis, or by a combination of extraction and chemical
synthesis, or in the packaging, repackaging, labeling, relabeling, or
distribution of prescription drug products.
We did not receive any comments on the definition of manufacturer,
and we are finalizing the definition of ``manufacturer'' as proposed.
Wholesaler/Distributor
The Proposed Rule proposed to define the terms ``wholesaler'' and
``distributor'' as terms that are used interchangeably and carry the
same meaning as the term ``wholesaler'' as defined in Social Security
Act section 1927(k)(11). Section 1927(k)(11) defines ``wholesaler'' as
a drug wholesaler that is engaged in wholesale distribution of
prescription drugs to retail community pharmacies, including (but not
limited to) manufacturers, repackers, distributors, own-label
distributors, private-label distributors, jobbers, brokers, warehouses
(including manufacturer's and distributor's warehouses, chain drug
warehouses, and wholesale drug warehouses) independent wholesale drug
traders, and retail community pharmacies that conduct wholesale
distributions.
We did not receive any comments on the definition of ``wholesaler''
and ``distributor,'' and we are finalizing the definitions of
``wholesaler'' and ``distributor'' as proposed.
Medicaid Managed Care Organization
The Proposed Rule proposed to define ``Medicaid managed care
organization'' or ``Medicaid MCO'' with the same meaning ascribed to
these terms in section 1903(m) of the Social Security Act. We did not
receive any comments on the definition of Medicaid MCOs in the Proposed
Rule. While we are moving this definition to Sec. 1001.952(cc), we are
otherwise finalizing this definition as proposed.
Prescription Pharmaceutical Product
The Proposed Rule proposed to define ``prescription pharmaceutical
product'' as either a drug or a biological as those terms are defined
in sections 1927(k)(2)(A), (B), and (C) of the Act.
Comment: One commenter noted that the definition of prescription
pharmaceutical product states that the terms ``drug'' and
``biological'' are defined at Section 1927(k)(2) of the Social Security
Act, but this is not the case. A commenter recommended that this
definition be revised to read as follows: ``For purposes of this
paragraph (h), a prescription pharmaceutical product means any drug,
biological or insulin product that falls within the scope of Social
Security Act section 1927(k)(2).''
Response: We agree that ``defined'' is inaccurate. We are updating
the definition to use the word ``described'' instead of ``defined.'' In
addition, because insulin is considered to be a biological product, we
are not adopting the commenter's recommendation to list that term in
this definition.
``Fair Market Value'' and ``Arm's-Length Transactions''
In the Proposed Rule, we stated that the new safe harbor for
certain PBM service fees would be available for fees if they are
consistent with ``fair market value in an arm's-length transaction.''
Many commenters provided feedback on the definition of ``fair market
value'' and ``arm's-length transaction.''
Comment: Multiple commenters recommended that OIG provide guidance
on certain issues related to fair market value compensation in an
arm's-length transaction. At least one of these commenters recommended
that OIG (i) clarify that PBMs are obligated to negotiate services
arrangements in good faith based on the bona fide needs of
manufacturers, (ii) clarify the scope of safe harbor protection
available for arrangements in which a PBM provides services on behalf
of an affiliated health plan, and (iii) clarify that individual health
plans that do not provide pharmacy benefits management services to plan
sponsors under Part D may not attempt to use the safe harbor to
negotiate administrative fees from manufacturers.
Another commenter recommended definitions of ``fair market value''
and ``arm's-length'' that would set guardrails for purposes of
negotiations between manufacturers, PBMs, Part D plans, and chargeback
administrators and would provide further transparency on how HHS
intends these fees to be determined. Specifically, the commenter
recommended that OIG clarify that the fair market value standard is
neither intended to allow free rein for third-party entities to
continue to keep a disproportionate share of pricing concessions that
should be used to reduce beneficiary cost-sharing nor to tie fees to
the list price of a medication.
Response: We decline to provide further guidance on fair market
value compensation in an arm's-length transaction. The safe harbor is
an affirmative defense for criminal violations of the anti-kickback
statute, so it is the entity's obligation to prove that the
remuneration meets the conditions of the safe harbor based on the terms
outlined in this final rule. Moreover, these terms are used in several
existing safe harbors.
[[Page 76690]]
Comment: One commenter recommended that OIG clarify the requirement
that payments be ``consistent with fair market value in an arm's-length
transaction'' by providing a non-exhaustive list of examples of
valuation approaches that meet this standard and specify that PBMs must
negotiate in good faith based on manufacturers' bona fide needs,
refraining from tactics that would be inconsistent with an arm's-length
transaction. The commenter asserted that OIG should require that PBMs
inform manufacturers when seeking manufacturer compensation for
services also compensated by health plans. This disclosure would enable
manufacturers to evaluate whether to pay for the services and what a
fair market value rate might be.
Response: We decline to provide a non-exhaustive list of examples
of valuation approaches. We expect that parties seeking protection
under this safe harbor have experience with the fair market value
standard and would use generally accepted valuation methodologies and
principles in any determination of ``fair market value.'' We also
decline to include a requirement that the PBM inform a manufacturer
when the PBM is receiving compensation from a health plan for a
service. This safe harbor protects only payment by a pharmaceutical
manufacturer for services the PBM provides to the manufacturer, not
payment for services a PBM provides to a health plan; because we have
included additional conditions in the safe harbor aimed at clarifying
that only payment for legitimate services would be protected, we do not
believe this requirement is necessary.
xiii. Comments Outside the Scope of Rulemaking
Above we respond to certain comments addressing matters outside the
scope of this safe harbor rulemaking. We received additional comments
that are outside the scope of this rulemaking. For instance, several
commenters recommended that Congress pass legislation or the Department
create new regulations related to certain issues the Proposed Rule
appears to address, such as lowering cost-sharing and out-of-pocket
costs for consumers; promoting competition of generics and biosimilars;
and ensuring beneficiaries have access to negotiated prices through
point-of-sale rebates. Requests for Congress to pass legislation are
outside the rulemaking authority; the other matters raised by
commenters are programmatic and outside the safe harbor authority.
Another suggestion involved extending safe harbor protection to the
commercial market; as noted above, purely commercial arrangements
generally do not implicate the Federal anti-kickback statute.
Commenters requested that OIG or CMS establish certain programs or
other forms of guidance, including creating a rebate index that would
provide parties with data on the range of rebates currently used in the
market for each drug receiving rebates under Part D. Another commenter
recommended focusing on the lack of competition in the drug market and
restrictions on beneficiary choice rather than trying to reform the
rebate system; as noted above, this rule is part of a larger set of
Department actions undertaken and under consideration with respect to
lowering drug prices. Other commenters requested that OIG create a new
safe harbor protecting value-based arrangements or proposed
specifically including value-based arrangements in existing safe
harbors. OIG has proposed safe harbors for certain value-based
arrangements in separate rulemaking.\38\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ 42 FR 55694 (Oct. 17, 2019).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Discount Safe Harbor Amendment
i. Statutory Exception
Comment: Several commenters stated that, under the terms of a
rebate arrangement, a manufacturer offers remuneration to a Part D plan
sponsor or Medicaid MCO to induce the purchase of federally
reimbursable products, thus implicating the anti-kickback statute.
However, commenters further asserted that, although the statutory
discount exception does not explicitly refer to rebates, the language
encompasses any reduction in price as long as it is properly
documented, which would include rebates administered by PBMs. Because a
rebate is a ``reduction in price'' obtained by Part D plan sponsor
``under a Federal health care program,'' and they are ``properly
disclosed'' to CMS and ``appropriately reflected'' in costs submitted
to CMS, including through statutorily required and CMS-established
processes for reporting DIR, commenters assert that they are protected
under the statutory discount exception. Similarly, a commenter alleged
that the Proposed Rule was based on incorrect and incomplete
assumptions regarding the conduct protected by the statutory discount
exception.
Response: The legislative history of the statutory exception states
that the exception is intended to protect discounts that are properly
disclosed and appropriately reflected, and notes that providers are
encouraged to ``seek discounts as a good business practice which
results in savings to [M]edicare and [M]edicaid program costs.'' \39\
As explained elsewhere, as the market has evolved in recent years, we
do not believe that the way many types of rebates have been used in the
Part D program function as reductions in price. While we believe that
the changes that we are finalizing to the safe harbors reflect
statutory intent and provide a clear pathway to protection, we
reiterate our longstanding guidance that safe harbors are voluntary. If
a party believes in good faith that a particular arrangement does not
implicate the anti-kickback statute or meets the terms of a statutory
exception, there is no mandate to comply with a safe harbor.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ See H.R. Rep. No. 95-393, pt. 2, at 53 (1977) (emphasis
added).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: A commenter noted that the Department has acknowledged
that Congressional intent was to protect price reductions in the normal
course of business and that post-point-of-sale manufacturer price
reductions are precisely the type of discounting that occurs in the
normal course of business. Another commenter noted that Congress did
not give the Department authority to transform practices that are
protected under the statutory discount exception into a crime; the
Secretary's regulatory authority is limited to protecting conduct that
would otherwise be illegal.
Response: We agree with the commenter that Congress gave the
Department authority to protect certain practices that occur in the
normal course of business. We further agree that the Department does
not have authority to narrow the reach of the statutory discount
exception, and that is not our intent. We note, however, that the mere
fact that a certain practice is performed in the normal course of
business does not make it legal. As a threshold matter, to be protected
under the discount exception, an arrangement must involve a reduction
in price. For example, an arrangement between a manufacturer and a plan
sponsor to increase the amount of the rebate to the plan sponsor by
increasing the list price of the drug would be suspect and subject to
scrutiny under the statute. Given the variety of ``rebate''
arrangements that have been created over the past several years between
pharmaceutical manufactures and Part D plan sponsors (directly or
through PBMs), many of which are not reductions in price, the Secretary
has determined that rebates to Part D plan sponsors do not pose a low
[[Page 76691]]
risk of fraud and abuse and should not be protected by a regulatory
safe harbor. We reiterate that falling outside of a safe harbor does
not make an arrangement criminal; each arrangement would need to be
examined on a case-by-case basis.
Comment: A commenter stated that the Proposed Rule impermissibly
infringes on protections afforded by the statutory discount exception
because, taking together the changes to the discount safe harbor and
the addition of the new safe harbor for point-of-sale reductions in
price, the Proposed Rule effectively eliminates post-point-of-sale
manufacturer price reductions, which limits the types of price
reductions a Part D plan sponsor, a Medicaid MCO, or a PBM could accept
from a manufacturer. The commenter stated that the new safe harbor for
point-of-sale reductions in price imposes requirements beyond those in
the discount exception's text.
Response: In this final rule, we are carving out a narrow class of
arrangements that the Secretary believes poses a higher risk of fraud
and abuse and the potential for increased costs to both beneficiaries
and Federal health care programs, and we are creating a new safe harbor
to protect certain reductions in price that pose lower risk. This new
safe harbor has its own conditions, specific to the particular
arrangements that are the subject of the safe harbor, and it is not
intended to mirror the discount exception or safe harbor. As noted
above, this final rule has no impact on the statutory exception.
Comment: Other commenters asserted that rebates or other payments
by drug manufacturers to PBMs may be structured to fit under the GPO
safe harbor, 42 CFR 1001.952(j), as well as the managed care safe
harbors 42 CFR 1001.952(m),(t), and (u), and noted that these safe
harbors have corollary statutory exceptions under the anti-kickback
statute (the statutory GPO exception, and the statutory shared risk
exception). Commenters asserted that the elimination of these statutory
protections through revisions to the regulatory discount safe harbor
inappropriately reads out of the anti-kickback statute the multiple
protections available to MCOs under other relevant statutory
exceptions.
Another commenter asked OIG to issue guidance or revise the managed
care safe harbors 42 CFR 1001.952(m), (t), and (u) to ensure they do
not protect reductions in price or other remuneration that is excluded
under the discount safe harbor.
Response: As a threshold matter, and as we discuss in detail above,
rebates from manufacturers to PBMs were not protected by the discount
safe harbor. If a payment arrangement can be structured to fit within
any one safe harbor, it would be protected by that safe harbor
regardless of any changes to a different safe harbor. Amendments to the
managed care safe harbors, 42 CFR 1001.952(m),(t), and (u), are beyond
the scope of this rulemaking.
ii. Effective Dates
We received many comments on the proposed January 1, 2020 effective
date for the revisions to the discount safe harbor.
Comment: Various commenters supported the proposed effective date.
Some of these commenters noted that it would be challenging to make all
necessary updates to systems and agreements and that significant
resources would be required across the industry to meet a January 1,
2020 effective date, but that the proposed effective date is
attainable. Some commenters noted that guidance from OIG and CMS and
cooperation from stakeholders would be required to meet that timeline
and minimize patient, pharmacy, and supply chain disruptions.
Response: Based on the comments received and further consideration
of the appropriate timeframe for implementation, we have modified our
proposal, and the changes to Sec. 1001.952(h)(5) of the discount safe
harbor will be effective January 1, 2022, which should provide adequate
time for parties to come into compliance and to minimize any
disruption.
Comment: A commenter strongly supported a January 1, 2020 effective
date, but the commenter recommended that it be coupled with both a
flexible 36-month transition process to facilitate implementation and
guidance issued before the effective date on chargebacks and other
issues. Other commenters suggested delaying the effective date and
testing efforts to reform the rebate system before the Proposed Rule is
implemented across Medicare Part D. Other commenters that did not
support a January 1, 2020, effective date noted that the April 5, 2019
Memorandum from CMS provided some guidance, but not enough to submit an
actuarially sound bid. Another commenter urged OIG to delay the
effective date of the final rule until 2022 or, alternatively, to issue
a statement that it will not begin to enforce the new safe harbors
until after the period of the announced CMS demonstration. A commenter
also noted that the demonstration program would need to be expanded,
for example, to account for enhanced benefits to EGWP plans. This
commenter further stated that if CMS does not expand the demonstration
program, CMS would have to require plans to submit two bids (one to
account for rebates, one to account for POS discounts). Another noted
that this effective date would place an enormous burden on CMS to issue
required guidance, which could lead to beneficiary disruption if key
events leading to the open enrollment period are delayed. A commenter
requested that OIG clarify whether manufacturers, PBMs, and pharmacies
can leverage existing mechanisms for exchanging data to support point-
of-sale reductions in price, noting that the January 1, 2020 effective
date is more feasible if extensive systems changes are not necessary.
Response: Based on the comments received and further consideration
of the appropriate time frame for implementation, we are finalizing our
proposal for the changes to Sec. 1001.952(h)(5) of the discount safe
harbor to be effective January 1, 2022. The CMS demonstration
referenced by the commenter was contingent on a change in the safe
harbor rules effective in 2020; because our changes to Sec.
1001.952(h)(5) of the discount safe harbor will be effective January 1,
2022, requests for modifications to that demonstration are no longer
applicable.\40\ Additionally, we confirm that the safe harbor does not
mandate any particular system or process for implementing point-of-sale
reductions in price.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\40\ Letter from Seema Verma, Administrator, CMS, to Part D Plan
Sponsors (Apr. 5, 2019), available at https://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Computer-Data-and-Systems/HPMS/Downloads/HPMS-Memos/Weekly/SysHPMS-Memo-2019-Apr-5th.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: Several commenters noted that the proposed January 1, 2020
effective date is particularly problematic for Medicaid MCOs because
many states' contracts are not renewed annually and often work on a
July 1-June 30 fiscal year. A January 1 change could require mid-year
rate adjustments to ensure that capitated payments to managed care
plans are actuarially sound. Other commenters noted that the proposed
January 1, 2020, effective date would not give states enough time to
substitute directly negotiated supplemental rebates for current
Medicaid MCO rebates. Additionally, a state health department commenter
indicated that a January 1, 2020, effective date would make it
challenging to prospectively set Medicaid Managed Care capitation rates
that appropriately account for anticipated price reductions for
prescription pharmaceutical
[[Page 76692]]
products, while another commenter stated that the proposed January 1,
2020, effective date would significantly disrupt current arrangements
among manufacturers, PBMs, Medicaid MCOs, and pharmacies.
Response: Based on the feedback we have received from commenters
and further consideration of the appropriate timeframe for
implementation, we are finalizing the modifications to Sec.
1001.952(h)(5) of the discount safe harbor to be effective on January
1, 2022. Additionally, we are not finalizing our proposal with respect
to Medicaid MCOs, which we believe addresses the commenters' concerns.
Comment: Various commenters stated that the effective date should
be delayed for some period of time (e.g., at least until 2022) to give
plan sponsors time to understand the impact of the rule. A commenter
noted that the changes set forth in the Proposed Rule would occur
simultaneously with many other changes being proposed to or implemented
in the Part D benefit, including new indication-based formularies. The
commenter stated that other pending rules would impact Part D protected
classes, pharmacy DIR changes, shifting drugs from Part B to Part D,
and others, all of which would make a January 1, 2020, effective date
more challenging. Commenters noted that, depending on what is
finalized, plans may need to adjust bids, renegotiate contracts, and
make systems changes. Another commenter noted that both PBMs and plans
will have to contract with vendors, who will have to develop, test,
sell, and have operational products, which the commenter asserts cannot
happen by 2020. Another commenter indicated that the safe harbor
changes proposed in the Proposed Rule would require fundamental changes
to the way drugs are negotiated, reimbursed, and adjudicated at the
point of sale, which would include new NCPDP electronic health care
transaction codes for pharmacy claims.
Commenters suggested that both the proposed January 1, 2020,
effective date and alternative effective date of January 1, 2021, were
unreasonable, indicating additional time would be needed to implement
the point-of-sale reduction in price structure, and that the chargeback
system referenced in the Proposed Rule would be far more complex and
require more coordination than what currently exists. Others suggested
that the same changes would take one year and recommended an
implementation date of 2021, with a commenter noting that an additional
year would help protect patients from the negative consequences of
market disruption and allow more time to educate beneficiaries on any
finalized changes. Another commenter asserted that the proposed
effective date of January 1, 2020 should be delayed to allow the market
to have an opportunity to respond to the new rule. A health plan
commenter also recommended delaying the effective date of the rule
beyond January 1, 2020, noting that even with CMS's risk corridor
assurances, there is still too much uncertainty, which will lead to
disparities in 2020 bid pricing.
Response: The final rule is one of many complementary initiatives
targeted around lowering list prices and reducing out-of-pocket costs,
as outlined in the American Patients First blueprint. These initiatives
are meant to build on each other to create a more rational and
competitive prescription pharmaceutical product market. Based on the
comments received and further consideration of the appropriate
timeframe for implementation, we are finalizing the changes to Sec.
1001.952(h)(5) of the discount safe harbor to be effective January 1,
2022.
Comment: Several commenters objected to the proposed effective date
because of the statutory Part D bid deadline. Commenters stated that
plans expected all final guidance for the upcoming year to be released
by CMS in early April 2019 because Part D bid submissions for calendar
year 2020 were due by June 3, 2019. If a final rule were released
without sufficient lead time, the commenter cautioned that there will
be large financial losses for plans and for CMS (who would have to make
substantial payments when plans enter the risk corridor). A commenter
expressed concern about the ability to submit an actuarially sound bid
by the bid deadline.
An effective date of January 1, 2020, does not provide a reasonable
amount of time after issuing a final rule for re-negotiating agreements
involving pharmaceutical manufacturers, pharmacies, health plans, and
PBMs. Several commenters raised concerns that a January 1, 2020,
effective date would make it difficult for the online Medicare Plan
Finder tool to reflect accurate information about premiums,
deductibles, and cost-sharing and requested that CMS prioritize updates
to the Medicare Plan Finder and other notices to patients. Some
commenters also noted that a January 1, 2020, effective date could
cause significant disruptions in coverage or benefits and confusion for
beneficiaries. This confusion, a commenter argued, may make it
difficult for patients to understand and utilize their prescription
drug benefits or could cause patients to search for new plans.
Other commenters noted that formularies for Medicare Part D plans
must be complete by early May for the June bid submission, and that
given the timing of the rule, an effective date of January 1, 2020,
would make it extremely challenging to meet the bid requirements.
Response: Comments related to CMS's administration of the Part D
program are outside the scope of this rulemaking. We are finalizing the
changes to Sec. 1001.952(h)(5) of the discount safe harbor to be
effective January 1, 2022.
Comment: A commenter stated that a 2020 effective date would harm
beneficiaries enrolled in MA-PD plans, especially if the rule is
finalized after bids are submitted on June 3, 2019. The commenter
suggested that, in order to mitigate losses from the change in rebates
after premiums and bids have been set, MA-PD plans would have to reduce
costs in other areas. The commenter stated that it would take years for
plan sponsors to recover from these losses, threatening improvements in
quality performance, Star measures, and the benefits of care
coordination over an extended period.
Response: We appreciate commenters' feedback and note that we are
now finalizing an effective date of January 1, 2022, for the amendments
to Sec. 1001.952(h)(5) of the discount safe harbor, which should avoid
the disruptions and potential harm described by the commenters. Under
the final rule, parties are not being asked to change their practices
after bids and premiums have been set for the 2022 plan year.
Comment: A health plan commenter indicated that if OIG requires
point-of-sale reductions in price, health plans will have to determine
benefit configuration, and there will likely be several formulary
configuration changes. A PBM commenter indicated that significant
system development and testing would be required, including system
modifications to apply formulary exceptions, and that PBMs would need
to make dramatic formulary changes just prior to the 2020 plan year
which, according to the commenter, may result in member disruption and
dissatisfaction.
Response: We thank the commenter for sharing this concern and note
that the effective date of the modifications to Sec. 1001.952(h)(5) of
the discount safe harbor will be January 1, 2022, providing additional
time for stakeholders to address these and other potential
implementation concerns.
[[Page 76693]]
Comment: A commenter noted that employers, including state
employers, would not receive any benefits from the changes we proposed,
and they would face additional costs if premiums increase. The
commenter indicated that this is particularly unfair for public
employers such as state governments that rely upon taxpayers to help
fund public employee and retiree health benefit coverage. The commenter
requested either an exemption from the proposed rule for governmental
employee benefit plans, which are not subject to ERISA, or if an
exemption is not granted, then a delay in the effective date
specifically for non-ERISA plans to January 1, 2021.
Response: We thank the commenter for sharing this concern and note
that the finalized effective date of January 1, 2022 for modifications
to Sec. 1001.952(h)(5) of the discount safe harbor should provide
sufficient time to address these and other implementation concerns. We
do, however, disagree with the commenter's suggestion to remove
employee benefit plans from the final rule. The Department believes
that the transition from rebates to point-of-sale reductions in price
can happen based on existing infrastructure, and these plans will
benefit from the lower list prices that may result from the final rule.
iii. Expand to Other Federal Health Care Programs
The Proposed Rule stated that the changes proposed were intended to
exclude from discount safe harbor protection rebates from manufacturers
to plan sponsors under Medicare Part D and Medicaid MCOs, whether
negotiated by the plan or by a PBM or paid through a PBM to the plan or
Medicaid MCO. The Proposed Rule clarified that the Department intended
for the discount safe harbor to continue to protect discounts on
prescription pharmaceutical products offered to other entities,
including, but not limited to, wholesalers, hospitals, physicians,
pharmacies, and third-party payers in other Federal health care
programs. Commenters provided feedback about whether payments for
prescription pharmaceuticals paid for by other Federal health care
programs should be excluded from the safe harbor.
Comment: Some commenters noted that if Medicaid MCOs, but not
Medicaid fee-for-service, are excluded from the existing safe harbor,
the Department would be treating these programs differently and would
potentially put Medicaid MCOs at a disadvantage. Most of these
commenters recommended removing Medicaid MCOs from the proposed
exclusion of the existing safe harbor. A few commenters were
indifferent on whether or not Medicaid MCOs were excluded from the
existing safe harbor or not, but they recommended that Medicaid MCOs
and Medicaid fee for service be treated the same way.
Response: As discussed above, the final rule removes Medicaid MCOs
from the exclusion of the existing safe harbor, which addresses these
comments.
Comment: Several commenters agreed with our proposal that the
amendment to the discount safe harbor should not apply to prescription
pharmaceutical products payable under Medicare Part B. These commenters
noted that Part B drugs are reimbursed under Medicare fee-for-service
based on the average sales price (ASP), which already accounts for
rebates and other price concessions. There were no comments
recommending that payment for drugs billed by Part B fee-for-service
providers be excluded from existing safe harbors.
Response: We are finalizing our proposal that the amendment to the
discount safe harbor should not apply to prescription pharmaceutical
products payable under Medicare Part B for the reason noted by the
commenters.
Comment: A commenter recommended that OIG remove the safe harbor
protection for rebates paid to Medicare Advantage plans with respect to
their coverage of Part B drugs because an increasing number of Medicare
beneficiaries are covered by Medicare Advantage plans, and these plans
can use rebates, similar to Part D plans, to manage Part B drug costs.
Additionally, according to the commenter, many of the most expensive,
high-spend drugs are physician-administered biologics.
Another commenter noted that Medicare Advantage generally pays for
Part B drugs as part of the medical benefit, and because of underlying
Medicare rules, these drugs are generally not subject to the same type
of formulary placement negotiations and patient cost-sharing patterns
as in the Part D prescription drug benefit.
Finally, additional commenters stated that there are differing
levels of cost-sharing in Medicare Advantage for Part B drugs and that
it is likely not necessary to extend the proposed changes to Part B
drugs. However, they recommend that OIG evaluate how Medicare Advantage
plans are reflecting potential savings on Part B covered medicines in
beneficiary cost-sharing.
Response: We thank the commenters for their recommendations. We are
finalizing our proposal that the amendment to the discount safe harbor
should not apply to prescription pharmaceutical products payable under
Medicare Part B for the reasons noted by the commenters.
Comment: One commenter noted that the Department of Veterans
Affairs (VA) could use this rule as an opportunity to assert a self-
serving interpretation of the definition of the non-Federal average
manufacturer price (non-FAMP). The commenter would like OIG to clarify
that any transactions governed by the final rule would constitute
``Federal'' prices and should thus be excluded from the determination
of a ``non-Federal'' average manufacture price. For the VA to determine
that these are not ``Federal'' sales would be inconsistent with the
Veterans Health Care Act.
Response: In the Proposed Rule, we noted that the VA, Department of
Defense, Coast Guard, and the Public Health Service (including the
Indian Health Service) are eligible to purchase drugs under the Federal
Ceiling Price (FCP) Program. The FCP is calculated as a percentage of
non-FAMP. Eligible programs can purchase drugs using the lesser of the
Federal Supply Schedule (FSS) Price and FCP. Although it is difficult
to determine the operation of the Proposed Rule on FSS users or
entities entitled to FCPs, if the overall effect of lowering list
pricing is achieved and that results in lower prices to commercial
customers (and wholesalers) or pricing components of non-FAMP, it is
possible the VA may realize some additional savings. This final rule
does not change the requirements of the FCP and whether Federal
programs, such as the VA, count transactions governed by this final
rule as ``Federal'' prices is outside the scope of this rulemaking.
iv. Scope of Amendment
Comment: A commenter asserted that, as written, the proposed
amendment to the discount safe harbor would apply not only to rebates
on prescription drugs dispensed by a community pharmacy but also to
physician-administered drugs covered in the Medicaid program. According
to the commenter, Medicaid MCOs would no longer be able to collect
rebates on these drugs as there is no avenue to pass the rebate on at
the point of sale. The commenter explained that the change could lead
to ``white-bagging'' (i.e., where providers purchase a pharmaceutical
product from a specialty pharmacy in order to receive a discount),
which the commenter believes raises a number of operational and
program-integrity concerns. The commenter also noted this change could
create an access issue for members in rural locations.
[[Page 76694]]
Response: As discussed in detail elsewhere in this final rule, we
are not finalizing the changes to the discount safe harbor with respect
to Medicaid MCOs, which we believe addresses the commenter's concerns.
Comment: A number of commenters requested clarification regarding
what specific types of rebates and discounts would still be protected
under the discount safe harbor. According to these commenters, the
Proposed Rule, as drafted, could be read to remove protection for
common purchase discounts that manufacturers provide to wholesalers or
pharmacies, if those discounted products are later dispensed by the
pharmacy to a Part D or Medicaid MCO enrollee. A commenter requested
that the final rule clarify that discounts to wholesalers are
protected.
Another commenter requested clarification that pharmacy purchase
discounts received by any mail-order pharmacy, specialty pharmacy, or
retail pharmacy owned by a plan sponsor under Part D, Medicaid MCO, or
a PBM operating on behalf of either, regardless of whether these
discounts are dependent on formulary placement, are protected, as the
proposed language could be read to exclude such discounts.
Response: We note initially that we are not finalizing our proposal
to amend the discount safe harbor to exclude protection for reductions
in price to Medicaid MCOs, which we believe partially addresses the
commenter's concerns with respect to pharmaceutical products dispensed
to Medicaid enrollees as well as the comments regarding pharmacies
owned by Medicaid MCOs or their PBMs.
We confirm in this final rule our statement in the Proposed Rule
that we ``intend[] for the discount safe harbor to continue to protect
discounts on prescription pharmaceutical products offered to other
entities, including, but not limited to, wholesalers, hospitals,
physicians, pharmacies, and third-party payors in other Federal health
care programs.'' \41\ Further, we clarify that protection is available
for these discounts (including rebates) even if the prescription
pharmaceutical product is ultimately dispensed to a Part D enrollee
(provided all safe harbor conditions are met). We have revised the
language in Sec. 1001.952(h)(5)(viii) to state that the term excludes
``[a] reduction in price or other remuneration in connection with the
sale or purchase of a prescription pharmaceutical product from a
manufacturer to a plan sponsor under Medicare Part D either directly to
the plan sponsor under Medicare Part D, or indirectly through a
pharmacy benefit manager acting under contract with a plan sponsor
under Medicare Part D, unless it is a price reduction or rebate that is
required by law.'' We believe this revised language addresses
commenters' concerns and reflects our intent as articulated in the
Proposed Rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\41\ 84 FR 2348.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Discounts offered or given to pharmacies owned by a plan sponsor
under Part D or a PBM generally could qualify under the discount safe
harbor if all conditions of the safe harbor are met. However,
remuneration that is labeled as a ``discount'' but that is given to
pharmacies or other entities owned by or affiliated with a plan sponsor
under Part D or a PBM to reward the plan or the PBM for referrals of
other Federal health care program business would be suspect. These
arrangements would appear to have many of the same features as
problematic swapping arrangements discussed elsewhere in this rule.
Comment: A commenter requested that OIG clarify in the final rule
that all rebates are still protected under the discount safe harbor,
except for formulary rebates paid by pharmaceutical manufacturers to
health plans or PBMs. Similarly, a commenter requested that OIG confirm
that the Proposed Rule does not affect discounts offered to other
entities (e.g., pharmacies).
Response: As we stated in the Proposed Rule and confirm in this
final rule, ``[t]he Department intends for the discount safe harbor to
continue to protect discounts on prescription pharmaceutical products
offered to other entities, including, but not limited to, wholesalers,
hospitals, physicians, pharmacies, and third-party payors in other
Federal health care programs.'' \42\ As discussed above, we are
finalizing our proposed revisions to the discount safe harbor with a
slight modification to ensure that the regulatory text is consistent
with our statement in the Proposed Rule. Specifically, the revisions to
the definition of ``discount'' apply only to reductions in price or
other remuneration in connection with the sale or purpose of a
prescription pharmaceutical product from a manufacturer to a plan
sponsor under Medicare Part D or through a PBM acting under contract
with the plan sponsor under Medicare Part D, unless it is a price
reduction or rebate that is required by law. In other words, the
revisions apply only to reductions in price offered from manufacturers
to plan sponsors under Medicare Part D or a PBM acting under contract
with such entities. For reasons explained above, the revisions to the
discount safe harbor in the final rule do not apply to discounts
offered to Medicaid MCOs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\42\ 84 FR 2348.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: A commenter recommended that OIG clarify that manufacturer
rebates and discounts may remain protected under other safe harbors.
The language of any proposed point-of-sale reduction in price safe
harbor and related amendments should specifically provide that the
subject remuneration may still receive protection under other available
safe harbors.
Response: If a party enters into an arrangement that fits squarely
within a safe harbor--any safe harbor--the party would be protected
from liability under the anti-kickback statute.
v. Impact on Volume or Prompt Pay Discounts
Comment: A commenter expressed concern that the finalizing changes
that we proposed to the discount safe harbor would enable other
entities to engage in the exact same practice that the Department is
trying to eliminate with PBMs; specifically, it will allow other
entities in the supply chain to be compensated for the provision of
services based on volume and a percentage of list prices.
Response: We noted in the Proposed Rule that we intended for the
discount safe harbor to continue to protect discounts on prescription
pharmaceutical products offered to other entities, including, but not
limited to, wholesalers, hospitals, physicians, pharmacies, and third-
party payors. However, we reiterate that the discount safe harbor
protects only the reduction in the amount a buyer is charged for an
item or service; it does not protect payments for services.
vi. Impact on Beneficiary Access
Comment: A number of commenters were supportive of the Proposed
Rule. These commenters contended that the Proposed Rule would reduce
out-of-pocket costs for beneficiaries; safeguard and increase access to
necessary and affordable treatments and therapies and increase patient
adherence to those treatments and therapies; and lower list prices for
drugs or, at least, address the increasing cost of drugs.
Other commenters contended that the Proposed Rule addresses the
perverse incentives for manufacturers to provide rebates, which affects
affordability of drugs; curbs PBMs' practices of preferring high-cost
drugs; shifts practices so that drug choices are based
[[Page 76695]]
on what is best for patients; and addresses PBMs' role in reducing the
availability of drugs, patients' access to drugs, and patients' freedom
to choose certain drugs.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support. The commenters
describe goals this rule is intended to achieve.
Comment: A commenter requested that the Department ensure that some
form of rebates remain protected to maintain prescription drug choice
and savings for their enrollees.
Response: The new safe harbor for point-of-sale reductions in price
offers a clear pathway for manufacturers to offer price reductions to
Part D plan sponsors and Medicaid MCOs. In addition, reductions in
price to Medicaid MCOs remain eligible for safe harbor protection under
the discount safe harbor.
Comment: Several commenters were concerned that finalizing the
changes in the Proposed Rule could result in higher premiums. Some of
these commenters were specifically concerned that an increase in
premiums will decrease or deter Part D enrollment, delay enrollment by
beneficiaries and, therefore, cause them to incur penalties for late
enrollment, or cause beneficiaries to dis-enroll or drop Part D
coverage altogether. Other commenters were concerned that uncertainty
in the Part D program caused by the Proposed Rule, including risks of
an older and sicker population and higher-than-projected premiums, may
cause smaller plans to drop out of participation in Part D because they
may be unable to handle the increased risk, which could, in turn,
reduce beneficiary choice of plans. Some commenters suggested that an
increase in premiums may result in a decrease in beneficiary access to
medically necessary medicines. Commenters stated that an increase in
premiums could result in changes to beneficiaries', including dual-
eligible beneficiaries', supplemental benefits, contending that an
increase in those costs may deter enrollment. A commenter suggested
that an increase in costs, generally, would reduce beneficiary access
to plans and plan choices.
Response: We understand commenters' concerns. The Department notes
that premiums in the Part D program have historically increased at a
slower rate than inflation, while the list prices of drugs and
government expenditures have increased more rapidly. Additional
information about impacts of this rule in areas predicted by the
commenters can be found in the Regulatory Impact Statement. The
Department does not believe that the risk of increased premiums or the
other uncertainties raised by the commenter will lead to plans dropping
out of the Part D program because Part D plans have methods for
preventing premium increases, such as tougher negotiation or lower
overhead, and that plans will be able to share in the savings under
this final rule.
Comment: Several commenters raised concerns that, without adequate
or timely updates to the Medicare Plan Finder, beneficiaries may not be
able to find appropriate plans and could, potentially, dis-enroll from
Part D. The same commenters, as well as another commenter, are also
concerned that beneficiaries may be confused about their cost-sharing
obligations and may, incorrectly and based on inaccurate or unreliable
information, assume that they should benefit from lower cost-sharing
amounts. Commenters requested that the Department create mechanisms for
beneficiaries to be provided or have access to information about cost
sharing, discounts received at the point of sale, and the amounts
reimbursed to pharmacies dispensing the medicine. A commenter suggested
that one way to mitigate their concerns is to, for example, update the
Medicare Plan Finder or to ensure that pharmacies and prescribers have
sufficient information to provide beneficiaries about their cost-
sharing obligations at the point of sale. Other commenters recommended
the use of electronic tools, such as Real Time Benefit Tools, that
would allow prescribers to access specific information on patients'
formularies and out-of-pocket costs for prescription drugs.
Response: We agree with commenters that it is important for
beneficiaries to have access to information needed to make informed
health care decisions. The Department believes the reduced price at the
point of sale will create the appropriate amount of transparency, and
that separately providing the amount of the reduction in price is not
necessary for transparency to be achieved. While the creation of
mechanisms for beneficiaries and prescribers that provide information
about cost sharing, out-of-pocket costs, and discounts received at the
point of sale would be programmatic tools that are outside the scope of
this rulemaking, we point commenters to a May 2019 final rule published
by CMS entitled ``Modernizing Part D and Medicare Advantage to Lower
Drug Prices and Reduce Out-of-Pocket Expenses'' under which CMS
requires Part D plans by 2021 to adopt Real Time Benefit Tools that
provide complete, accurate, timely, clinically appropriate and patient-
specific real-time formulary and benefit information to prescribers
that they can discuss with their patients. CMS has also noted that
Medicare beneficiaries or their representatives can search an online
interactive drug plan comparison tool, the Medicare Plan Finder, to
find formulary and cost-sharing information for Part D plans.
Additionally, CMS has informed us that through their eMedicare
initiative, which is a multi-year initiative intended to empower
patients and update Medicare resources to meet beneficiaries'
expectation of a more personalized customer experience, the Medicare
Plan Finder will continue to be improved over time to enhance access to
information.\43\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\43\ Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), CMS
announces new streamlined user experience for Medicare
beneficiaries, (Oct. 1, 2018), available at https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/press-releases/cms-announces-new-streamlined-user-experience-medicare-beneficiaries-0.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CMS has also advised us that it will ensure that beneficiaries
receive adequate and timely information about cost-sharing obligations
under Medicare plans, and that the Medicare Plan Finder will reflect
any necessary updates before the final rule's implementation.
Comment: A commenter is specifically concerned that the increased
transparency that results from a final rule may pressure PBMs to reduce
overall costs in ways that may disadvantage beneficiary access. The
commenter is concerned that health plans and PBMs may narrow
prescription benefits for, e.g., vulnerable populations, or discourage
high-cost patients from enrolling altogether. Other commenters also
raised concerns relating to narrow prescription benefit design and
increased cost sharing, indicating that if the amended and new safe
harbors are finalized, plans and PBMs will have increased pressure to
reduce costs, which may result in some plans and PBMs significantly
narrowing formularies, using utilization management tools to a greater
extent, and/or increasing cost-sharing on brand-name drug tiers in
order to prevent enrollment by beneficiaries who have costly conditions
or take certain medications. Other commenters asserted that mandatory
point-of-sale reductions in price could lead to adverse risk selection,
where beneficiaries with a specific condition select the one plan with
the lowest upfront discounted price for their specialty drug, which the
commenters asserted could result in significant formulary and coverage
changes.
[[Page 76696]]
Expressing similar concerns, another commenter stated that CMS
should enhance its review of Part D benefit design to ensure the
patient protections of Part D are not undermined and that plans are not
restricting access to medicines in a manner that would violate the non-
discrimination protections in Part D. Another commenter suggested that
having safeguards in place to protect patients who are currently stable
on a medication will be important and requested that OIG or the
Department provide certain additional safeguards.
Response: We appreciate and share commenters' concerns that
beneficiaries be protected from discriminatory practices, including
improper restrictions on access to drugs. As stated elsewhere in this
rule, CMS is responsible for administering the Part D program. We are
informed by CMS that it has a robust formulary review and approval
process, which entails in-depth checks to ensure sufficient inclusion
of all necessary Part D drug categories or classes for Medicare
beneficiaries, preventing discriminatory benefit designs. As part of
this review, CMS assesses the adequacy of a Part D sponsor's formulary
drug categories and classes along with the plan's formulary drug list
to ensure that the formulary offers an appropriate range of Part D
drugs.\44\ This formulary review process also includes a review of
utilization management tools to ensure plans do not restrict
beneficiary access to necessary medication. The Secretary cannot
approve a prescription drug plan if the plan's design and its benefits,
including any formulary and tiered formulary structure, are likely to
substantially discourage enrollment by certain Part D eligible
individuals under the plan.\45\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\44\ 79 FR 1918, 1939 (Jan. 10, 2014).
\45\ Social Security Act section 1860D-11(e)(2)(D)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CMS also employs risk adjustment where Medicare plan sponsors
receive higher payments for beneficiaries who are higher risk (as
determined by health status). Risk adjustment is intended to minimize
the incentive for Medicare Part D plan sponsors to engage in practices
that would result in the enrollment and retention of beneficiaries with
expected cost below the average, although individual plan experience
may differ based on the plan's mix of beneficiaries relative to the
national average and the specific costs that they face relative to the
national average. CMS believes that the formulary review and approval
process, risk adjustment, and anti-discrimination rules each serve to
mitigate the incentive for health plans and PBMs to narrow prescription
benefits for vulnerable populations and to discourage enrollment among
high cost patients.
Comment: A commenter stated that the changes included in the
Proposed Rule could prevent Part D plan sponsors and PBMs from
penalizing manufacturers for lowering list prices by removing drugs
from formularies or imposing significant utilization management
requirements.
Response: We agree with the commenter that it is inappropriate to
penalize lower prices; a key goal of this rulemaking is to encourage
lower drug prices.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that, before implementing
the final rule, the Department or OIG conduct certain demonstrations,
pilot programs, focus groups, or other assessments or evaluations to
determine whether and how beneficiaries will benefit from, or be
adversely affected by, the proposed changes.
Response: While we appreciate the commenters' suggestions, we are
not conducting any particular pilot programs or assessments prior to
finalizing the rule. We analyzed anticipated impacts to beneficiaries
in the regulatory impact analysis and refer readers to that section for
further information.
vii. Additional Safeguards
Comment: Several commenters recommended OIG, CMS, or HHS monitor,
or implement mechanisms to monitor, the effect of the final rule on
beneficiaries, PBMs, drug manufacturers, plans, plan sponsors,
dispensing pharmacies, and other stakeholders in the drug supply chain.
Some of these commenters recommended that data be gathered on the
effect of the final rule, specifically related to drug prices,
beneficiaries' costs, utilization management, access to drugs,
chargeback amounts, the contracts PBMs enter into with drug
manufacturers and plans and the terms of those contracts, and formulary
changes. A commenter specifically recommended a mechanism for
stakeholders in the drug supply chain to report non-compliance with any
of the proposed safe harbors. Another commenter specifically requested
that the data gathered by OIG, CMS, or HHS through its monitoring
mechanisms be publicly available. Finally, a commenter recommended that
OIG require pharmaceutical manufacturers to confidentially disclose
their drug rebates before the Proposed Rule's changes are finalized so
policymakers can compare net costs for drugs before and after the
proposed changes go into effect.
Response: The Department recognizes that, due to the complexity of
the drug supply chain, the final rule has the potential to affect
stakeholders in ways and to an extent that may be difficult to
anticipate. The Department declines the commenter's request to require
manufacturers to disclose rebate amounts prior to issuance of the final
rule. The Department intends to monitor the effects of this rule. As an
independent, objective oversight entity, OIG regularly reviews the Part
D and other HHS program and has identified ensuring that HHS
prescription drug programs work as intended as a priority area. OIG's
reports are routinely made public and available on our website at
https://oig.hhs.gov/reports-and-publications/index.asp. With respect to
a mechanism for reporting non-compliance with the requirements of a
safe harbor, the OIG website provides detailed instructions for
reporting violations of law, including violations of the anti-kickback
statute, at https://oig.hhs.gov/fraud/report-fraud/. We note, however,
that an individual or entity's failure to comply with the requirements
of a safe harbor does not per se constitute a violation of the anti-
kickback statute. The conduct in question must otherwise meet the
elements of a violation of that law.
Comment: Some commenters requested OIG include safeguards in the
amendment to the discount safe harbor. For example, a commenter
requested OIG ensure that the only price concessions available to
health plans, PBMs, or the affiliates in their vertically integrated
business in Part D are those point-of-sale reductions in price under
the new safe harbor for point-of-sale reductions in price.
Response: Arrangements are protected from liability under the anti-
kickback statute if they meet all the requirements of a safe harbor.
Parties are free to enter any arrangements that do not violate the
anti-kickback statute or other federal or state law.
viii. Alternative Recommendations
Comment: A commenter recommended that, in lieu of removing rebates
to Part D plans and Medicaid MCOs from the discount safe harbor, OIG
should modify the existing safe harbor by allowing rebates only when a
minimum percentage, for example 50 percent, is reflected at the
pharmacy point-of-sale, while the remaining savings continue to be
spread across
[[Page 76697]]
monthly premiums for all consumers served by the health plan.
Response: We thank the commenter for this proposal, but we decline
to adopt this revision. We did not propose this approach, we do not
believe it would be practical to implement, and we do not believe it
would achieve the goals of this rulemaking.
Comment: A commenter recommended that OIG expand the proposed
amendment to the discount safe harbor to permit manufacturers to offer
copayment and coinsurance assistance to Part D beneficiaries for
single-source drugs where the patient has no other choice and thus
cannot be induced to select one drug over another, while still allowing
plan sponsors to decide whether to cover drugs under existing rules and
effectively manage utilization for appropriate patient care and while
allowing patients who need innovative therapies and cannot afford the
copayment due to the circumstances of Part D's benefit design to be
able to access manufacturer copayment support. By contrast, a commenter
recommended that OIG narrow the existing discount safe harbor to
prohibit rebate arrangements as a percentage of list price while still
allowing for price concessions in the form of rebates that are
beneficial for the healthcare system, including those that would yield
a fixed net price for a drug over time and those that reimburse plans
when a drug does not work as promised.
Response: We decline to adopt the changes proposed by commenters.
First, we did not propose or solicit comments on including any
protection for cost-sharing supplements from manufacturers to
beneficiaries, and we have longstanding concerns with such assistance.
With respect to the second suggestion, we believe that some value-based
arrangements involving prescription pharmaceutical products might
qualify for protection under the new point-of-sale safe harbor but also
could qualify under other safe harbors (e.g., the personal services and
management contracts safe harbor, warranties safe harbor). We decline
to continue protection under the discount safe harbor for rebate
arrangements between pharmaceutical manufacturers and Part D plans
(directly or through their PBMs) that might yield a fixed price over
time. It is unclear how we could separately protect such rebates, and
beneficiaries would not be able to share in the benefit of the lower
cost. We note other rebates may be permitted under the discount safe
harbor, and certain price concessions are permitted under the new
point-of-sale reduction in price safe harbor at 42 CFR 1001.952(cc).
Comment: Some commenters recommended that CMS monitor formulary
changes by plan sponsors, and one of those commenters recommended
specifically monitoring for the potential emergence of ``discount
walls.'' A commenter recommended that CMS monitor medical exceptions
(which, according to the commenter, are ways for beneficiaries to
access new innovator products that are blocked from formulary access
(i.e., non-contracted) by rebate walls) to ensure plan sponsors do not
tighten controls for or restrict access to these medical exceptions as
a way to manage costs in the absence of rebates. The same commenter
recommended that CMS ensure that the final rule does not affect ``non-
medical switching'' (which, according to the commenter, involves
switching between branded products and across therapeutic classes in a
medically stable patient solely for cost savings and potentially
without the patient's or provider's consent) so that formulary changes
made by plan sponsors do not affect patients undergoing therapy.
Response: We have coordinated with CMS in promulgating this rule.
As described above, CMS has informed us that it has and will use a
robust formulary review and approval process.
C. Safe Harbor for Certain Price Reductions on Prescription
Pharmaceutical Products
Comment: We received a comment that expressed concern about the new
safe harbor for point-of-sale reductions in price taking effect 60 days
after the rule is finalized. The commenter stated that 60 days is not
enough to adjust bids and amend contracts for compliance.
Response: The new safe harbor for point-of-sale reductions in price
does not require any party to take any action within a particular
timeframe. The safe harbor may be used starting 60 days after the final
rule is published, but it is just another option for protecting
discounts.
i. Point-of-Sale Chargebacks
Comment: Several commenters requested that OIG revise the
definition of ``chargeback'' proposed in the Proposed Rule. A commenter
requested that OIG amend the definition to prohibit entities that
control Part D or Medicaid MCO formularies from processing chargebacks.
Another commenter recommended that different chargeback amounts should
not be negotiated for chain pharmacies, community pharmacies, and
specialty pharmacies.
With respect to the term ``chargeback,'' a commenter suggested
defining it as ``a payment made directly or indirectly to the
dispensing pharmacy that is equal to the price reduction negotiated
between the manufacturer and the plan or PBM.'' A commenter
representing pharmaceutical manufacturers recommended that OIG specify
that the total payment to the dispensing pharmacy be equal to: (1) The
payment to the pharmacy from the plan or PBM; (2) the point-of-sale
chargeback due from the manufacturer; and (3) the beneficiary cost-
sharing amount. The commenter recommending these changes expressed
concern that OIG's proposed definition could result in gaming by other
entities that would result in pharmacies dispensing medicines at a
financial loss. Several commenters requested that we change the term to
``point-of-sale chargeback'' to avoid confusion with how that term is
used elsewhere in the distribution channel.
While a commenter asked for the definition of ``chargeback'' to
include a payment agreed upon by the pharmacy, and not just Part D
issuers and/or PBMs, another commenter expressed support for chargeback
to be defined as proposed in the rule but requested clarification on
whether a chargeback is to be based on the pharmacy actual acquisition
cost or on Wholesale Acquisition Cost (WAC). Another commenter proposed
amending the definition of ``chargeback'' to confirm that chargebacks
are separate and apart from the agreed upon reimbursement to the
pharmacy.
Response: We appreciate the range of suggestions received in
response to our request for comment on the proposed definition. As we
noted in the Proposed Rule, ``the use of chargebacks [makes] pharmacies
whole for the difference between acquisition cost, plan payment, and
beneficiary out-of-pocket payment . . . .'' \46\ Further, we are
mindful of concerns about pharmacies dispensing prescription
pharmaceutical products at a loss. We agree with the commenter above
who recommended clarifying that a chargeback is equal to the amount of
the discount negotiated by the Plan Sponsor under Part D, the Medicaid
MCO, or a PBM acting under contract with either, and the manufacturer
of the prescription pharmaceutical product. We are revising the
definition to eliminate any confusion on this point. The revised
definition is consistent with our goal expressed in the Proposed Rule
[[Page 76698]]
to protect point-of-sale price reduction arrangements in which
consumers share the full benefit. Any point-of-sale chargeback, as
defined in this rule, is part of the total reimbursement to the
pharmacy for the prescription pharmaceutical product.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\46\ 84 FR 2361.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
With respect to the request that OIG confirm that different types
of pharmacies must receive the same chargeback amount, as described
above, the chargeback amount due to the pharmacy must be equal to the
reduction in price negotiated by a plan (or PBM operating on its
behalf) and the manufacturer of the prescription pharmaceutical
product. If a manufacturer and a plan (or a PBM acting on its behalf)
have negotiated a point-of-sale reduction in price for a prescription
pharmaceutical product that complies with the safe harbor, we would
expect the chargeback to the pharmacy to be the same, regardless of the
type of pharmacy.
Finally, we agree with those commenters who recommended that we
revise the term from ``chargeback'' to ``point-of-sale chargeback'' to
differentiate this process from other transactions in the
pharmaceutical supply chain with the same name. We have revised the
term in the final regulations at Sec. 1001.952(cc).
Comment: A number of commenters raised concerns about the need for
CMS to promulgate or revise regulations and to issue technical guidance
applicable to the chargeback administration process if the new rule is
finalized. Several of these commenters requested that OIG consult with
CMS because of its oversight and administration of the Part D program.
For example, a commenter requested that CMS issue guidance regarding
how to incorporate chargebacks into the Medicare Plan Finder files.
Another commenter provided an extensive list of Part D regulations that
it believes would need to be revised and topics for sub-regulatory
guidance that it believes would need to be published in order to
implement the chargeback construct.
Several commenters also posited that significant involvement by CMS
would be required because there is currently no regulatory structure or
oversight mechanism in Part D for these chargebacks, for example, there
is no structure for invoicing, reconciliation, or auditing and recovery
functions. As one example, a commenter expressed concern that there are
no requirements for pharmacies to disclose chargeback amounts to CMS
and there is no requirement for pharmacies to provide evidence that the
point-of-sale reduction in price benefited the beneficiary. A commenter
recommended that there be regulatory oversight of the chargeback
process by relevant agencies. Furthermore, according to commenters,
under Part D there is no existing regulatory authority over or
oversight of wholesalers or other entities that could be facilitating
the chargeback administration process.
In addition, several commenters requested guidance from CMS on
error adjudication or dispute resolution processes. A commenter
indicated the error adjudication process would be used in those
instances where a manufacturer erroneously remits a chargeback to a
pharmacy or where there are errors in the amount that a beneficiary
pays. Other commenters suggested that pharmacies should not be required
to reverse and rebill original claims if a price reduction is applied
in error because it could result in a beneficiary's cost-sharing
obligation increasing, and a commenter requested guidance from the
Department explaining that plan sponsors and PBMs are not required to
collect additional cost-sharing from beneficiaries under these
circumstances. A number of commenters raised concerns or questions
about the impact that changes included in the Proposed Rule would have
on pharmacies. For example, a commenter requested guidance on dealing
with non-collectible rebates (e.g., if a beneficiary is given a
discount at the point of sale, which the manufacturer later does not
honor, must the pharmacy attempt to collect the disallowed amount from
the beneficiary?).
Similarly, a commenter requested clarification on the role of
pharmacies in dispute resolutions involving point-of-sale reductions in
price and asked that there not be any retroactive adjustments for
chargebacks paid to pharmacies. Another commenter requested guidance on
administering chargebacks to pharmacies where the value of the
chargeback exceeds the ingredient cost.
Response: This rule provides flexibility for parties seeking safe
harbor protection to structure back-end, point-of-sale chargeback
processes that result in fully passed-through point-of-sale discounts.
Moreover, were we to include detailed technical requirements, we would
make it more difficult for parties to use and comply with the safe
harbor for its intended purposes. While we have consulted with CMS in
this rulemaking, any requests for CMS to issue guidance related to the
chargeback administration process (e.g., guidance related to dispute
resolution processes) and questions about CMS authority to do so are
outside the scope of this rulemaking, as are CMS requirements related
to PDE reporting and correcting known discrepancies in cost-sharing
charged to beneficiaries in the event of a mistake or error in the
calculation of the point-of-sale price.
With respect to the comments regarding the circumstances under
which a pharmacy extends a price reduction to a beneficiary that is not
honored by the manufacturer, we note that if an entity made a practice
of undercharging beneficiaries for cost sharing, under the guise of
passing through manufacturer reductions in price, with knowledge that
the reductions in price would not be paid by manufacturers (thus
providing remuneration to the beneficiaries), and did so with the
intent to induce beneficiaries to purchase items paid for in part by a
Federal health care program, the entity could be subject to liability
under the anti-kickback statute. Moreover, while occasional errors in
calculations (e.g., a miscalculation of a beneficiary's cost-sharing
obligation) would not implicate the anti-kickback statute, a pattern of
errors could eliminate the protection of the safe harbor (e.g., if a
manufacturer regularly miscalculates the full value of the reduction in
price owed to the pharmacy that is required to be provided for safe
harbor protection) and would be subject to scrutiny for intent.
We also clarify that there should be no situation in which the
price at the pharmacy counter is less than zero. A situation in which a
beneficiary or a Part D plan sponsor theoretically would be owed money
would not be a reduction in price; that would be a payment to a
referral source and would not be protected by a safe harbor.
Comment: A commenter requested additional safeguards related to
chargebacks for small business community pharmacies, including but not
limited to the right to: Appeal chargeback decisions, inquire about
missing chargeback payments, utilize audit processes, and engage in
dispute resolution. A commenter recommended that, if other parties
violate the requirements under the Proposed Rule and the anti-kickback
statute, then community pharmacies should be held harmless from such
conduct. This commenter stated that independent community pharmacies
should have the opportunity to do business with any trading partner in
the supply, billing, or reconciliation chain.
Response: Nothing in this rule restricts the ability of pharmacies
to do business with other parties in the supply, billing, or
reconciliation chain.
[[Page 76699]]
While we appreciate the commenter's concerns, we decline to provide
additional safeguards in the safe harbor that are specific to community
pharmacies; the articulated concerns are not unique to any particular
type of pharmacy, and we believe the safe harbor contains the right
combination of conditions to protect programs and patients from abusive
kickback schemes. We note that many of the commenter's requests, e.g.,
the right to appeal chargeback decisions, are outside the scope of this
rulemaking, which addresses the conditions necessary for protection
under the anti-kickback statute. Nothing in this rule limits
pharmacies' ability to inquire about missing chargeback payments or to
enter into contracts that provide for appealing chargeback decisions,
utilizing audit processes, and engaging in dispute resolution. We
further note that community pharmacies would not necessarily be liable
under the anti-kickback statute if other parties violate the anti-
kickback statute. Whether a party is subject to liability under the
anti-kickback statute depends upon the actions and intent of that party
and not solely upon the actions and intent of other parties to an
arrangement.
Comment: Several commenters requested that the Department
facilitate the exchange of information for purposes of implementing the
chargeback process. For example, a commenter requested that CMS allow
for the electronic sharing of data so that pharmacies will know
patients' cost-sharing obligations and create a mechanism for
pharmacies to receive point-of-sale chargebacks. Another commenter
asked that OIG require as a safe harbor condition that plans, PBMs, and
other entities involved in the chargeback administration process
exchange information and cooperate as necessary to ensure transparency.
Several commenters raised concerns or questions related to the
claims-level data needed for chargeback administration. For instance,
some commenters asked that the Department develop processes and claims-
level data elements to allow manufacturers to administer chargebacks to
pharmacies. A commenter requested that HHS implement updates to
existing data and communications file formats to assist with the
chargeback verification and correction process.
Other commenters commented on the need for pharmacies to have
visibility into various claims-level data. For example, a commenter
explained that pharmacies should have full visibility into the total
and final reimbursement due the pharmacy and any final amounts due as
chargebacks so that they can predict their cash flow. A commenter
indicated that while other parties in the drug supply chain may argue
that these chargeback amounts are proprietary, access to this
information is vital to a pharmacy's ability to operationalize its
business and support the Proposed Rule. Another commenter noted that
transparent, timely, and plan-validated communication of claims-level
chargeback amounts due to the pharmacy will enable wholesalers to
effectively adjudicate the chargeback payment to pharmacies. A
commenter recommended that the chargeback administrator be required to
furnish electronic remittance advices with all chargeback amounts
detailed at the claim level so as to allow pharmacies to substantiate
the total and final reimbursement. Other commenters had various
requests for pharmacies to have full visibility into plan-adjudicated
claims, for example, to allow the pharmacies to extract chargeback data
or to track price reductions made by an entity who will be paying the
pharmacies (if the entity making payment is not a plan sponsor under
Part D or a PBM).
Response: We do not intend for this rule to stipulate the data that
must be shared among the parties administering the point-of-sale
chargebacks. As we stated above, this rule provides flexibility for the
industry to develop and implement arrangements for the administration
of chargebacks as necessary to meet the conditions of the safe harbor.
While we encourage such flexibility, we note that point-of-sale
chargebacks are defined as a payment made directly or indirectly by a
manufacturer to a dispensing pharmacy. To the extent the chargeback
process is used, we expect the manufacturer and the plan sponsor under
Part D, Medicaid MCO, or PBM to have a writing that sets forth the
reduction in price negotiated between the parties, which would be equal
to the chargeback due to the pharmacy.
Similarly, we would expect a manufacturer to have sufficient
documentation to prove that the chargeback actually was administered to
the pharmacy and that the amount of the chargeback was equal to the
point-of-sale reduction in price agreed upon in writing between the
plan sponsor under Part D, the Medicaid MCO, or a PBM acting under
contract with either, and the manufacturer. While we are not specifying
the form of this documentation, it would be prudent for manufacturers
to maintain appropriate documentation to show that the condition in
(cc)(1)(ii) has been met, if applicable.
We decline to adopt the commenter's request to create a condition
in the safe harbor related to the exchange of information and
cooperation among the parties. While increased transparency is an
important goal of this final rule, we believe such a condition in the
safe harbor would be vague and would result in significant stakeholder
confusion.
Comment: Several commenters noted that NCPDP would need to be
consulted in order to implement new minimum transaction standards
related to chargebacks. A commenter posited that a new version of the
standard transaction is not required but expedited code values would be
required. Several commenters suggested that every approved pharmacy
claim (adjudicated through the standard transactions developed by
NCPDP) should include an itemized chargeback amount due to the
pharmacy. One of these commenters explained that a number of sources
(e.g., a manufacturer, a health plan, a pharmacy switch) could
potentially provide the claims-level chargeback data. Another commenter
raised concerns, however, that manufacturers and wholesalers do not
currently have access to the final adjudicated claim or to other
enrollee-level data, which the commenter believes would be necessary to
implement the chargeback processing system.
A commenter that is a not-for-profit standards development
organization provided guidance on three possible options for
chargebacks to be administered in accordance with the HIPAA standards
for electronic healthcare transactions. In two methods, a PBM would
administer the chargeback process and in the third method a non-PBM
entity would serve as the chargeback administrator. According to the
commenter, two of the possible methods for administering chargebacks
(one involving a PBM and one involving a non-PBM entity) would require
near-term modifications to the standard transaction through additional
expedited code values added to the existing HIPAA standard. The
commenter stated that ten-to-twelve months from the date of a final
rule would be necessary for the standards development process, with
additional time needed for modification of industry operations. The
commenter requested that OIG and the Department provide guidance as to
which of these methods would support the definition of a
``chargeback.''
Response: We appreciate the commenters highlighting changes to the
[[Page 76700]]
HIPAA standard transactions that might be required for certain parties
to administer point-of-sale chargebacks, although we will note that the
Department is agnostic as to which entities may choose to implement the
point-of-sale chargeback process. We thank the commenter for the
estimate that ten to twelve months would be necessary for standards
development and implementation. While we do not endorse that estimate,
we do believe the revised effective date of January 1, 2022 for the
amendments to Sec. 1001.952(h)(5) of the discount safe harbor will
provide adequate time for the standards development process and for
implementation of industry operations to provide the chargeback
function.
Comment: A few commenters requested that OIG provide flexibility as
to the entities that may administer the chargebacks described in the
point-of-sale reductions in price safe harbor, with various commenters
highlighting that existing systems used by PBMs, pharmacy switch
models, and wholesale distributors, among others, could be leveraged to
operationalize this process. A commenter requested that OIG allow
market forces to determine the most efficient revenue streams under
this new system. Another commenter requested that OIG clarify those
entities that can have a role in the chargeback administration process,
and whether entities that have formulary decision-making responsibility
(directly or indirectly) could serve as chargeback administrators. A
commenter highlighted, however, that the safe harbor only protects
reductions in the price charged by a manufacturer, which the commenter
noted could unintentionally limit the chargeback process to wholesalers
because manufacturers typically only ``charge'' these entities.
Several commenters supported the use of wholesalers to effectuate
chargebacks to pharmacies. For example, a trade association
representing pharmaceutical distributors explained that existing
distributor systems could be leveraged to process point-of-sale
reductions in price and to route chargebacks to pharmacies. More
specifically, some commenters posited that wholesalers are best-
positioned in the distribution channel to facilitate point-of-sale
discounts because of their existing capabilities and infrastructure,
and their prior experience with chargeback transactions. According to
these commenters, the wholesaler system would create a ``cash-less''
discount model and would move the industry towards net prices for
patients, would enhance transparency, and would minimize payment delays
to pharmacies. A wholesaler commenter noted that the use of wholesalers
to effectuate chargebacks would increase transparency and would ensure
wholesaler accountability because pharmacies have the discretion to
choose a different wholesaler with which to do business. However, the
commenter emphasized that there is a need for additional accountability
principles to be set, such as requirements to relay accurate
information and credits throughout the channel promptly so as not to
impede manufacturers, wholesalers, or other entities from the proper
administration of chargebacks. Another wholesaler commenter stated that
a new remittance transaction would need to be established for the
payment of the chargeback by the wholesaler to the pharmacy once it is
authorized by the manufacturer.
A PBM commenter raised a number of concerns with wholesalers
serving as chargeback administrators. For example, the commenter
expressed concern that using a wholesaler-led system could lead to
pricing collusion. Another commenter raised its concerns that
wholesalers that administer chargebacks may be incentivized to ignore
utilization management requirements and pay discounts because, unlike
plans or PBMs, they are paid per unit sold. A commenter also cautioned
against unintended consequences of using wholesalers to facilitate
chargebacks; specifically, the commenter stated that using these
entities would decrease the AMP and, as a result, would lower the
amount that states and the Federal government receive under the MDRP.
Other commenters requested that PBMs be designated to administer
chargebacks because they are able to use existing infrastructure and
relationships with manufacturers, plan sponsors, and pharmacies.
However, a trade association representing community pharmacists
supported a model in which PBMs would not participate in the chargeback
administration process. According to the commenter, interactions
between pharmacies and PBMs have led to a non-transparent environment
that may hinder patient care. Another commenter cautioned against
making pharmacies the chargeback administrator, as it would require the
pharmacy to be privy to a significant amount of new information, such
as information about the beneficiary's plan, benefit structure,
position in the benefit parameters, and costs, as well as information
about the discount negotiated. The commenter also cautioned that such
responsibilities would significantly change the role of a pharmacy.
Response: The Department recognizes that stakeholders in the
pharmaceutical industry are best positioned to determine what entity or
entities should be responsible for the point-of-sale chargeback
administration process. In addition, the Department wants to encourage
current and future innovation and seeks a level playing field so that a
variety of entities may engage in the chargeback administration
process. For these reasons, and so as not to be overly prescriptive,
the final rule does not require a specific category or categories of
entities to serve as chargeback administrators.
We did not intend for the use of the word ``charged'' in the safe
harbor to imply that only wholesalers may effectuate the chargeback
process, and that term has been changed in the regulatory text. So long
as all conditions of the safe harbor are met, any entity may administer
the chargeback process for purposes of compliance with the safe harbor.
Comment: Many commenters raised concerns about the costs,
coordination, and development that would be required for all Part D
stakeholders (e.g., manufacturers, wholesalers, and pharmacies) to
create and implement new systems to operationalize chargebacks. For
example, several commenters noted that pharmacies would be required to
develop mechanisms to track payments at negotiated discount rates and
to operationalize chargebacks. To address these concerns, a commenter
requested that OIG minimize burden and financial risk for pharmacies
and suggested that the responsibility for calculating the total payment
due to the pharmacy rest with the plan sponsor. On a similar note, a
commenter raised concerns about the burden on pharmacies to determine
beneficiary out-of-pocket cost-sharing amounts.
Commenters noted that entities would incur significant financial
costs through, by way of the commenters' examples, upfront investments
in IT; development of systems for invoicing, reconciliation, and
recovery; and new systems (specific to pharmacies) to collect
reimbursement from the PBM and chargeback administrator. Such system
modifications also would be required across the entire drug supply
chain to incorporate and analyze utilization information at the
beneficiary level. In addition, some commenters noted that the existing
wholesaler chargeback systems in place are much simpler and very
different than what would be
[[Page 76701]]
required in the retail pharmacy context and would need to be modified
for this context, potentially requiring significant infrastructure
changes and material investments.
Commenters also noted that all parties involved would have to
renegotiate existing contracts or enter into new contracts to
operationalize this system, which they posited would be a time-
consuming and resource-intensive process. A commenter also requested
confirmation from CMS that the renegotiation of the terms and
conditions of contracts between pharmacies and plans (or PBMs)
implicates the any willing pharmacy provisions of the Act.
Commenters highlighted that the new chargeback infrastructure would
need to undergo rigorous testing to avoid adverse impacts, and a
commenter noted that the proposed deadline does not provide sufficient
time for stakeholders to develop, test, and deploy these new chargeback
systems. According to a commenter, requiring pharmacies to implement
these new processes increases administrative costs for, and requires
significant upfront investment by, these entities, with no added
benefit. Several commenters noted that these burdens, challenges, and
risks would be worse for independent community pharmacies and specialty
pharmacies.
Response: While we recognize that some system changes may be
required in order to administer point-of-sale chargebacks, we note that
nothing in the point-of-sale reduction in price safe harbor requires
parties to utilize this process. While the Department encourages rapid
adoption of point-of-sale price reductions, we note that we are
finalizing a later effective date than originally proposed for the
amendments to Sec. 1001.952(h)(5) of the discount safe harbor, which
should help address commenters' concerns about implementation
timelines. As we set forth in Sec. 1001.952(cc)(1)(ii), the reduction
in price must not involve a rebate unless the full value of the
reduction in price is provided to the dispensing pharmacy by the
manufacturer, directly or indirectly, through a point-of-sale
chargeback or series of point-of-sale chargebacks, or is required by
law. We view this criterion of the safe harbor as applying only if a
rebate is involved (in the form of a point-of-sale chargeback). If the
pharmacy receives the full value of the reduction in price at the time
of sale of the prescription pharmaceutical product to the beneficiary,
then a chargeback (and the requirements for chargebacks under this safe
harbor) would not be needed.
We are not providing specific guidance and rules around
reimbursement methodologies or processes in the safe harbor to allow
flexibility, as further explained below. If the chargeback process is
used, then in order to receive protection under the safe harbor the
payment must be made from the manufacturer (directly or indirectly) to
the pharmacy, and the amount of the payment must be equal to the
reduction in price negotiated between the plan sponsor and the
manufacturer. Moreover, we agree that the new safe harbor should not
restrict patient access to drugs because of delays in reimbursement at
the pharmacy.
Comment: A commenter raised concerns that the chargeback system may
allow manufacturers to access pharmacy systems for auditing purposes,
which the commenter believes raises privacy issues.
Response: Nothing in this final rule would alter in any aspect
existing obligations of Covered Entities under the HIPAA privacy and
security rules. We would expect such entities to structure their
interactions in full compliance with applicable laws.
Comment: A commenter asked if payments to pharmacies will be
subject to prompt payment rules, particularly with regard to chargeback
payments where, according to the commenter, CMS has no regulatory
authority over wholesalers. The commenter noted that if the chargeback
system fails to timely compensate pharmacies at the point of sale,
pharmacies may refuse to participate in Part D plans or networks that
rely on chargebacks rather than existing PBM-facilitated transaction
systems, decreasing beneficiary access to medicines at pharmacies.
Commenters also noted that there could be a significant delay
between a pharmacy's dispensing of a product and receipt of a
chargeback, which the commenters believe will create significant
financial burdens, substantial operational challenges, and increased
financial risk for pharmacies. A commenter asked for clarification as
to what entity holds the financial risk in the period between when the
price reduction is applied at the point of sale and when pharmacies are
made whole. According to the commenters, this lag also could jeopardize
patient access to needed medications.
Commenters suggested solutions to this issue such as tracking
systems to account for each specific discount, applying chargebacks as
credits due from the wholesaler to the pharmacy, immediate
communication of the discount at the time of invoicing, or daily
adjudication for rebate payments. Several commenters posited that
pharmacies may choose not to participate in the Part D program if they
are not compensated in sufficient time or are required to implement
these new operations.
Some commenters recommended that CMS amend its regulations to apply
the Part D prompt-payment requirements to point-of-sale reductions in
price, while another commenter opposed application of these regulations
to chargeback payments. At least one commenter requested that the safe
harbor require as a condition of protection that any chargeback process
be consistent with prompt payment laws. Similarly, a commenter
requested that pharmacies be permitted to charge interest for delayed
payment of chargebacks in addition to being paid in full for the total
and final reimbursement.
Response: We thank commenters for highlighting these issues. As a
threshold matter, the Proposed Rule did not propose prompt payment as a
condition of meeting the safe harbor condition regarding chargebacks.
We did not propose this condition, and, in any event, it would add
unnecessary technical detail to the safe harbor to stipulate the
specifics related to the timing of any payments made via the chargeback
process or which party assumes the financial risk during the process.
In large part, these comments concern questions that must be resolved
through arrangements negotiated by the relevant parties. The Part D
program is a private sector-based program in which the participating
entities negotiate with their partners to make what they believe are
the most effective arrangements to participate in the Part D market.
Entities have been and continue to be required to establish these
arrangements in compliance with programmatic requirements as well as
the anti-kickback statute.
We expect terms related to chargebacks to be in the agreements
between the relevant parties, but we note that, to the extent the
chargeback process is used, the chargeback must be made from the
manufacturer to the pharmacy, directly or indirectly, in order for the
safe harbor to protect the reduction in price.
Comment: A trade association representing pharmacy benefit managers
stated that the rule, if finalized, would require parties to create a
new system to handle chargeback transactions unless rebates can be
transferred through a PBM. In lieu of the Proposed Rule, the commenter
provided a detailed description of an alternative in which
[[Page 76702]]
PBMs would be responsible for administering price concessions at the
point of sale.
Response: The Department does not intend for this rule to prescribe
those individuals or entities that may serve as chargeback
administrators, and we see no compelling reason to do so. The
Department believes that PBMs as well as other individuals or entities
(including entities that currently or may in the future participate in
the pharmaceutical supply chain) would be able to develop the means and
infrastructure necessary to effectuate the chargeback process. By
remaining agnostic in this safe harbor, the Department believes that
innovation and competition will be encouraged in the marketplace.
Comment: A commenter requested that HHS modify Medicare and
Medicaid policy to ensure point-of-sale chargebacks will continue to be
treated as plan discounts because they are established through
manufacturer-plan relationships, rather than being treated as pharmacy
discounts because this may affect pharmacy reimbursement.
Response: We have consulted with CMS as part of this rulemaking and
are informed that point-of-sale chargebacks should be treated as plan
discounts.
Comment: A commenter noted that key portions of the Proposed Rule
related to the chargeback process are vague and ambiguous, which
heightens enforcement concerns for these parties under the anti-
kickback statute. The commenter requested that OIG re-propose the rule
with additional clarifications.
Response: While we appreciate the commenter's concerns, we
respectfully disagree that the portion of the proposal related to the
chargeback process is vague and ambiguous. By design, the proposed safe
harbor is not overly prescriptive with respect to the chargeback
process to allow for private sector flexibility, competition, and
innovation, and to avoid creating technical barriers to the safe
harbor's utility. We intend for this safe harbor to provide flexibility
in terms of the parties responsible for chargeback administration as
well as how that process is operationalized.
Comment: Several commenters requested that OIG revise the safe
harbor for point-of-sale reductions in price to add disclosure
requirements for chargeback administrators that mirror the disclosure
requirements in the PBM service fees safe harbor.
Response: We decline to accept the commenter's suggestion. As we
explained in the Proposed Rule, the ``transparency requirement is
important to ensure that PBM's arrangements with pharmaceutical
manufacturers are not in tension with the services that the PBM
provides to the health plans for which it is acting as an agent.'' We
believe the transparency requirement is important for purposes of the
PBM service fee safe harbor because of the agency relationship and
functions in that safe harbor, because of the potential for a wide
variety of services and compensation structures and amounts, and
because there are defined parties (i.e., the pharmaceutical
manufacturer, the PBM, and the health plans to which the PBM provides
pharmacy benefit management services). Because the point-of-sale
reductions in price safe harbor specifically requires the point-of-sale
chargeback (if used) to be equal to the discount negotiated between the
manufacturer and plan and is agnostic as to the entity that serves as
chargeback administrator, and because a range of individuals and
entities could potentially be involved in this process, we believe the
same disclosure requirements are not appropriate or necessary for
purposes of this safe harbor.
Comment: Commenters who commented on the chargeback process raised
a number of questions about fees that may be charged to administer
chargebacks. For instance, a commenter recommended that pharmacies not
be responsible for any chargeback administration fees, and another
commenter recommended that pharmacies be held harmless for these
processing fees. Commenters also asked that the compensation and
disclosure requirements set forth in the new PBM service fees safe
harbor apply with respect to fees for chargeback administration
services. A commenter recommended that OIG establish a form for a
chargeback administration fee (e.g., specify that the fee must be on a
per-chargeback basis), and recommended that OIG mandate that chargeback
administration fees not vary substantially by manufacturer or by drug.
Response: We did not propose, and are not finalizing in this rule,
requirements regarding chargeback administration arrangements. We note,
however, that chargeback fee arrangements should not be used to reward
the generation of Federal health care program business and would need
to comply with the anti-kickback statute. Other existing safe harbors
(e.g., the personal services and management contracts safe harbor)
could be used to protect such arrangements. We note that chargeback
administration fees based on the cost of the drug, or that vary
substantially by drug, would share many of the same problematic
features of those rebate arrangements that are no longer protected
under the discount safe harbor and would be suspect.
ii. Reverse Engineering
Comment: Various commenters expressed concerns that the proposed
point-of-sale reduction in price safe harbor would provide sufficient
data to reverse engineer the manufacturer's or the PBM's discount
structure, with certain commenters asserting that point-of-sale
reductions in price would not likely be incentivized because disclosure
of sensitive price and bargaining information inhibits competition.
However, another commenter noted that this reverse engineering may
allow stakeholders to have a better understanding of drug discounts and
pricing and may result in increased competition and lower prices.
Response: We appreciate commenters' concerns about price
transparency and agree that providing the market with additional
information could have unintended effects in certain, limited
circumstances. However, the Department is not persuaded, on net, that
this would increase overall program costs or reduce competition. Price
transparency lowers a key barrier to entry and increases competition in
most competitive markets. Additionally, as commenters suggest and
program performance indicates, PBMs have been extremely effective
negotiators in the Medicare Part D program, and the Department does not
anticipate that additional price transparency would weaken their
negotiating leverage and ability to obtain price concessions. PBMs are
aware of the rebates they currently receive, and, in the Department's
view, they are unlikely to accept higher net prices going forward as
they compete to attract Medicare beneficiaries.
Comment: Numerous commenters were concerned that requiring the
disclosure of discounts would, for example, lead to collusion among
manufacturers; higher prices; and lower, unvaried discounts because, in
part, negotiation leverage diminishes, manufacturers will be able to
determine the contract terms offered by their competitors to each plan,
and manufacturers will lose the incentive to negotiate the lowest
possible discounts, in order to protect market share. In support of
these assertions, several commenters cited statements from the FTC
indicating that, if pharmaceutical manufacturers learn the exact amount
of rebates offered by their competitors,
[[Page 76703]]
tacit collusion among manufacturers is more feasible.\47\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\47\ U.S. FTC, Letter to Assembly Member Greg Aghazarian, 2004,
available at https://www.ftc.gov/sites/default/files/documents/advocacy_documents/ftc-comment-hon.greg-aghazarian-concerning-ca.b.1960-requiring-pharmacy-benefit-managers-make-disclosures-purchasers-and-prospective-purchasers/v040027.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Several commenters recommended that OIG consider implementing
commercial best practices and safeguards that maintain the
confidentiality of proprietary contract data and ensure point-of-sale
discounts that manufacturers negotiate with plans and their PBMs are
not made public. A commenter also requested that CMS not display the
value of rebates on Medicare Plan Finder but only require display of
the final discounted drug prices, net of any pharmaceutical
manufacturer discounts.
By contrast, a commenter asserted that, while some stakeholders
fear full price transparency will undermine the negotiating power of
payers and increase the potential for collusion, the disclosure of
price concessions represents the best way of assuring plan sponsors
that formulary development is not being influenced by rebates.
Response: We appreciate commenters' concerns that manufacturers may
raise their prices or engage in tacit collusion as a result of this
final rule. However, the Department has seen very limited evidence that
this will occur.
Additionally, although we recognize that the pharmaceutical market
is different than other markets in some respects, in most consumer
markets where prices are known, transparency increases competition,
rather than harms it. In the Department's experience, a hallmark of the
prescription drug market is that manufacturers are less concerned about
other manufacturers knowing the level of discounts they offer. Indeed,
manufacturers can generally estimate the discount their competitors are
offering, based on negotiations they have won or lost. Manufacturers
are more concerned about each PBM knowing the discount the other PBMs
have received, because that will enable PBMs to seek the lowest
discount offered by a manufacturer for a particular product. This
places downward pressure on net prices, rather than enabling collusion.
Echoing a sentiment of many commenters, the Department recognizes
that PBMs are extremely effective negotiators. Nothing in this final
rule takes away a PBM's ability to negotiate lower drug prices in
exchange for better formulary access, and the Department expects that
PBMs will continue to be effective negotiators.
iii. Common Ownership
Comment: Various commenters raised concerns regarding changes
proposed in the Proposed Rule and common ownership between PBMs,
pharmacies, and health plans. Commenters noted that many of the largest
PBMs have vertically integrated business lines, such as health plans or
pharmacies. Some commenters asserted that OIG's proposed definition of
``PBM'' might allow vertically integrated organizations to circumvent
the proposed requirements, with a commenter noting that this potential
loophole could give PBM-affiliated pharmacies improper competitive
advantages over non-PBM-affiliated pharmacies. Another commenter
highlighted the potential anti-competitive behavior of PBMs, including
requesting that drug manufacturers provide higher discounts for drugs
sold through PBMs' own pharmacy operations.
To address this issue, commenters recommended that OIG adopt a
functional definition of PBM that includes any person, business, or
other entity that carries out specified PBM services to a manufacturer,
where directly or through an owned, affiliated, or other related entity
under a common ownership structure with a PBM, with a commenter
recommending that PBM- and plan-affiliated pharmacies be able to access
non-abusive purchase discounts, such as those on generics. A commenter
suggested that PBMs be required to provide the same conditions and same
reimbursement to independent, non-vertically integrated pharmacies as
are provided to PBM-owned pharmacies, while another commenter
recommended that all discounts and rebates from any source and PBM
service fees be disclosed at the point of sale and PBM service fees
paid by the pharmaceutical industry be disclosed and separated from any
discounts and rebates provided to PBM-owned pharmacy operations.
However, another commenter noted that only extending the revisions
proposed in the Proposed Rule to PBM-owned pharmacies could raise anti-
competitive issues with non-PBM-owned competitors. This commenter
recommended expanding the scope of the amendment to include all
intermediaries involved in drug distribution and payment transactions,
whether or not they take possession of the drugs. Another commenter
specifically noted that the provisions in 42 CFR 1001.952(dd)(2)(iii)
for PBM services must also include language to prohibit the PBM's
activity between the manufacturer and another business entity in which
the PBM has operational control or an ownership interest.
Another commenter suggested that the changes we proposed could
result in unfair competition because they would exclude from safe
harbor protection all purchase discounts received by any mail-order
pharmacy, specialty pharmacy, or retail pharmacy owned by a PBM or a
plan sponsor, regardless of whether the purchase discounts (offered to
the buyer in its capacity of a dispensing pharmacy, not in the capacity
of a formulary manager) are dependent on formulary placement of the
manufacturer's pharmaceutical product. The same commenter is concerned
that, if purchase discounts are not offered to PBM-owned and plan
sponsor-owned pharmacies because of the safe harbor exclusion, class-
of-trade pricing could prevent manufacturers from offering purchase
discounts to any mail-order pharmacy, specialty pharmacy, or retail
pharmacy.
Response: We appreciate the comments on any potential issues that
ownership interests might create under our proposed revisions to the
discount safe harbor and suggestions on how best to address these
issues. However, we intend for the discount safe harbor to continue to
protect discounts on prescription pharmaceutical products offered to
entities other than plan sponsors under Medicare Part D (directly or
through a PBM), including, but not limited to, wholesalers, hospitals,
physicians, and pharmacies. As explained previously, we are not
expanding the amendment to include entities other than plan sponsors
under Medicare Part D, such as PBM-affiliated pharmacies. We note,
however, that arrangements in which PBMs funnel discounts through
affiliated or commonly owned entities, or arrangements where it appears
that a PBM is channeling kickbacks through a commonly owned entity or
otherwise in order to evade this rule, are highly suspect. The anti-
kickback statute prohibits remuneration offered, paid, solicited, or
received, directly or indirectly, to induce or reward referrals of, or
the purchase (or arranging for the purchase) of, an item or service
paid for in whole or in part by Federal health care programs. If a
discount offered to a pharmacy is for the purpose of inducing a
commonly owned entity, e.g., a PBM, to arrange for the purchase of a
drug paid for by Federal health care programs, through formulary
placement or otherwise, then the discount would not be protected by the
discount safe harbor.
[[Page 76704]]
Finally, while we appreciate the commenter's suggestion to require
disclosure of all discounts and rebates from any sources and PBM
service fees paid by the pharmaceutical industry, we note that this
safe harbor is limited to reductions in price by manufacturers for
prescription pharmaceutical products payable by a plan sponsor under
Medicare Part D or a Medicaid MCO. The safe harbor does not protect
discounts or rebates offered to or from other sources and it does
protect any service fees. Given this limited scope of this safe harbor,
we decline to adopt the commenter's suggestion for broader disclosure
requirements.
Comment: Other commenters recommended that OIG monitor for
inappropriate business practices involving PBMs and PBM-affiliated
entities, with several pharmaceutical company commenters pointing to
price concessions from manufacturers to specialty pharmacies that are
owned by or affiliated with PBMs and may be used to subvert the
requirements set out in the Proposed Rule. A commenter also encouraged
OIG to assert in the preamble to the final rule that these types of
price concession arrangements will be viewed as highly suspect if
certain facts are present.
Response: We acknowledge the issues that common ownership interests
between PBMs and other entities may cause and understand that this may
be a potential area of risk following the implementation of the final
rule. We reaffirm that this rule is intended to explicitly exclude from
the discount safe harbor certain reductions in price and other
remuneration offered by manufacturers of prescription pharmaceutical
products to Part D plan sponsors that may pose a risk to certain
Federal health care programs and beneficiaries. As discussed above,
pricing arrangements that enable PBMs to retain these types of
discounts through an affiliated or commonly owned entity, instead of
flowing to Part D plans, are excluded from the discount safe harbor and
would not qualify for protection under the new point-of-sale reductions
in price safe harbor. The determination as to whether a particular
pricing arrangement would receive safe harbor protection would be
dependent upon the facts of that particular case.
Comment: Some commenters recommended that DOJ monitor and increase
its scrutiny related to vertical and horizontal mergers, especially
given that three PBMs appear to control a majority of the market,
allowing the PBMs to leverage their market power to the detriment of
plan sponsors (government and commercial), providers, and consumers.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' feedback. This issue is
outside the scope of this rule.
Comment: A commenter stated that pharmaceutical companies should
provide to all pharmacies in the same circumstances, irrespective of
their ownership, access to the same drug product's actual acquisition
cost and discounts.
Response: The amendment to the discount safe harbor and the two new
safe harbors promulgated in this final rule do not address discounts or
other pricing arrangements between manufacturers and wholesalers,
pharmacies, or other entities.\48\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\48\ See 84 FR 2348.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
iv. Incentives for Point-of-Sale Reduction in Price
Comment: Several commenters were uncertain how manufacturers,
health plans, and PBMs would react to the new safe harbor for point-of-
sale reductions in price for and how those reactions would affect the
prescription drug marketplace. These commenters were generally unsure
whether the new safe harbor would incentivize point-of-sale reductions
in price and requested that HHS further analyze how manufacturers may
alter pricing strategies, particularly longer-term impacts, before
enacting a final rule.
Response: We appreciate commenters' concerns regarding uncertainty.
The Department intends to monitor the effects of this final rule.
However, we note that the new safe harbor for point-of-sale reductions
in price is designed to offer more flexibility for manufacturer
discounts and several manufacturers commented that they would be
incentivized to offer point-of-sale reductions in price, noting their
support for lowering out-of-pocket costs for beneficiaries.
Comment: A few commenters questioned whether manufacturers would
provide point-of-sale reductions in price to fully offset the rebates
that would be prohibited if the amendment to the discount safe harbor
were finalized, especially because point-of-sale reductions in price
have been offered by PBMs for some time in the commercial market, and
there has not been widespread adoption.
Response: We appreciate commenters' observations about the dynamics
of the commercial market. As we discuss elsewhere in this rule, we are
aware that some commercial plans may be operationalizing point-of-sale
benefit designs and believe that at least some industry stakeholders
have the capabilities to operationalize point-of-sale reductions in
price that would be protected under the new safe harbor.
Comment: A commenter requested clarification on how PBMs will
negotiate for discounts without using rebates. For example, the
commenter requested clarification on what compensation would be
available to PBMs, how PBMs would be incentivized to negotiate lower
prices for patients, and how drug manufacturers would negotiate for
formulary placement, all in the absence of rebates.
Response: This rule does not require any particular method of
negotiation of discounts, and parties are free to pursue all lawful
forms of negotiation. With respect to negotiations between PBMs and
manufacturers, PBMs are supposed to be acting as an agent of health
plans and, in this role, we would expect them to negotiate with
manufacturers on behalf of plan sponsors under Part D for point-of-sale
reductions in price. We leave it to the applicable parties to determine
how negotiations of point-of-sale reductions in price will evolve and
how financial arrangements will be structured between these parties to
comply with the anti-kickback statute.
Comment: A few commenters expressed concern that errors or delays
in the implementation of point-of-sale reductions are likely, which
could leave beneficiaries without prescriptions at all or with
prescriptions at higher costs. Commenters questioned whether a pharmacy
would be liable for such errors via retroactive reconciliation. Without
clarity on these issues, commenters believed manufacturers were not
likely to be incentivized to offer point-of-sale reductions in price.
Response: Questions regarding billing errors are outside the scope
of this rulemaking. However, we note that while all conditions of a
safe harbor must be met to ensure protection, falling outside a safe
harbor does not necessarily result in liability under the statute.
Moreover, mere errors do not create liability under the anti-kickback
statute.
Comment: A couple of commenters questioned whether point-of-sale
reductions in price were viable as constructed under the Proposed Rule
as they would require significant operational changes, ultimately
discouraging point-of-sale reductions in price from being offered.
These commenters recommended that the Department should require Part D
plans to provide a point-of-sale rebate plan as one of their plan
offerings instead.
[[Page 76705]]
Response: We appreciate the commenters' concerns regarding the
viability of point-of-sale reductions. The Department believes that
industry stakeholders have or can develop the capabilities to
operationalize point-of-sale reductions in price that would be
protected under the new safe harbor. Regarding commenters'
recommendation that the Department require Part D plans to provide a
rebate plan, we note that changes to Part D rules related to required
plan offerings are outside the scope of this rulemaking.
Comment: A few commenters expressed concern that manufacturers
would not likely be incentivized to offer point-of-sale reductions in
price unless HHS clarified whether discount safe harbor protection will
continue to be available for formulary and utilization management
arrangements.
Response: As we explain above, reductions in price to a plan
sponsor or Medicaid MCO that are conditioned on formulary placement and
utilization management tools can qualify for protection under the new
safe harbor for point-of-sale reductions in price.
Comment: A few other commenters expressed concern that
manufacturers were not likely be incentivized to enter into
arrangements to offer point-of-sale reductions in price unless the
Department clarified whether manufacturers have an option to provide
these discounts via plans, directly to each pharmacy, or through
another mechanism.
Response: We thank commenters for their concern. We note that the
discount safe harbor continues to protect discounts on prescription
pharmaceutical products offered to other entities, including, but not
limited to, wholesalers, hospitals, physicians, pharmacies, and third-
party payors in other Federal health care programs. We clarify,
however, that under the new safe harbor at Sec. 1001.952(cc), the
reduction in price must be set in advance with a plan sponsor under
Medicare Part D, a Medicaid MCO, or a PBM acting under contract with
either. While a chargeback may be paid directly to the pharmacy, the
Medicaid MCO or Part D plan is the anticipated recipient of the
reduction in price.
Comment: A few other commenters expressed concern that
manufacturers were not likely be incentivized to enter into
arrangements for point-of-sale reductions in price unless HHS clarified
whether point-of-sale discounts are required to be uniform across all
stages of the benefit design.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' concern. We clarify that
because the reduction in price must be set in advance with a plan
sponsor under Medicare Part D, a Medicaid MCO, or a PBM acting under
contract with either, we would expect the point-of-sale reduction in
price to be uniform across all stages of the benefit design, and would
not expect the reduction in price to be negotiated on a beneficiary-by-
beneficiary basis. Any such arrangement would be difficult to know at
the point of sale and thus could not be applied accurately to the
point-of-sale price, creating risk of violating the requirements of the
new safe harbor for point-of-sale reductions in price.
Comment: Another commenter expressed concern that manufacturers
would not likely be incentivized to provide point-of-sale reductions in
price, or only provide limited reductions at the point of sale, because
manufacturers would more likely set single discount levels across all
payers due to the increased transparency requirements.
Response: As we discuss in more detail in the Regulatory Impact
Statement, we acknowledge that there may be a wide range of behavioral
changes throughout the prescription pharmaceutical product supply
chain. However, PBMs will continue to have access to important
negotiation tools, such as formulary placement. Additionally, PBMs know
the net prices that plans paid before the revisions to the safe
harbors. Accordingly, the Department believes it is unlikely that
parties will dramatically change the prices they negotiate due to
transitioning from rebates to point-of-sale reductions in price.
Comment: A few commenters noted that since drugs are not typical
consumer products, offering point-of-sale reductions in price would not
likely impact demand; therefore, manufacturers would not likely be
incentivized to offer them. However, another commenter expected that
the new safe harbor would increase competition and create a strong
behavioral response among plans and manufacturers. Another commenter
believed that some manufacturers would be highly incentivized to offer
point-of-sale reductions in price if the drug was already in a highly
competitive market.
Response: We thank commenters for their insights into the dynamics
of drug markets. We agree that manufacturers are more likely to be
incentivized to offer point-of-sale reductions in highly competitive
drug markets and less likely to be incentivized in drug markets with
less competition, as was the case with rebates. However, as explained
elsewhere in this final rule, we believe there is a decreased risk of
fraud and abuse when the reductions in price are offered at the point
of sale rather than as rebates.
v. During 100 Percent Cost Sharing
Comment: A commenter noted that the Proposed Rule did not address
how point-of-sale discounts would apply to beneficiaries with 100
percent cost sharing. Other commenters provided examples of how they
interpreted the point-of-sale discount to apply during phases with 100
percent cost sharing, e.g., the deductible phase. A commenter suggested
that such beneficiaries should pay 100 percent of the discounted net
cost. The commenter provided the following example: If a drug's list
price is $200 and a beneficiary's plan sponsor under Part D has
negotiated a point-of-sale reduction in price of 10 percent, then the
price of the drug is $180. According to the commenter, during a period
of 100 percent cost sharing, the beneficiary would pay $180.
Response: We agree with the example offered by the commenter.
Specifically, if a drug's list price is $200 and a plan sponsor under
Part D has negotiated a point-of-sale discount of 10 percent, the price
of the drug for enrollees of that plan is $180. If a beneficiary is in
the deductible phase, the beneficiary would pay the full discounted
price of the drug (i.e., $180) at the pharmacy counter.
vi. Additional Safeguards
Comment: A commenter recommended OIG require entities to ``refrain
from doing anything that would impede'' their contracting counter-party
from meeting its own obligations under the safe harbor. The commenter
noted that this is a condition of the discount safe harbor.
Response: The proposed safe harbor for point-of-sale reductions in
price for prescription pharmaceutical products differs from the
discount safe harbor at 42 CFR 1001.952(h), in that the latter has
separate sets of requirements for buyers and sellers or offerors of
discounts. Because the ability of the buyer to meet its obligations
under the discount safe harbor depends in part on cooperation of the
seller or offeror, the safe harbor includes requirements that the
seller or offeror refrain from impeding the buyer from meeting the
buyer's own obligations. Because the proposed safe harbor for point-of-
sale reductions in price does not include conditions that similarly
require the cooperation of other parties to the transaction, we did not
propose to include this safeguard, and we decline to include it in the
final rule.
[[Page 76706]]
Comment: A commenter recommended that the point-of-sale reductions
in price not be contingent upon agreement between the manufacturer and
the PBM as to PBM service fees.
Response: We did not propose, and therefore are not finalizing in
this rule, a condition of the point-of-sale reduction in price safe
harbor that would prohibit a reduction in price being contingent upon
agreement between the manufacturer and the PBM on PBM service fees. We
note, however, that the point-of-sale reduction in price safe harbor
protects only the reduction in price; it does not protect a demand or
request for concession with regard to a PBM service fee arrangement.
Such a demand or request itself could constitute a solicitation for
remuneration (the remuneration being the service fee agreement, or a
concession on the terms of the service fee agreement) prohibited by the
anti-kickback statute that would not be protected by any safe harbor.
Comment: Some commenters recommended revising the proposed safe
harbor for point-of-sale price reductions to require any individual or
entity administering point-of-sale chargebacks to meet the same
compensation requirements set forth in the proposed PBM service fees
safe harbor.
Response: We did not propose, and therefore are not finalizing in
this rule any requirements for payments related to chargeback
administration. We note, however, that the point-of-sale reduction in
price safe harbor protects only a reduction in price by a manufacturer
for a prescription pharmaceutical product that is payable, in whole or
in part, by a plan sponsor under Medicare Part D or a Medicaid MCO; it
does not protect any payment arrangements that parties may enter into
for services such as chargeback administration.
Comment: Several commenters requested that OIG require certain
transparency requirements, for example: Plans or PBMs should be
required to exchange information to enable manufacturers to validate
that the full value of the reduction in price is provided to the
dispensing pharmacy; data from plans and PBMs should be available to
manufacturers to confirm that patients receive point-of-sale reductions
in price; information from plans or PBMs be available to patients and
pharmacies at the point-of-sale; and information from plans or PBMs,
including chargeback amounts due and paid, be available to pharmacies
in real time. By contrast, some commenters opposed general transparency
requirements and requested that OIG ensure that point-of-sale
reductions in price remain confidential by explicitly stating that
transparency is not required for this proposed safe harbor. For
example, pharmacies are not parties to the agreements between plans,
PBMs, and manufacturers and, thus, should not be allowed to know their
terms.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' suggestions for and
concerns about certain transparency requirements for the proposed
point-of-sale reductions in price safe harbor. As explained elsewhere
in this final rule, we believe that creating a new safe harbor for
point-of-sale reductions in price will increase transparency, including
transparency to plans and beneficiaries, and improve alignment of
incentives among parties that could result in lower list prices and
out-of-pocket costs. However, as explained earlier in this rule, we
decline to adopt the commenter's request to create a condition in the
safe harbor related to the exchange of information and cooperation
among the parties, such as the suggested disclosures to manufacturers.
Comment: Some commenters recommended that OIG ensure that
pharmacies are further protected by, for example, ensuring that a
reduction in revenue for PBMs is not compensated by reduction in
payment to pharmacies not affiliated with the PBM, or ensuring that the
chargeback accounts for costs incurred by the pharmacy or that
pharmacies are reimbursed for medication costs and costs to acquire,
handle, and dispense medications.
Response: We are not specifying the reimbursement terms of an
agreement between a PBM or plan and a pharmacy for prescription
pharmaceutical products in the final safe harbor. To the extent point-
of-sale chargebacks are used, the payment from the manufacturer to the
pharmacy must be equal to the reduction in price negotiated between the
manufacturer and the plan or PBM. As we stated in the Proposed Rule, we
intend for the point-of-sale chargeback to make ``pharmacies whole for
the difference between acquisition cost, plan payment, and beneficiary
out-of-pocket payment.''
Comment: A commenter requested that OIG clarify the meaning of
``completely applied'' as set forth in paragraph (cc)(1)(iii). Another
commenter requested OIG revise paragraph (cc)(1)(iii) to indicate that
the reduction in price must be completely applied to the price upon
which the patient's out-of-pocket spending at the point-of-sale is
based. Another commenter recommended revising paragraph (cc)(1)(iii) to
ensure that the rule does not inadvertently permit point-of-sale
reductions in price to operate like a branded drug manufacturer coupon
program for Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries.
Response: We agree with the commenter's interpretation of
``completely applied'' as it was set forth in paragraph (cc)(1)(iii) of
the Proposed Rule and confirm that a protected reduction in price
cannot operate like a coupon program. We have revised the language for
clarity in this final rule. The reduction in price is from the
manufacturer to the plan sponsor under Medicare Part D or a Medicaid
MCO, but the reduction in price negotiated by a Part D plan sponsor or
Medicaid MCO (or a PBM on the plan sponsor's or Medicaid MCO's behalf)
must be reflected at the pharmacy counter. The amount paid by a
beneficiary at the pharmacy counter will depend on the benefit design
of a particular plan, the phase of the benefit year in which the
prescription is filled, and the price negotiated by the plan sponsor or
PBM for the prescription pharmaceutical product that may include, e.g.,
reductions in price negotiated with the pharmaceutical manufacturer or
dispensing fees negotiated with the pharmacy. For example, if a
pharmaceutical product has a list price of $120 and the manufacturer
gives a reduction in price of $20, then that entire $20 would need to
be reflected completely in the price upon which the beneficiary's cost-
sharing obligation is based. We are informed by CMS that their guidance
allows for this reflection of the entire discount at the point of
sale.\49\ For purposes of safe harbor protection, the reduction in
price must be completely reflected at the point of sale.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\49\ CMS, Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, ch. 5,
section 20.6 (describing that Part D plan sponsors must provide
enrollees with access to negotiated prices for covered Part D drugs
as part of their qualified prescription drug coverage).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
If a Part D beneficiary has a 20 percent coinsurance obligation,
the beneficiary typically would pay 20 percent of $100, or $20, at the
pharmacy counter (plus any portion required by the benefit design for,
e.g., dispensing fees). If the beneficiary were in the deductible phase
at the time the prescription was filled, the beneficiary would pay $100
at the pharmacy counter (plus any portion required by the benefit
design for, e.g., dispensing fees). If, however, the beneficiary's plan
used copayments instead of coinsurance, then the beneficiary would pay
the copayment amount according to Part D rules. Part
[[Page 76707]]
D plan sponsors must meet actuarial equivalence standards when
designing plans and benefit structures during the Part D bidding
process. The reduction in price must be reported in accordance with
existing rules and regulations governing the reporting of discounts and
other reductions in price under the Part D program. We reiterate that
if a PBM operating on behalf of a Part D plan sponsor or Medicaid MCO
retains any portion of the reduction in price, the remuneration
retained by the PBM would not be protected under this new point-of-sale
safe harbor.
To provide additional clarity for stakeholders, we include the
following example from the Proposed Rule regarding the current rebate
framework and then explain how a reduction in price would be reflected
at the point of sale consistent with the new safe harbor. Consider a
branded prescription drug dispensed at a retail pharmacy that has a
WAC/list price of $100. A manufacturer sells the drug to a wholesaler
at a 2 percent discount from the WAC. Thus, the drug is sold to the
wholesaler at $98. The wholesaler in this example sells the drug to a
pharmacy for $100. A PBM negotiates on behalf of a plan both a
negotiated reimbursement rate with a pharmacy that dispenses the drug
and a rebate from the manufacturer for including the drug on the plan's
formulary, tier placement within the formulary, etc. Under its contract
with the PBM, the pharmacy agrees to be paid a negotiated rate such as,
by way of example only, 1.20 x WAC/list price minus 15 percent plus a
$2 dispensing fee.
When a patient has a prescription for the medication, the pharmacy
files a claim on behalf of the patient to the patient's prescription
insurance. This claim is processed by the plan and/or the PBM on the
plan's behalf. The PBM determines what they pay the pharmacy and the
amount remaining for the patient to pay the pharmacy. In this instance,
the pharmacy is paid $104 for the drug. After the transaction, the plan
and/or PBM may also receive rebates from the manufacturer, and in some
cases, pay the pharmacy less than the original amount.
In this example, the PBM has negotiated a rebate with the
manufacturer, of 30 percent of the WAC/list price ($30), which is
passed on entirely to the plan sponsor. This rebate does not reduce the
price charged at the pharmacy counter or the beneficiary's out-of-
pocket cost, and the beneficiary's $26 coinsurance is actually 35
percent of the net cost of the drug ($104-$30), compared to the 25
percent coinsurance described in the benefits summary (which is based
on negotiated pharmacy reimbursement and not net price). Thus, in this
example, the plan receives back $30 in rebates, reducing the net cost
for the drug to $74 (i.e., $104-$30). This process is reflected in the
following chart, which has been revised slightly with technical edits:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\50\ The Federal government shares in the rebates received by
PBMs and Part D plan sponsors. See also https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/medicare-part-d-direct-and-indirect-remuneration-dir.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Transaction Brand Notes
------------------------------------------------------------------------
List Price........................ $100 (A).
Pharmacy Reimbursement/POS Price.. $104 (P).
Manufacturer Rebate to Plan....... $30 (B) = 30% of (A).
Net Drug Cost..................... $74 (C) = (P)-(B).\50\
Patient Coinsurance............... ($26) (D) = 25% * (P).
Net Cost to Plan.................. $48 (E) = (C)-(D).
Patient's Share of POS Price...... 25% (H) = (D)/(P).
Patient's Share of Net Cost....... 35% (I) = (D)/(C).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The difference in the patient's cost sharing relative to that of
the plan is even more acute when the beneficiary is in the deductible
phase and is fully responsible for the total pharmacy reimbursement. In
this case, the beneficiary pays the full $104, more than 40 percent
higher than what the plan negotiated, but never paid any fraction of
it. In fact, the plan netted $30 when the beneficiary picked up the
prescription.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Transaction Brand Notes
------------------------------------------------------------------------
List Price........................ $100 (A).
Pharmacy Reimbursement/POS Price.. $104 (P).
Manufacturer Rebate to Plan....... $30 (B) = 30% of (A).
Net Drug Cost..................... $74 (C) = (P)-(B).
Patient Coinsurance............... ($104) (D) = 100% of (P).
Net Cost to Plan.................. ($30) (E) = (C)-(D).
Patient's Share of POS Price...... 100% (H) = (D)/(P).
Patient's Share of Net Cost....... 140% (I) = (D)/(C).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
As we stated in the Proposed Rule, this example reflects the
Department's concern that, under the current rebate-based system,
beneficiaries may not receive the benefits of reduced prices and costs
that other parties do. The Department recognizes that parties to
prescription drug sales are frequently paid based on a percentage of
the WAC/list price and therefore, as the list price increases, so does
the revenue to these parties. For example, in the context of branded
prescription drugs, the absolute net revenue to the PBM and
manufacturer generally may increase as the WAC increases. The net
revenue to the pharmacy also may increase, but that would be contingent
on the pharmacy's contract with the PBM. While the insurer's costs will
increase as the WAC increases, under the current system, PBMs often
offset the increase for insurers via a higher rebate from the
manufacturer. In contrast, when a beneficiary is in the deductible
phase, their out-of-pocket spending is more closely related to the WAC
price than the net price. The rebate from the manufacturer is not
utilized to offset beneficiary's out-of-pocket costs. Similarly, the
beneficiary's coinsurance, which is often partly a percentage of WAC,
will often increase as list price
[[Page 76708]]
increases. Under the current system, rebates are often not applied at
the point of sale to offset the beneficiary's deductible or coinsurance
or otherwise reduce the price paid at the pharmacy counter.
Under this final rule, beneficiaries would be able to share--at the
pharmacy counter--in the discounts that plans and PBMs negotiate with
manufacturers. Using the examples above, if the rebate were fully
reflected in the point-of-sale price, the beneficiary's cost-sharing
obligations would drop from $104 to $74 if the beneficiary were still
in the deductible phase, and from $26 to $18.50 if she had a
coinsurance obligation of 25 percent. The plan's share of the discount
would be proportional to the coinsurance: The plan would get no share
of the discount if the beneficiary were to pay full cost, but it would
get 75 percent of the discount if the beneficiary had 25 percent
coinsurance. The following provides an illustration of this point:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
100 Percent
Transaction coinsurance 25 Percent
(deductible) coinsurance
------------------------------------------------------------------------
List Price.............................. $100 $100
Pharmacy Reimbursement.................. $104 $104
Negotiated POS Discount................. ($30) ($30)
Net Drug Cost/POS Price................. $74 $74
Patient Coinsurance..................... $74 $18.5
Net Cost to Plan........................ $0 $55.5
Patient's Share of POS Price............ 100% 25%
Patient's Share of Net Cost............. 100% 25%
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: A commenter recommended that OIG restrict, through a
revision to the proposed safe harbor, the provision of identifying
patient and prescriber information the drug manufacturer can receive
from a Medicaid MCO or PBM acting on behalf of a Medicaid MCO in
exchange for providing a price reduction. Specifically, the commenter
recommended that a new paragraph (cc)(1)(iv) be added: (iv) The
reduction in price does not involve the provision of identifying
patient or prescriber information to the pharmaceutical manufacturer by
a Medicaid MCO, or the PBM acting under contract with it.
Response: Nothing in this final rule affects obligations under
existing privacy and security rules. We do not expect manufacturers to
need patient- or provider-specific information. The plan sponsor under
Part D, Medicaid MCO, or PBM must have a writing with the manufacturer
that sets in advance the reduced price for a prescription
pharmaceutical product. The plan sponsor under Part D, Medicaid MCO, or
PBM is best positioned to ensure that the reduction in price is
completely reflected in the price of the prescription pharmaceutical
product at the time the pharmacy dispenses it to the beneficiary, and
we would expect these parties to maintain documentation showing that
these reductions in price were completely reflected at the time of
dispensing.
Comment: A commenter requested that OIG clarify that under the
point-of-sale safe harbor, point-of-sale reductions in price can be
made contingent on bundled sales arrangements. Such arrangements can
provide additional value to patients by expanding the types of discount
arrangements available to manufacturers and payors. Another commenter
recommended that any point-of-sale reductions in price that are
contingent on bundled sales arrangements are passed along to consumers
in a non-allocated, disaggregated fashion. This commenter further
stated that if a method for allocating bundles at the point-of-sale is
needed, OIG should look to CMS's definition of ``bundled sale'' at 42
CFR 447.502 and that OIG should encourage manufacturers and PBMs to
agree upon a written method for estimating and allocating, in advance,
effective rates for products subject to a bundle and that these
effective rates are provided to the dispensing pharmacy. This commenter
also recommended that price protection payments are passed along as
point-of-sale chargebacks.
Response: The conditions of the new safe harbor for point-of-sale
reductions in price do not limit the types of negotiation methods the
parties may use, as long as the reduction in price can be completely
reflected at the point of sale. Elsewhere in this final rule, we make
clear that a reduction in price must be simply a reduction in price and
not payment for a service. Therefore, making a reduction on price
contingent on a bundled sale arrangement (e.g., by providing for a
reduction in price for one drug contingent on formulary placement of
another drug) is not prohibited. However, we caution that to be
protected under the safe harbor, the reduction in price must be
reflected in the price of the product at the point of sale and a
reduction in price that is not known at the time of sale (and therefore
cannot be reflected at the time of sale) would not meet this condition
of the safe harbor. For example, we could see a bundled arrangement
based on formulary placement (such as in the example above) to be
feasible; the parties will know at the time of sale, what the reduction
in price would be. However, some types of bundling arrangements (e.g.,
an arrangement that might be contingent on volume of sales of different
items in a bundle) would make it difficult to reflect the final price
at the time of sale, and therefore would not be consistent with the
requirements of the safe harbor. We also clarify that there should be
no situation in which the price at the pharmacy counter is less than
zero. A situation in which a beneficiary or a Part D plan sponsor
theoretically would be owed money would not be a reduction in price;
that would be a payment to a referral source and would not be protected
by a safe harbor.
Comment: A commenter suggested that OIG coordinate with the FTC to
identify and address anti-competitive rebate schemes, such as rebate
walls (which, according to the commenter, block competition by coupling
volume-based discounts across multiple indications with retaliatory
measures, such as the clawback of rebates by a market leader), when
they run afoul of antitrust law.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's feedback. We work closely
with our Government partners, including the FTC, as appropriate.
Comment: A commenter proposed an alternative model relating to
point-of-sale reductions on drugs covered under Federal health care
programs--namely, safe harbor protections for manufacturer cost-sharing
assistance programs that provide point-of-sale reductions on
prescription drugs covered under Federal health care programs when
[[Page 76709]]
there is no less expensive and equally effective generic available,
such as for biologics.
Response: We did not propose to protect manufacturer cost-sharing
assistance programs and have long-standing concerns with these types of
arrangements; for these reasons, we decline to adopt the commenter's
suggestion in this final rule.
Comment: Some commenters requested that OIG clarify how the point-
of-sale discounts should be structured. For example, a commenter
requested that OIG clarify whether manufacturers would be required to
or have the option to provide the point-of-sale discounts by plans
directly to the pharmacies, individually, or through another mechanism.
Response: If safe harbor protection is desired, point-of-sale
reductions in price can be structured in any way that complies with the
requirements of this safe harbor and any other applicable law. We note,
however, that the safe harbor protects the price reduction from the
manufacturer to the plan (directly or through a PBM). Discounts to
pharmacies are not included in this safe harbor, but they are eligible
for protection under the discount safe harbor if all safe harbor
conditions are met. We have made minor changes to the regulatory text
at Sec. 1001.952(cc)(1) to clarify this point.
Comment: Some commenters recommended that patients with higher cost
sharing be provided preferential treatment. A commenter requested that
OIG provide manufacturers with the ability to pass through differential
discounts to patients with, for example, copayments or higher cost
sharing. Another commenter requested that patients with copayments,
specifically, pay the lesser of the negotiated price of the drug, after
it is reduced to reflect the point-of-sale discounts, or a reduced
copayment reflecting a reduction that must, at a minimum, be
proportional to the point-of-sale discount.
Response: We have clarified above the treatment of copayments under
this final rule. We are not providing specifically for differential
discounts under the safe harbor. We note, however, that this safe
harbor protects reductions in price that manufacturers offer to plan
sponsors under Part D and to Medicaid MCOs; the amount that gets passed
through to beneficiaries is part of a plan's design and would not be
determined by the manufacturer.
Comment: Several commenters identified that there is no mechanism
in the proposed safe harbor to influence or even monitor drug
manufacturer behavior, particularly related to lowering drug prices.
Some commenters recommended that OIG require manufacturers to lower
drug prices, while another commenter recommended that drug
manufacturers be required to ``price drugs fairly'' as a condition for
receiving government-funded research monies. A commenter recommended
that OIG enforce penalties for ``egregious price increases'' that have
the effect of increasing costs for plans, Federal health care programs,
or patients. Another commenter recommended that OIG require not just
manufacturers, but also PBMs and payors to lower drug prices. Another
commenter recommended that CMS leverage the condition of participation
standards by implementing new conditions on drug manufacturers that (1)
would limit price increases for existing drugs to a measure of
healthcare cost inflation and (2) allow managed care companies the
option to exclude new drugs from their formularies if their price is
higher than existing, peer drugs, but the differences in their clinical
effectiveness relative to existing, peer drugs are not statistically
different. A commenter recommended that the Department establish
requirements on drug manufacturers that are similar to the medical loss
ratio, for example, drug manufacturers should be held to standards
based upon a ratio of expenditures on research and development and
required to provide detailed reports of their expenses with penalties
or other consequences for non-compliance. A commenter recommended that
OIG require not only manufacturers, but also PBMs and payors, to lower
drug prices.
Response: OIG does not have the authority to require that
manufacturers or others lower drug prices, and comments recommending
CMS take certain actions are outside the scope of this rulemaking. This
final rule is limited to the issue of safe harbor protection under the
anti-kickback statute for certain arrangements that implicate the
prohibition on referral payments but pose an acceptably low risk of
fraud or abuse. To that end, we have revised the discount safe harbor
and added two new safe harbors. We have not required any particular
level of discounts or price reductions.
Comment: Several commenters were concerned that the changes
included in the Proposed Rule would not influence manufacturers'
behavior and would not impose requirements on manufacturers to engage
in good faith negotiations with all entities of the supply chain.
Response: As we stated in the Proposed Rule, it is difficult to
predict any particular manufacturer's behavior. We are finalizing a
safe harbor that permits manufacturers to offer reductions in price
that meet certain conditions, including that the reduction be
completely reflected in the price of the prescription pharmaceutical
product at the time the pharmacy dispenses the drug to the beneficiary.
Like all safe harbors, this safe harbor is optional and does not
require manufacturers to offer discounts.
Comment: A commenter identified that the Proposed Rule does not
provide a mechanism by which manufacturers can monitor or validate
whether the reductions in price from manufacturers are passed through
at the point of sale. Thus, the commenter recommended that OIG allow
for manufacturers to be insulated from liability if certain discounts
are not passed through at the point of sale, until OIG can establish a
mechanism for monitoring and validating the pass through actually
occurs.
Response: We decline to adopt this suggestion. Under the anti-
kickback statute, parties are always required to comply with the law
regardless of whether the OIG monitors for compliance with it. With
that said, we recognize that each party has certain responsibilities
for complying with the safe harbor. Whether a party has complied with
the law is a fact-specific inquiry, including with respect to the
intent of the parties.
Comment: Some commenters recommended that OIG require all
participants or intermediaries in the drug supply chain be regulated
and subject to the proposed safe harbor.
Response: For reasons explained elsewhere, we are not expanding the
scope of the safe harbor beyond what we proposed. The commenters'
suggestion would be impractical. Further, a safe harbor offers
protection under the Federal anti-kickback statute for the remuneration
described in the safe harbor; it does not generally regulate parties in
the industry.
D. Safe Harbor for Certain PBM Service Fees
The Proposed Rule proposed a safe harbor to protect remuneration in
the form of flat, fixed fees that manufacturers pay to PBMs for
services the PBM provides to a manufacturer.
Comment: Many commenters who commented on the proposed safe harbor
for PBM service fees were generally supportive of the safe harbor and
its requirements. According to a commenter, the conditions limit the
potential for PBMs to perform services with the incentive to increase
costs for beneficiaries and programs. Another
[[Page 76710]]
commenter supporting the proposal stated that it will allow parties to
receive appropriate payment for the value of their services, rather
than the volume or value of the pharmaceutical products.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' support for this safe
harbor.
Comment: Some commenters raised concerns about or opposed the
proposed safe harbor for PBM service fees. For example, according to a
commenter, the proposed safe harbor does not address what the commenter
believes to be a conflict of interest when a PBM provides services to
plan sponsors and patients while profiting from their relationships
with manufacturers. The same commenter also said that manufacturers and
PBMs can mislead parties by how they classify rebate payments and
service fees in their financial arrangements.
Another commenter said that the safe harbor will not lower the
surplus that PBMs with market power receive because, according to the
commenter, such PBMs can demand a flat fee as easily as they can
negotiate for percentage-based fees under the current rebate system.
According to this commenter, payments from manufacturers to PBMs should
first flow to the payor before being split between the payor and the
PBM.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' responses. While we agree
that PBMs can negotiate for flat fees just as they can negotiate for
percentage-based fees, this safe harbor includes safeguards to reduce
the risks associated with remuneration that may be tied to referrals.
For example, the fees must be consistent with fair market value in an
arm's-length transaction and cannot be determined in a manner that
takes into account the volume or value of referrals or business
otherwise generated between the parties, or between the manufacturer
and the PBM's health plans that is payable, in whole or in part, by a
Federal health care program. In addition, protected fees would be only
for services that the PBM provides to the manufacturer, not for
services provided to health plans. Fees for services furnished to
health plans may be structured to comply with the personal services and
management contracts safe harbor at Sec. 1001.952(d).
Comment: Several commenters requested that OIG clarify the meaning
of ``services the PBM provides to the pharmaceutical manufacturer
related to the pharmacy benefit management services that the PBM
furnishes to one or more health plans,'' and requested that OIG specify
the types of services protected by the proposed safe harbor. A
commenter recommended OIG narrow the list of ``pharmacy benefit
management services'' listed in the preamble to the Proposed Rule so
that, for example, PBMs do not create rebates composed of new classes
of fees, or otherwise disguise rebates as fees, charged to and paid by
manufacturers. Another commenter recommended OIG restrict PBM services
to adjudicating claims only. Other commenters suggested that OIG issue
guidance on the types of PBM services that OIG views as appropriately
compensated by plans instead of by manufacturers, with a commenter
pointing to claims adjudication and utilization management as examples
of services performed for plans, and member aggregation as an example
of a service appropriately provided to manufacturers.
Response: We are not specifying the services to be protected under
the PBM service fees safe harbor because we do not want to set a static
list of services that will be protected. Moreover, the types of
services a PBM might provide to a health plan are not necessarily the
same types of services that a PBM might provide to a manufacturer.
Using the commenter's example, adjudicating claims is a service that a
PBM performs for a health plan, but not for a manufacturer; further,
while member aggregation might be one type of service provided by PBMs
to manufacturers, to the extent that any compensation for such services
is determined based on the volume or value of Federal health care
program business, the compensation would not be protected by this safe
harbor. We decline to specify a list of services that the PBM provides
for plans as opposed to manufacturers. We believe it should be clear to
the contracting parties whether the PBM is providing a service for a
manufacturer or a plan.
i. Scope of Protected Fees
The Proposed Rule proposed a new safe harbor to protect certain PBM
service fees that were flat service fees manufacturers make to PBMs for
services the PBMs provide to the pharmaceutical manufacturers, for the
manufacturers' benefit, when those services relate in some way to the
PBMs' arrangements to provide pharmacy benefit management services to
health plans. This safe harbor would protect only a pharmaceutical
manufacturer's payment for those services that a PBM furnishes to the
pharmaceutical manufacturer, and not for any services that the PBM may
be providing to a health plan. The compensation paid to the PBM must be
consistent with fair market value in an arm's-length transaction, be a
fixed payment, not based on a percentage of sales, and not be
determined in a manner that takes into account the volume or value of
any referrals or business otherwise generated between the parties, or
between the manufacturer and the PBM's health plans, for which payment
may be made in whole or in part under Medicare, Medicaid, or other
Federal health care programs. The Proposed Rule provided a non-
exhaustive list of ``pharmacy benefit management services,'' but
proposed not to create a definition because the role of the PBM may
evolve over time. We address the definition of pharmacy benefit
management services in the definition section. This section discusses
the scope of the protected fees.
Comment: Some commenters suggested clarifying that the services
must be performed ``on behalf of'' the manufacturer instead of ``to the
manufacturer'' or ``for the manufacturer's benefit.'' Commenters also
recommend that the safe harbor be limited to fees for services ``that
the manufacturer would otherwise perform (or contract for) in the
absence of the service arrangement.''
Response: For purposes of this safe harbor, and in this context, we
believe that ``to the manufacturer'' is sufficiently clear. The PBM
would be providing a service to a manufacturer (which also might be on
behalf of the manufacturer). While we are not incorporating the
particular language suggested regarding the services that the
manufacturer would otherwise perform (or contract for), we agree that
the safe harbor protects payment only for legitimate services.
Comment: Several commenters recommended broadening the proposed
safe harbor related to PBM Service Fees to all fees, especially all PBM
arrangements with manufacturers. These commenters wanted to ensure that
the ``related to'' language does not unduly limit the scope of the safe
harbor or risk noncompliance if manufacturers contract with PBMs for
services that may not clearly ``relate to'' the PBM services that they
typically provide to health plans.
Response: We thank the commenter for this suggestion but decline to
accept it. If a service does not relate to pharmacy benefit management
services that the PBM provides to a health plan, then it is unclear how
the PBM could meet the condition that requires certain annual
disclosures to health plans. As we note elsewhere, other services that
PBMs provide could be protected by
[[Page 76711]]
other safe harbors, including the GPO and personal services safe
harbors.
Comment: One commenter recommended that OIG clarify the PBM
services covered by the safe harbor by removing the requirement that
the services must ``relate to'' services the PBM furnishes to health
plans and clarify the types of PBM services that might be provided for
the benefit of the manufacturer.
Response: We decline to remove the requirement in the new safe
harbor for PBM service fees that the fees for which safe harbor
protection is sought ``relate to'' pharmacy benefit management services
that the PBM furnishes to health plans. This proposed condition fosters
transparency for health plans. As we stated in the Proposed Rule, the
Department believes that PBMs are agents of the health plans with which
they contract and that transparency is important to ensure that a PBM's
arrangements with pharmaceutical manufacturers are not in tension with
the services it provides to the health plans for which it is acting as
an agent. Disclosures of specific services will allow a plan to see
what services a PBM is contracting with a manufacturer that relate to
the health plan. Thus, we proposed to protect only those fixed fee
arrangements between manufacturers and PBMs where plans could have
visibility into the arrangements, in other words, arrangements related
to services the PBM was providing the plans. We solicited comments on
limiting the safe harbor to fees that pharmaceutical manufacturers pay
to the PBMs that relate to the PBM's arrangements to provide pharmacy
benefit management services to health plans.
The language of the final rule clarifies that the fees for which
safe harbor protection is available are fees for services provided for
the benefit of the manufacturer who is paying for them. As noted in the
Proposed Rule, such services might include services rendered to a
manufacturer that depend on or use data gathered from PBMS from their
health plan customers (whether claims or other types of data), subject
to all applicable privacy and security rules. PBMs also might provide
services for manufacturers to prevent duplicate discounts on 340B
claims. Nothing in this rule preempts any contractual terms that a PBM
has with health plans that limit uses of health plans or enrollees'
data.\51\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\51\ 84 FR 2349-50.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: As noted in the definition section, many commenters
recommended that the PBM services and their related fees be tied to
bona fide services. Additionally, these commenters recommended that the
services be itemized to clearly show that the fees are paid for
specific services at a market value. These commenters recommended that
this guidance clarify that these services cannot be negotiated as a
fixed suite of services or services that are applied on an ``all or
nothing basis.''
Response: As we explain above, we have included additional
conditions aimed at clarifying that only payment for legitimate
services would be protected. We did not propose, and are not
finalizing, a specified format for disclosure of the services to health
plans, nor would PBMs be required to disclose the fees to health plans.
However, PBMs would be required to disclose both the services and
associated fees to the Secretary upon request. Therefore, it would be a
best practice to maintain documentation that could demonstrate how each
element of the safe harbor (e.g., fair market value, fixed fees) is
met.
Comment: One commenter recommended that the safe harbor fees be
narrowed to protect only service fees paid for the purposes of
administering point-of-sale reductions in price and related
chargebacks.
Response: We decline to adopt this suggestion. The safe harbor for
point-of-sale reductions in price protects a different stream of
remuneration (i.e., the reduction in price from a manufacturer to a
plan sponsor under Part D or a Medicaid MCO). This safe harbor for PBM
service fees is not related to the safe harbor for point-of-sale
reductions in price and therefore should not be limited to arrangements
protected under it.
Comment: A commenter requested that OIG protect only fees paid to
PBMs independent of services a PBM already provides to plans.
Response: The PBM service fees safe harbor protects payments ``for
services the PBM provides to the pharmaceutical manufacturer.''
Services provided to plans are not services provided to manufacturers,
and therefore payments for services to plans are not protected by the
safe harbor.
ii. Fair Market Value
Comment: A commenter recommended that the fair market value of the
payment to PBMs reflect the value of the services, not the value of the
products involved.
Response: By its terms, the proposed safe harbor for PBM service
fees protects compensation paid for services performed by a PBM for a
pharmaceutical manufacturer. The safe harbor provides that the
compensation must (1) be consistent with fair market value in an arm's-
length transaction; (2) be a fixed payment, not based on a percentage
of sales; and (3) not be determined in a manner that takes into account
the volume or value of Federal health care program business. We believe
it is clear from this context that the compensation must reflect the
fair market value of the service rendered, and not the value of the
products involved.
Comment: Several commenters requested that OIG clarify the meaning
of ``fair market value.'' A commenter asked OIG to provide examples of
valuation approaches to meet the standard. Other commenters requested
that OIG either adopt CMS's statements regarding fair market value in
the context of CMS's bona fide service fees guidance for the MDRP or
clarify the ``fair market value'' standard is consistent with CMS's
statements. Another commenter asserted that in order to establish fair
market value, PBMs and manufacturers should provide specific
disclosures and demonstrate that the performed services are of real
value to manufacturers, instead of simply showing that many
manufacturers are willing to pay PBMs comparable amounts of money for
general, nondescript services.
Response: The requirement that compensation paid for PBM service
fees be ``consistent with fair market value in an arm's-length
transaction'' is nearly identical to a requirement of the safe harbor
for personal services and management contracts, 42 CFR 1001.952(d),
which has been in effect since 1991. 56 FR 35952 (July 29, 1991). In
addition, both the personal services and management contracts safe
harbor and the proposed PBM service fees safe harbor include a
requirement that the compensation not be determined in a manner that
takes into account the volume or value of any Federal health care
program business. (Because of this requirement, a fair market value
determination cannot be made through comparison to transactions where
compensation may have taken the value of referrals into account.) \52\
The
[[Page 76712]]
proposed PBM service fees safe harbor also specifically excludes from
protection compensation based on a percentage of sales. In addition, as
we explain elsewhere, we include certain additional requirements
similar to the personal services and management contracts safe harbor
at 42 CFR 1001.952(d).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\52\ See, e.g., Letter from D. McCarty Thornton, Associate
General Counsel, Inspector General Division, to T. J. Sullivan,
Office of the Associate Chief Counsel, Internal Revenue Service,
Dec. 22, 1992 (``When considering the question of fair market value,
we would note that the traditional or common methods of economic
valuation do not comport with the prescriptions of the anti-kickback
statute. Items ordinarily considered in determining the fair market
value may be expressly barred by the anti-kickback statute's
prohibition against payments for referrals. Merely because another
buyer may be willing to pay a particular price is not sufficient to
render the price paid to be fair market value. The fact that a buyer
in a position to benefit from referrals is willing to pay a
particular price may only be a reflection of the value of the
referral stream that is likely to result from the purchase.''),
available at https://oig.hhs.gov/fraud/docs/safeharborregulations/acquisition122292.htm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We decline to provide further guidance on the setting of
compensation for PBM service fees, nor do we adopt the guidance
provided by CMS in a different context.\53\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\53\ A commenter on the Proposed Rule cited CMS's response when
asked to provide guidance on the meaning of ``fair market value'' as
used in its definition of ``bona fide service fees.'' 81 FR 5170,
5179-5180 (Feb. 1, 2016). Among the comments cited in that
rulemaking was one that ``encouraged CMS to acknowledge that many or
most fee arrangements common in the industry tend to be percentage
based agreements and that manufacturers can establish a fair market
value rationale for a percentage based fee through industry
benchmarking by comparing types of specific services outlined in an
agreement with ranges of payments observed throughout the
industry.'' 81 FR 5179. While CMS did not respond to this particular
comment and declined to further define fair market value for
purposes of the bona fide service fee definition, it stated its
belief that manufacturers should retain flexibility in determining
whether service fees are paid at fair market value. We are not
adopting CMS' terminology nor its definition of ``bona fide services
fees,'' for purposes of this final rule. To the extent that CMS's
guidance on the topic of service fees leaves room for percentage-
based arrangements, it should be noted that percentage-based
arrangements are expressly excluded from protection under the PBM
service fees safe harbor.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
iii. Take Into Account Volume or Value
Comment: Commenters suggested that, if OIG does not believe that
all fees based on volume or value would generate a significant risk,
OIG should adopt clear guidance excepting lower risk arrangements from
the volume or value requirement. More specifically, several commenters
recommended that OIG exempt any arrangement that involves varying
numbers of transactions, provided that the fee for each individual
transaction is fixed in advance and consistent with fair market value
in an arms-length transaction, as it presents a low risk of fraud. This
would facilitate practical service fee arrangements between
manufacturers and PBMs. Alternatively, commenters suggested that the
rule could clarify that the reference to volume or value of business
``otherwise generated'' between parties means that payment terms under
the PBM service fee arrangement in question should not take into
account other arrangements outside of the contract, but would not
preclude per-unit fees based on volume or value of the services
furnished under the service fee agreement itself. According to
commenters, these types of arrangements present a low risk of fraud or
abuse if certain safeguards are incorporated into the safe harbor.
Specifically, a few commenters recommended including the factors
identified in OIG's Advisory Opinions 10-14 and 11-18 \54\ to deem
certain fair market value, arms-length, per-unit fees as not taking
into account the volume or value of referrals or other business
generated between the parties. A commenter requested that the safe
harbor protect fees where PBMs are paid less per claim as the number of
claims increases in light of certain fixed costs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\54\ Advisory Opinion 11-18 was terminated on April 1, 2014.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Response: We agree with the general premise of the commenters'
concerns, that compensation for services may be determined on a per-
unit of work basis and thus vary with the volume of work performed.
This particular safe harbor condition excludes compensation that takes
into account the volume or value of referrals or other business that
are payable in whole or in part under a Federal health care program.
For example, if a per-unit-of-work fee is fixed in advance at fair
market value for services actually provided to the manufacturer and is
not based on volume or value of Federal health care business, then that
arrangement could be protected, so long as the unit-based compensation
does not vary during the course of the compensation arrangement in any
manner that takes into account referrals or other Federal business
generated. On the other hand, the safe harbor would not protect per
unit compensation that varies with either increases or decreases in
volume (e.g., X amount per unit for the first 1,000 units, X + 1 per
unit for additional units), as we believe that compensation determined
in this manner is not low risk. In addition, we emphasize that this
safe harbor would not protect any per-unit-of-work fee that is based on
or otherwise connected with drug prices.
Comment: According to a commenter, the Proposed Rule would allow
all entities (other than PBMs) in the drug supply chain that supply
services to manufacturers to be compensated for the provision of
services based on volume and a percentage of list price. The commenter
recommended requiring all payments by manufacturers for services
provided by third parties to be applied equally and to be set in
advance, fixed, and based on fair market value.
Response: In the Proposed Rule, we proposed a new safe harbor
specifically to protect fees paid from manufacturers to PBMs for
services rendered to the manufacturers, if all the conditions of the
safe harbor are met. This safe harbor does not ``allow'' payments to
other entities that do not meet these conditions; it simply does not
protect them, whether they meet the conditions or not. Manufacturer
payments to entities other than PBMs may be protected by other safe
harbors, such as the safe harbor for personal services and management
contracts, 42 CFR 1001.952(d). (This safe harbor also requires that
compensation be set in advance, consistent with fair market value in
arm's-length transactions, and not determined in a manner that takes
into account volume and value of Federal health care program business.)
However, compliance with the terms of each safe harbor is voluntary. If
parties choose not to comply with such requirements with regard to
particular arrangements, it may be that they do not believe that these
arrangements implicate the anti-kickback Statute or that they otherwise
comply with the law.
iv. Fixed Fees
Comment: Several commenters were supportive of the condition in the
safe harbor requiring that the compensation paid to a PBM be a fixed
payment rather than a payment based on a percentage of sales. A
commenter noted that this proposal may increase the placement of less
expensive drugs on preferred formulary tiers and could reduce out-of-
pocket costs for certain patients. Some commenters noted that a flat-
fee system aligns fees with the value of the services provided.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' support for this condition
of the safe harbor. Based on the comments received, we are finalizing
this condition, as proposed.
Comment: Several commenters suggested changes to the scope of fees
that can be protected under the PBM service fees safe harbor. For
instance, several commenters recommended that the safe harbor apply to
fees for any service a PBM provides to or on behalf of a manufacturer.
Many commenters either requested that the safe harbor protect fees for
all bona fide services provided by PBMs to manufacturers or asked that
we incorporate (or consider incorporating) the standards from the bona
fide service fee definition under the MDRP (42 CFR 447.502). According
[[Page 76713]]
to at least one commenter, if we do not limit the scope of the safe
harbor to bona fide services, PBMs may seek to convert costs and lost
revenue to service fees.
Response: We are finalizing a modification to the new safe harbor
to protect payments by a pharmaceutical manufacturer to a PBM for
legitimate services the PBM provides to the pharmaceutical manufacturer
related to the pharmacy benefit management services that the PBM
furnishes to one or more health plans with certain conditions. We share
commenter's concerns about the use of this safe harbor to convert costs
and lost revenue to service fees. Therefore, we are clarifying in the
regulatory text that the safe harbor applies only to ``legitimate''
services; thus, this safe harbor does not protect arrangements between
manufacturers and PBMs for services that are not necessary, are
worthless, or are duplicative. Because we are not adopting or
incorporating by reference the term ``bona fide service fee,'' as CMS
may use that term, we wanted to use a different term to convey a
similar concept.
Comment: A commenter requested clarification as to how fixed fees
would be structured to comply with this safe harbor. In particular, the
commenter raised concerns that a fixed-fee model could lead PBMs to
pass down higher administrative costs to Medicaid MCOs that could, in
turn, increase costs for states and the Federal Government. Another
commenter raised concerns that flat fees will be used by manufacturers
as another way to encourage utilization of their products. According to
these commenters, the fixed fees are a mechanism for entities to offset
rebate losses.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's concerns about how a fixed-
fee model could affect costs for states and the Federal government, and
we do not intend for this safe harbor to protect fixed fees that serve
only as a mechanism for entities to offset rebate losses. As discussed
above, we are finalizing a modification to the new safe harbor to
protect payments by a pharmaceutical manufacturer to a PBM for
legitimate services the PBM provides to the pharmaceutical manufacturer
related to the pharmacy benefit management services that the PBM
furnishes to one or more health plans with certain conditions. If the
fee arrangement does not meet all safe harbor conditions, then it would
not be protected.
Comment: A commenter sought clarification from OIG that the PBM
service fees protected under the safe harbor would replace the existing
administrative fees received by PBMs that are based on a percentage of
WAC. Additionally, the commenter requested that OIG not protect any
administrative fees based on a percentage of WAC that are paid to PBMs
or any other intermediaries.
Response: We proposed to add, and are finalizing, a new safe harbor
specifically designed to protect certain fixed fees pharmaceutical
manufacturers pay to PBMs for services rendered to the manufacturers
that relate to PBMs' arrangements to provide pharmacy benefit
management services to health plans. With respect to the commenter's
second request, we note that nothing in this final rule is intended to
affect any existing protections that may be available under other safe
harbors for the types of administrative fee arrangements the commenter
described.
Comment: A commenter disputed OIG's assertion that a PBM service
fee becomes a kickback because the basis for setting it is a percentage
of list price, especially since this is typically the best measure of
fair market value. To address this concern, the commenter recommended a
prohibition on any manufacturer requirement that the service fees be
dependent on formulary placement. This would permit specifying that
service fees tied to a fixed percentage of sales may qualify as a
permitted fixed fee under the rule.
Response: Our Proposed Rule stated that service fees tied to a
product's price ``could function as a disguised kickback.'' Whether a
service fee based on a percentage of list price rises to the level of
an unlawful kickback under the anti-kickback statute would depend on
the facts and circumstances. As we noted in the Proposed Rule, we
proposed a safe harbor that would protect flat fees because they ``pose
lower risk of abuse and conflicts of interest.'' Because of these
concerns, we decline to adopt the commenter's suggestion to protect
service fees tied to a fixed percentage of sales.
v. Disclosure Requirement
Comment: Many commenters expressed general support for PBM
disclosures arguing that plans should have full information about PBM
relationships with manufacturers, including fees that manufacturers pay
to PBMs.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' support. To promote
transparency, we are finalizing our proposals that information about
both the services and the associated fees be disclosed to the Secretary
upon request. In the Proposed Rule we said we were considering and
solicited comments on requiring additional information about the fee
arrangements, including information about valuation, valuation
methodologies, compliance with the ``volume or value'' criterion, and
other characteristics. For purposes of compliance with the final safe
harbor, we are not requiring disclosure of each of these additional
elements. However, maintaining documentation of these elements would be
prudent to demonstrate safe harbor compliance.
Comment: Many commenters recommended additional disclosure
requirements, including: Requiring PBMs to disclose service fee
arrangements with plans to manufacturers; requiring PBMs to disclose
all arrangements with manufacturers and wholesalers that are related to
health plans; requiring PBMs to disclose all information related to the
fees PBMs are paid for the services protected under the safe harbor;
requiring PBMs to disclose to manufacturers when they seek manufacturer
compensation for services also compensated by a plan; requiring PBMs to
annually disclose to the Department information that explains their
valuation methodology and demonstrates their fee arrangements meet the
volume and value criteria; and requiring PBMs to disclose service fees
that are separated from any discounts or rebates. A commenter requested
clarification regarding the specific information that must be included
in the disclosures under the new safe harbor, particularly as it
related to the ``additional information about fee arrangements'' that
PBMs would be required to disclose to the Secretary.'' See 84 FR 2350.
Another commenter requested that PBMs' written agreements with
pharmaceutical manufacturers be made publicly available on both the
manufacturer's and PBM's websites and that CMS should also compile and
display these agreements on the agency's website.
Response: Although we appreciate commenters' suggestions, we did
not propose transparency requirements for agreements between PBMs and
health plans or wholesalers and, therefore, could not finalize such
requirements here. Moreover, the additional disclosure requirements
suggested by the commenters exceed what we believe should be necessary
for safe harbor compliance, given the overall structure of the safe
harbor, and to protect against abusive fee arrangements between
manufacturers and PBMs. Additionally, we see no need to require the
public disclosure of this type of private agreement between two parties
as a
[[Page 76714]]
requirement under the safe harbor. However, we note that under the
final rule, PBMs would disclose to the Secretary upon request the
services provided and fees paid for the services. Of course, to the
extent a PBM was subject to an enforcement action and asserting the
safe harbor as a defense, the PBM would have to show that it met each
element of the safe harbor. Therefore, as a best practice, the PBM
should have documentation of how it met each element (e.g., a fair
market value analysis for the fees).
Comment: A commenter proposed that beneficiaries should have
similar access as health plans to information regarding PBM contracts
and another commenter requested clarification as to whether the PBM
disclosures would be required to the pharmacy or beneficiary.
Response: We did not propose and are not finalizing any requirement
for PBMs to make disclosures to pharmacies or beneficiaries. We believe
the safe harbor conditions we are finalizing provide the appropriate
protections against abusive kickback schemes.
Comment: Another commenter proposed that disclosures of contracts
and service fees should be made at the time of agreement rather than
annually, because obtaining the information earlier would aid plans in
contemporaneously addressing possible conflicts in PBMs'
recommendations. The same commenter recommended adding a new subsection
to prohibit Medicaid-identifying patient or prescriber information from
being provided to the manufacturer.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's suggestion, but we decline
to delete the requirement for PBMs to report on arrangements with
manufacturers annually. We believe that this information can change
over time and should be updated. Medicaid-identifying patient or
prescriber information is not part of the disclosure requirement and
its disclosure may be governed by other laws.
Comment: A commenter supported general disclosure of the types of
services that PBMs may provide to manufacturers but objected to
disclosures of specific services provided to manufacturers on the
grounds that such disclosure would be unwieldy and provide no
additional transparency. Another commenter objected to the disclosure
requirements, because PBMs and their clients already engage in arm's-
length negotiations, including what is disclosed and not disclosed, and
called any additional disclosure requirements unnecessary, burdensome,
and invasive.
Response: Although we appreciate the commenters' concerns, we
respectfully disagree. The transparency requirement is important to
ensure that a PBM's arrangements with pharmaceutical manufacturers are
not in tension with the services it provides to the health plans for
which it is acting as an agent. Disclosures of specific services will
allow a plan to see what services a PBM is contracting with a
manufacturer for on its behalf.
Comment: A commenter requested clarification regarding the scope of
``associated costs'' and ``associated compensation'' for services
rendered to pharmaceutical manufacturers that are to be disclosed under
the new PBM service fees safe harbor. The commenter objected to the
disclosure to plan sponsors of fees paid by manufacturers to PBMs,
stating that the disclosure of fees to plan sponsors would not provide
any additional transparency and would negatively affect competition due
to widespread dissemination of the fees paid by each manufacturer to
each PBM.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's concern. The terms
``costs'' and ``compensation'' as used in the Proposed Rule were meant
to be synonymous. We further note that while we considered and
solicited comments on whether PBMs should be required to disclose fee
arrangements to health plans, we are not finalizing this requirement.
We are, however, finalizing the proposal that PBMs are required to
disclose fee arrangements to the Secretary upon request.
Comment: Regarding ``additional information about fee
arrangements'' to be disclosed to the Secretary upon request, a
commenter recommended that PBMs disclose information to the Department
that demonstrates fee arrangements do not duplicate other arrangements
for which the PBM might receive payments. Conversely, other commenters
cautioned that duplicative services may not always constitute ``double
dipping'' and that duplicative services may not necessarily indicate
that an arrangement is fraudulent or abusive. As an example, these
commenters noted that ``PBMs may provide the same data to more than one
entity, and such data could represent value to each recipient, even if
the data is also received by others.''
Response: In the Proposed Rule, we said we were considering and
solicited comments on a range of additional information we might
require be disclosed to the Secretary, upon request, including
information related to duplicative payments and double-dipping.
However, we are not requiring that the PBM proactively disclose
information that specifically demonstrates a lack of duplicate
services. The safe harbor requires that a PBM disclose to the Secretary
upon request the services it rendered to each pharmaceutical
manufacturer related to the PBM's arrangements to furnish pharmacy
benefit management services to the health plan and the fees paid for
such services. We believe this disclosure requirement will provide
sufficient transparency and that additional disclosure requirements are
not necessary to achieve the goals of the safe harbor. The requirement
to provide information about services and the fees paid for those
services to the Secretary on request does not constitute a
determination that any particular arrangement is abusive. We recognize
that particular fees and services cannot be examined in a vacuum, and
we would look at the totality of facts and circumstances in reviewing
an arrangement.
Comment: A commenter argued that, as proposed, the definition of
pharmacy benefit manager services eligible for protection under the
proposed safe harbor meets the definition of a bona fide service fee
and urged HHS to specify that if administrative service fees meet the
bona fide services fee definition they would no longer be treated as
reportable price concessions.
Response: Determinations of what services are or are not reported
as price concessions are the purview of CMS, which administers the Part
D program.
vi. Scope of Agreement
We solicited comments regarding whether the safe harbor for
pharmacy benefit manager fees should specify the format of any such
agreement (e.g., whether it would be sufficient for a PBM to have one
agreement with a manufacturer that covers all of the services the PBM
provides to that manufacturer, or whether separate agreements for
services that relate to each health plan would be necessary).
Comment: A commenter recommended that the rule should not dictate
the format of a PBM agreement, which could vary based on the services
to be provided and the preferences and standards desired by the
parties. The commenter suggested that requiring separate agreements for
each of a PBM's plan sponsor clients would impose tremendous costs on
the parties while providing no benefit or protection to Federal health
care programs. The commenter also pointed out that PBMs may need
separate agreements for Federal and commercial business.
Response: The final rule does not specify the format of a PBM
service fee
[[Page 76715]]
agreement and does not mandate that the PBM have separate agreements
with each health plan with which it contracts.
vii. Statutory Exception and Safe Harbor for Group Purchasing
Organizations
Comment: Various commenters asked OIG to affirmatively rescind
statements from its 2003 CPG that indicate rebates or other payments to
PBMs may be structured to fit under the GPO safe harbor at 42 CFR
1001.952(j) \55\ and to indicate in revised guidance that these
statements have been superseded and replaced by the point-of-sale
reductions in price and PBM service fees safe harbors, as of the
effective date of the final rule. Another pharmaceutical manufacturer
commenter asserted that allowing PBMs to rely on the GPO safe harbor
would create a loophole to the new safe harbors and reduce uptake of
point-of-sale discount arrangements and service fees based on flat,
fair market value payments.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\55\ Specifically, several commenters requested OIG rescind the
following statements from the ``Payments to PBMs'' section in 68 FR
23736: ``Any rebates or other payments by drug manufacturers to PBMs
that are based on, or otherwise related to, the PBM's customers'
purchases potentially implicate the anti-kickback statute.
Protection is available by structuring such arrangements to fit in
the GPO safe harbor at 42 CFR 1001.952(j). That safe harbor
requires, among other things, that the payments be authorized in
advance by the PBM's customer and that all amounts actually paid to
the PBM on account of the customer's purchases be disclosed in
writing at least annually to the customer.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commenters also asked for clarification as to whether OIG still
recognizes the GPO safe harbor as a possible source of protection for
rebates or other payments by manufacturers to PBMs. Similarly, other
commenters recommended that OIG clarify or revise the 2003 CPG in light
of the final rule because of the potential for confusion by
stakeholders on the status of rebates or other payments paid by
manufacturers to PBMs.
Conversely, a PBM commenter indicated that it intends to continue
to utilize the GPO safe harbor, 42 CFR 1001.952(j), to protect the
receipt of administrative fees from manufacturers. Another commenter
stated the GPO safe harbor also has a corollary statutory exception
that would protect these payments.
Response: To qualify for protection under the GPO safe harbor,
certain requirements must be met. First, the safe harbor protects only
payment by a vendor to a GPO as part of an agreement to furnish goods
or services to an entity. Second, the GPO must have a written agreement
with each individual or entity for which items or services are
furnished that specifies either that the fee the GPO receives will be
three percent or less of the purchase price of the goods or services
provided by that vendor or specifies the amount (or if not known, the
maximum amount) the GPO will be paid by each vendor (where such amount
may be a fixed sum or a fixed percentage of the value of purchases made
from the vendor by the members of the group under the contract between
the vendor and the GPO). Third, if the entity that receives the goods
or service from the vendor is a health care provider of services, the
GPO must disclose in writing to the entity at least annually, and to
the Secretary upon request, the amount received from each vendor with
respect to purchases made by or on behalf of the entity. In addition to
meeting the requirements above, a PBM, as a threshold matter, would
have to meet the definition of a GPO: An entity authorized to act as a
purchasing agent for a group of individuals or entities who are
furnishing services for which payment may be made in whole or in part
under Medicare, Medicaid or other Federal health care programs, and who
are neither wholly-owned by the GPO nor subsidiaries of a parent
corporation that wholly owns the GPO (either directly or through
another wholly-owned entity).\56\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\56\ 42 CFR 1001.952(j)(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thus, for a PBM to qualify as a GPO acting as a purchasing agent on
behalf of its members, the PBM could not wholly own the members, nor
could the members be wholly owned by the same parent corporation as the
PBM. This may limit the utility of the safe harbor for many PBMs. The
propriety of any particular arrangement and whether it can fit under a
safe harbor is highly dependent upon the facts and circumstances of
each particular case. Any statements in this final rule should be not
construed as approval of an individual arrangement. PBMs and
manufacturers wishing to use the GPO safe harbor should closely
scrutinize their arrangements for full compliance with all safe harbor
conditions and definitions, including all requirements relating to
written agreements and disclosures.
Requests for amendments to the regulatory safe harbor for GPOs are
beyond the scope of this rulemaking. In addition, as we state above,
fees to PBMs are not protected by the discount or point-of-sale
reduction in price safe harbors, so nothing in this rule would suggest
those amendments would replace or supersede a PBM's ability to have
fees protected by a different safe harbor. The new PBM service fee safe
harbor is an additional avenue for protection for arrangements between
pharmaceutical manufacturers and PBMs that meet the conditions of that
safe harbor. As with any safe harbor, only offers or payment of
remuneration that meet all safe harbor conditions, including any
applicable definitions and disclosure requirements, would be protected.
Comment: Another commenter encouraged OIG to clarify and
distinguish the GPO safe harbor term ``purchasing agent'' from PBM in
the final rule or future rulemaking. The commenter asserted that the
term ``purchasing agent'' is used but not defined in both the GPO
statutory exception and safe harbor. The commenter requested that OIG
define the term ``purchasing agent'' narrowly, e.g., as an entity that
is distinct from a PBM and represents members that take title and
possession of purchased products, which, the commenter asserted, would
better ensure the objectives of the Proposed Rule. Similarly, another
commenter encouraged OIG to clearly distinguish PBMs from GPOs based on
the types of entities that they represent and services they perform for
those entities.
Response: Defining the term ``purchasing agent'' and distinguishing
between GPOs and PBMS as those terms are used in the GPO statutory
exception and safe harbor is outside the scope of this rulemaking,
which does not address the GPO safe harbor.
viii. Additional Recommendations
Comment: Several commenters requested that OIG clarify, expand, or
restrict the definition of PBM for purposes of the proposed safe harbor
for various reasons. For example, some commenters recommended a
definition that is based on an entity's function or incorporates the
types of services an entity provides, rather than the label of its
name. A commenter recommended that a definition of ``PBM'' not include
``negotiating rebate arrangements'' because it could create the
impression of protecting PBM services provided to manufacturers that
are not legitimate and/or necessary. Some commenters recommended OIG
include in the definition all PBM-owned and PBM-affiliated entities,
including PBM-owned pharmacies.
Response: We thank the commenters for their suggestions. We decline
to expand or limit the definition of ``PBM'' that we included in the
Proposed Rule. We included only the core function of a PBM in the
definition because we recognize that one PBM may perform more or fewer
services than another
[[Page 76716]]
PBM, and we do not want a defined term to dictate a business model for
purposes of safe harbor protection. We also decline to include all PBM-
owned or PBM-affiliated entities in the definition. Other safe harbors
(such as the personal services safe harbor) might be available to
protect services performed by other types of entities.
Comment: Some commenters requested that OIG clarify or remove
altogether the ``related to'' aspect of the proposed safe harbor so
that the safe harbor protection could be more broadly available to, for
example, all PBM services arrangements with manufacturers.
Response: We are not adopting this suggestion. The conditions in
this safe harbor are designed to ensure that protection is offered only
for service fees if the services are related or (i.e., connected in
some way) to pharmacy benefit management services that the PBM provides
to health plans. If there is no connection to health plan services,
certain conditions in the safe harbor would be inapplicable (e.g., the
requirement to make certain disclosures to health plans). We note,
however, that other safe harbors, such as the personal services and
management contracts safe harbor at Sec. 1001.952(d) may be available
to protect other types of service arrangements between PBMs and
manufacturers.
Comment: Some commenters recommended that OIG incorporate certain
requirements of the personal services and management contracts safe
harbor to the PBM service fees proposed safe harbor. Specifically, the
commenters recommended requiring that (1) the agreement for the service
be signed by the parties; (2) the services performed under the
agreement do not involve the counselling or promotion of a business
arrangement or other activity that violates any State or Federal law,
and (3) the aggregate services contracted for do not exceed those that
are reasonably necessary to accomplish the commercially reasonable
business purpose of the services.
Response: The proposed safe harbor for PBM service fees includes
certain safeguards adapted from the personal services and management
contracts safe harbor, including a requirement that compensation be
fair market value for services rendered.
With regard to the suggestion that the safe harbor include a
requirement that the agreement for PBM services be signed by the
parties, we believe that such a requirement is implicit in the
requirement that the agreement be in writing in order to establish and
memorialize the agreement of the parties. However, we acknowledge that
the personal services and management contracts safe harbor includes an
explicit requirement of signatures. For the sake of consistency, and to
avoid any implication that an inconsistency on this point means no
signatures are required for compliance with the PBM service fees safe
harbor, we are adding this explicit requirement to the final rule.
As noted by commenters, the personal services and management
contracts safe harbor also includes a requirement that the services
performed under the agreement do not involve the counselling or
promotion of a business arrangement or other activity that violates any
State or Federal law. While the proposed PBM service fees safe harbor
did not include such a requirement in regulatory text, we think it is
obvious that the proposed safe harbor was not intended to protect
payments for the counselling or promotion of illegal activities. For
the sake of clarity, we are adding this explicit requirement to the
final rule.
The commenters also noted that the personal service and management
contracts safe harbor requires that ``the aggregate services contracted
for do not exceed those that are reasonably necessary to accomplish the
commercially reasonable business purpose of the services.'' While we
are not including this specific condition in the final rule, we note
that considering whether services are commercially reasonable would
likely be useful in meeting the condition that payments protected by
the safe harbor be ``for services the PBM provides to the
pharmaceutical manufacturer related to the pharmacy benefit management
services that the PBM furnishes to . . . health plans'' and not for
favorable treatment of the manufacturers' products.
Comment: A commenter recommended that OIG provide guidance stating
that companies will be held accountable for their own compliance,
noting that the discount safe harbor requires entities to ``refrain
from doing anything that would impede'' their contracting counter-party
from meeting their own obligations under the safe harbor. The
contractor further noted that the 1999 preamble to the discount safe
harbor states that, if a seller meets its obligations under the safe
harbor in good faith, while the buyer fails to meet its obligations,
the seller would be protected by the safe harbor. 64 FR 63518, 63527
(Nov. 19, 1999).
Response: The safe harbor for PBM service fees differs from the
discount safe harbor at 42 CFR 1001.952(h), in that the latter has
separate sets of requirements for buyers and sellers. The PBM service
fee safe harbor has only one condition that is the responsibility of
only one party: The PBM is responsible for certain disclosures, which
we believe it is able to make without the assistance of any other party
to the agreement. We confirm that, provided that all other requirements
of the safe harbor are met, and provided that the manufacturer party to
an agreement with a PBM has taken no steps to discourage or impede the
PBM from meeting the disclosure requirements, the PBM's failure to meet
the disclosure requirement will not, by itself, cause the manufacturer
to lose the protection of the safe harbor. We note, however, that if
the manufacturer were aware of a failure to disclose and took no steps
to remedy it, liability might attach to the manufacturer through
various legal theories, depending on all the facts of the arrangement
and the conduct of the parties.
Comment: A commenter explained that bona fide payments for services
performed by PBM intermediaries should be converted to fee-for-service
arrangements that are tied to the fair market value of the services
performed rather than a percentage of WAC. The commenter requested that
OIG provide similar protections for pharmacies, wholesalers, and
outpatient providers.
Response: The commenter did not explain how the referenced service
arrangements with pharmacies, wholesalers and outpatient providers
implicate the anti-kickback statute while posing low risk of abuse, and
therefore are suitable for protection by a safe harbor. If the
arrangements do not fit in a safe harbor, they would be analyzed on a
case-by-case basis for compliance with the statute.
Comment: Some commenters requested that pharmacies' reimbursement
not be affected by the negotiated rate between plans or PBMs and
manufacturers and that pharmacies not be expected to pay any of the
service fees owed by manufacturers to PBMs.
Response: There is no expectation under the final rule that
pharmacies pay any of the service fees owed by manufacturers to PBMs.
Pharmacy reimbursement from plan sponsors and the relationships between
pharmacies and manufacturers are beyond the scope of this rulemaking.
However, we note that the PBM service fee safe harbor protects only
payments to PBMs by manufacturers, provided all conditions of the safe
harbor are met. Payments that are made by pharmacies, even indirectly
through reimbursements to
[[Page 76717]]
manufacturers, are not protected by the safe harbor.
Comment: Some commenters requested that OIG clarify what ``arm's-
length transaction'' means. In particular, a commenter specifically
requested that OIG clarify: (1) That PBMs are obligated to negotiate
services arrangements in good faith based on the bona fide needs of
manufacturers; (2) the scope of safe harbor protection available for
arrangements in which a PBM provides services on behalf of an
affiliated plan; and (3) that individual health plans that do not
provide pharmacy benefits management services to plan sponsors under
Part D may not attempt to use the safe harbor to negotiate
administrative fees from manufacturers.
Response: The term ``arm's-length transaction'' has appeared in
safe harbor regulations since 1999 \57\ and has been subject to
interpretation in advisory opinions and other OIG guidance,\58\ as well
as court cases,\59\ since that time. We decline to provide further
interpretation here.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\57\ See, e.g., 64 FR 63518 (Nov. 19, 1999).
\58\ See, e.g., 2003 CPG, Special Advisory Bulletin: Contractual
Joint Ventures (April 23, 2003, available at https://oig.hhs.gov/fraud/docs/alertsandbulletins/042303SABJointVentures.pdf.
\59\ See, e.g., U.S. ex rel. Gale v. Omnicare, Inc., 2013 WL
3822152 (N.D. Ohio, July 23, 2013).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: A commenter suggested that alternative, transparent, flat-
fee based pharmacy benefits models that reduce costs already exist (and
were not considered by OIG or HHS) that generate savings, which are
used by health plans in a variety of ways, including (1) reducing plan
spending and/or providing member savings, such as offsetting premium
costs; or (2) lowering copayments for enrollees and not charging an
enrollee more than the cost of the drugs themselves.
Response: The Proposed Rule does not prohibit the use of other
models but only provides protection from liability for PBM service
fees, in certain circumstances, because they implicate the anti-
kickback statute and are considered to be low-risk.
Comment: A commenter urged OIG to clarify that, if an arrangement
fell under the protection of other safe harbors, including discount,
personal services and management contracts, managed care, and GPO
administrative fee, those arrangements can only now be protected under
the proposed PBM service fees safe harbor.
Response: An arrangement that satisfies all conditions of any safe
harbor can be protected without satisfying conditions of other
potentially applicable safe harbors. Thus an arrangement between a PBM
and a manufacturer that does not satisfy the conditions of the safe
harbor for PBM service fees could be protected by a different safe
harbor, if the arrangement met all the conditions of that other safe
harbor.
E. Technical Comments
We received several comments requesting that we make technical
revisions to certain provisions in the regulatory text. We summarize
the comments received below.
Comment: Commenters requested that we revise ``reduced price'' to
``reduction in price'' in Sec. 1001.952(cc)(1)(i) to ensure
consistency with the term used in Sec. 1001.952(cc).
Response: We agree with the commenters and have made the technical
correction.
Comment: Commenters noted that we use the term ``health benefits
plan'' in the proposed definition of ``pharmacy benefit manager'' but
use the term ``health plan'' throughout the rest of the Proposed Rule.
The commenters requested that we avoid introducing inconsistency and
use the term ``health plan'' in this definition.
Response: We agree with the commenters and have made the technical
correction.
IV. Provisions of the Final Regulation
This final rule incorporates, in large part, the amendments to the
discount safe harbor and the new safe harbors we proposed in the
Proposed Rule, but with some changes to the regulatory text.
A. Revision to the Discount Safe Harbor
We are finalizing, with certain revisions, our amendments to the
discount safe harbor (42 CFR 1001.952(h)). In the Proposed Rule, we
proposed to exclude from safe harbor protection a reduction in price or
other remuneration from a manufacturer in connection with the sale or
purchase of a prescription pharmaceutical product to a plan sponsor
under Medicare Part D or to a Medicaid MCO. In response to comments, we
are not finalizing our proposal to exclude from protection those
reductions in price from pharmaceutical manufacturers to Medicaid MCOs.
B. New Safe Harbors
We are finalizing, with certain revisions, a new safe harbor in
Sec. 1001.952(cc) to protect point-of-sale reductions in price by a
manufacturer for a prescription pharmaceutical product that is payable,
in whole or in part, by a plan sponsor under Medicare Part D or a
Medicaid Managed Care Organization. In addition, we are finalizing,
with minor revisions, a new safe harbor that protects payment by a
pharmaceutical manufacturer to a PBM for services the PBM provides to
the pharmaceutical manufacturer related to the pharmacy benefit
management services that the PBM furnishes to one or more health plans.
C. Technical Corrections
We are correcting a numbering error in the new safe harbor in Sec.
1001.952(dd). Specifically, we inadvertently failed to include a (1)
before the opening language for Sec. 1001.952(dd). In this final rule,
we have inserted the (1) and renumbered the subsequent paragraphs
accordingly to correct this oversight.
V. Regulatory Impact Statement
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 direct agencies to assess all
costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public
health and safety effects, distributive impacts, and equity). A
regulatory impact analysis must be prepared for major rules with
economically significant effects of $100 million or more in any one
year.
Executive Order 13771 (January 30, 2017) requires that the costs
associated with significant new regulations ``to the extent permitted
by law, be offset by the elimination of existing costs associated with
at least two prior regulations.'' The Department believes that this
rule is a significant regulatory action as defined by Executive Order
12866 that imposes costs, and therefore is considered a regulatory
action under Executive Order 13771. The Department estimates that this
rule generates $78.0 million in annualized costs at a 7 percent
discount rate, discounted relative to 2016, over a perpetual time
horizon.
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) and the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement and Fairness Act of 1996, which amended the RFA,
require agencies to analyze options for regulatory relief of small
businesses. For purposes of the RFA, small entities include small
businesses, non-profit organizations, and government agencies. Based on
subsequent analysis, the Secretary does not believe that this rule will
have significant impact on a substantial number of small entities.
In addition, section 1102(b) of the Act requires us to prepare a
regulatory impact analysis if a rule may have a significant impact on
the operations of a substantial number of small rural hospitals. This
analysis must conform to
[[Page 76718]]
section 603 of the RFA. For purposes of section 1102(b) of the Act, we
define a small rural hospital as a hospital that is located outside a
Metropolitan Statistical Area for Medicare payment regulations and has
fewer than 100 beds. The Secretary has determined that this rule would
not have a significant impact on the operations of a substantial number
of small rural hospitals.
Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 also
requires that agencies assess anticipated costs and benefits before
issuing any rule whose mandates require spending in any one year of
$100 million in 1995 dollars, updated annually for inflation. In 2020,
that threshold is approximately $156 million. The rule may have effects
on states through its effects on the MDRP, under which rebates are
shared between the Federal Government and the states based on the
Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP) for each state.
The rule does not alter obligations under the statutory provisions
for Medicaid prescription drug rebates under Section 1927 of the Act
that are calculated as percentages of AMP plus the difference between
the rate of increase in AMP and the increase in the consumer price
index for all urban consumers (CPI-U). It also does not alter Section
1927's provisions for Medicaid rebates based on the Best Price
available to other payers for innovator drugs or for supplemental
rebates negotiated between states and manufacturers, nor does the rule
alter the regulations and guidance to implement Section 1927
provisions.
Although it is difficult to anticipate the final rule's potential
effects on AMP, if the rule reduces AMP, it will also reduce Medicaid
prescription drug rebates calculated as percentages of AMP plus the
difference between the rate of increase in AMP and the increase in the
CPI-U. The Milliman analysis includes an extended example demonstrating
that the loss of revenue from these rebates can exceed the savings from
lower list prices.\60\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\60\ Milliman, Inc., Impact of Potential Changes to the
Treatment of Manufacturer Rebates (Jan. 31, 2019). This citation is
corrected from the Proposed Rule and reflects the document that was
posted as supplementary material in the docket for this rule at
regulations.gov in February 2019.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The VA, Department of Defense, Coast Guard, and the Public Health
Service (including the Indian Health Service) are eligible to purchase
drugs under the FCP Program. The FCP is calculated as a percentage of
non-FAMP. Eligible programs can purchase drugs using the lesser of the
FSS Price and FCP. Although it is difficult to determine the effects of
the final rule on FSS users or entities entitled to FCPs, if the
overall effect of lowering list pricing is achieved and that results in
lower prices to commercial customers (and wholesalers) or pricing
components of non-FAMP, it is possible the VA may realize some
additional savings.
Executive Order 13132 establishes certain requirements that an
agency must meet when it promulgates a rule (and subsequent final rule)
that imposes substantial direct requirement costs on State and local
governments, preempts State law, or otherwise has federalism
implications. Since this regulation does not impose any direct costs on
State or local governments, preempt State law, or otherwise have
federalism implications, the requirements of Executive Order 13132 are
not applicable.
Comment: One commenter suggested that the Proposed Rule did not
comply with the requirements under E.O. 13771 to offset costs of
significant rules by eliminating costs from at least two prior final
rules and suggested the E.O. 13771 cost estimate was calculated
incorrectly.
Response: We appreciate the comments but disagree. The Proposed
Rule complied with the requirements under E.O. 13771, as described in
more detail in OMB guidance.\61\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\61\ For general guidance, see https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/whitehouse.gov/files/omb/memoranda/2017/M-17-21-OMB.pdf. For
guidance on accounting methods, see https://www.reginfo.gov/public/pdf/eo13771/EO13771_accounting_methods.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. Need for Regulation
As described above, manufacturers paying rebates to PBMs may be a
factor in list prices rising faster than inflation. This phenomenon may
also be causing PBMs to favor higher-cost drugs with higher rebates
over drugs with lower costs and discouraging the adoption of lower-cost
brand drugs and biosimilars. As a result, rebates may increase costs
for consumers, because their out-of-pocket costs during the deductible,
coinsurance, and coverage gap phases of their benefits are based on the
retail price derived from pharmacy acquisition costs with negotiated
additional markups and dispensing fees. Rebates may also increase costs
for the government, which pays a portion of the premium, cost-sharing,
and reinsurance payments associated with the use of highly rebated
drugs instead of less-costly alternatives.
Prescription drug spending can be measured based on WAC price (also
referred to as list price or invoice price) and the so-called ``net
price'' (which accounts for all price concessions).\62\ According to
the IQVIA Institute for Human Data Science (a private research
organization affiliated with the human data science and consulting firm
IQVIA that uses proprietary data from IQVIA), the difference between
total U.S. invoice spending (the amount paid by distributors) and net
spending (which accounts for all price concessions) across all
distribution channels has increased from approximately $38 billion in
2009 to $135 billion in 2018 for retail drugs.\63\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\62\ ``Net price'' is industry jargon. Each PBM or plan sponsor
may treat payments and price concessions differently. Thus the ``net
price'' of a drug is more difficult to define than the Wholesale
Acquisition Cost set by the manufacturer.
\63\ IQVIA Institute for Human Data Science, Medicine Use and
Spending in the U.S.: A Review of 2018 and Outlook to 2023, May
2019, p. 20.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Department analysis shows that within Medicare there has been a
similar trend of growing differences between list and net prices.
Manufacturer rebates grew from about 10 percent of gross prescription
drug costs in 2008 to about 20 percent in 2016 and are projected to
reach 28 percent in 2027 under current policy (Figure 1). Reinsurance
spending and gross drug costs, after rising in tandem with premiums in
the early years of the Part D benefit, are now growing much faster than
premiums.
[[Page 76719]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR30NO20.000
Comment: One commenter suggested that the Proposed Rule does not
adequately justify the need for regulation, does not adequately
describe and assess the impacts of alternatives, and does not carefully
weigh effects on stakeholders.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's feedback and additional
information but disagree with the conclusion. One of the purposes of
the Proposed Rule was to get feedback and information from the public
that we could not otherwise access. We have updated the regulatory
impact analysis and the rule based on the comments, and the regulatory
impact analysis represents our best thinking in these areas with
consideration of these comments. We note that while we only had
qualitative evidence on benefits in the Proposed Rule, the Department
now quantifies some of these benefits, and these benefits exceed the
rule's cost estimates.
B. Background on Costs, Benefits, and Transfers
This rule eliminates safe harbor protection for rebates received by
plan sponsors, or PBMs under contract with them, from manufacturers in
connection with Medicare Part D prescription pharmaceutical products
and offers new safe harbor protection for certain price reductions
offered at the point of sale. As a result, manufacturers will have an
incentive to lower list prices, PBMs will have greater incentive to
negotiate larger discounts from manufacturers, and beneficiaries will
benefit from more transparency enabling them to better choose a plan
that meets their needs. The goal of this policy is to lower out-of-
pocket costs for consumers, reduce government drug spending in Federal
health care programs, and create transparency that increases choice,
competition, and program integrity.
The full magnitude of these savings is difficult to quantify, and
the Office of Management and Budget has specific definitions of costs,
benefits, and transfers. As such, a brief summary of potential effects
of this rule is provided here. More information about these effects may
be found in the respective costs, benefits, and transfers sections.
Notably, the Department intends for this rule to result in
manufacturers lowering their list prices and replacing rebates with
point-of-sale reductions in price. One way to quantify this impact is
to simply replace all manufacturer rebates paid to PBMs with point-of-
sale reductions in price to consumers and estimate the effect of this
transfer on stakeholders. However, this approach does not consider the
range of strategic behavioral changes stakeholders may make in response
to this rule, including the extent to which manufacturers lower list
prices or retain a portion of current rebate spending, PBMs change
benefit designs or obtain additional price concessions, and the impact
on consumer utilization of lower-cost drugs. The section below
describes the current system and the potential system that could result
from finalizing this rule, based on current Medicare Part D spending
and a range of potential behavioral changes, including the manufacturer
pricing changes and PBM negotiation practices described above. In some
places, the analysis in this section is premised on the proposed
effective date of January 1, 2020. We recognize that impacts will not
occur in 2020, but did not feel that updated analyses would
significantly change the discussion of the range of potential impacts
or resolve uncertainty around estimates from the proposed rule stage.
Impacts will occur at a later point in time, relative to the proposed
rule, due to the delayed effective date. As at the proposed rule stage,
the precise timing of impacts depends on external factors, such as when
regulated entities implement adjustments to their business
arrangements.
Today, prescription drug manufacturers prospectively set the WAC,
or list price, of the drugs they sell to wholesalers and other large
purchasers. Manufacturers also retrospectively make payments to PBMs or
other customers who meet certain volume-based or market-share criteria.
The difference between the list price of a drug and the rebate amount
is referred to in industry parlance as the ``net price.'' Since the
passage of the anti-kickback statute and the establishment of the
various safe harbors, the list prices of branded prescription drugs,
and the rebates paid by manufacturers to PBMs, have grown
substantially. The phenomenon of list prices rising faster than ``net
prices'' is referred to as the ``gross to net bubble.''
Research suggests that the approval of a new drug can lead to
higher list prices for existing drugs in the therapeutic class.\64\
PBMs may favor drugs with higher rebates over drugs with lower costs,
or otherwise discourage the adoption of lower-cost brand or generic
drugs and biosimilars. As a result, rebates may increase costs for
[[Page 76720]]
consumers (who experience out-of-pocket costs more closely related to
the list price than the rebated amount during the deductible,
coinsurance, and coverage gap phases of their benefits) and the
government (which pays a portion of the premium, cost-sharing, and
reinsurance payments associated with the use of higher-rebated drugs
instead of less-costly alternatives). This rule seeks to correct the
incentives that have created the widening gaps between gross and net
prescription drug costs and between gross prescription drug costs and
Part D premiums.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\64\ Hartung DM, et al. The cost of multiple sclerosis drugs in
the US and the pharmaceutical industry: Too big to fail? Neurology
2015; 84(21):2185-92; Alliance of Community Health Plans, The Spike
in Drug Costs: Rheumatoid Arthritis, available at https://www.achp.org/wp-content/uploads/Rheumatoid-Arthritis_Final.pdf;
Alliance of Community Health Plans, The Spike in Drug Costs:
Diabetes, available at https://www.achp.org/wp-content/uploads/Diabetes_FINAL_Revised-12.7.15.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This rule removes safe harbor protection for rebates from a
manufacturer of prescription pharmaceutical products to plan sponsors
under Part D (either directly or indirectly through PBMs under contract
with them), and creates two new safe harbors protecting certain
reductions in price at the point of sale by manufacturers and
protecting certain flat fees paid by manufacturers to a PBM for
services that the PBM renders to the manufacturer. To the extent that
this rule results in manufacturers reducing the list price of drugs, it
will impact all cash flows throughout the system.
The intent of this rule is to remove discount safe harbor
protection for rebates and other reductions in price from manufacturers
to plan sponsors under Part D or PBMs under contract with those
sponsors and to provide a new avenue for point-of-sale reductions in
price that will benefit beneficiaries at the pharmacy counter. This
change will impact the price that many patients pay for prescription
drugs. As part of their health insurance coverage, many consumers pay
some cost-sharing for the use of health care services. For many plans,
consumers first pay a deductible. This typically means that the
consumer pays the full cost of services until the deductible is met.
After the consumer has met the deductible, cost sharing often takes the
form of coinsurance, in which consumers pay a percentage of the cost of
the covered health care service or product, or copayments, in which
consumers pay a fixed amount for a covered health care service or
product. A recent IQVIA report found that in 2017 more than 55 percent
of commercially-insured consumer spending on branded medicines was
filled under coinsurance or before the deductible is met.\65\ For most
health care services, consumer deductibles and coinsurance are based on
the prices that health insurers negotiate with their network providers.
However, for prescription drugs, often the price the plan ultimately
pays is based on rebates that are paid after the point of sale to the
consumer, whereas the consumers' deductible and coinsurance payments
are based on the list price.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\65\ IQVIA, Patient Affordability Part One: The Implications of
Changing Benefit Designs and High Cost-Sharing (May 18, 2018),
available at https://www.iqvia.com/locations/united-states/patient-affordability-part-one.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
With a reduced price used to adjudicate the benefit, patients with
coinsurance or deductible plans will likely experience reductions in
cost-sharing for rebated brand-name drugs at the point of sale. Because
of actuarial equivalence requirements in the Part D program, patients
with fixed co-payments may also see changes in their cost-sharing at
the point of sale outside of the deductible, coverage gap, or
catastrophic phases of their benefits. These effects will accrue to
some beneficiaries through lower out-of-pocket costs and to all
beneficiaries through more transparent pricing. If this rule closes the
gap between list and net prices and leads to additional price
concessions, as the Department anticipates, the benefit of lower
premiums and out-of-pocket costs would accrue to all beneficiaries with
individual out-of-pocket savings varying by beneficiary prescription
drug utilization. If this rule closes the gap between list and net
prices but leads to fewer price concessions, all beneficiaries could
experience higher premiums with only some experiencing lower out-of-
pocket costs. The potential impact of these distributional changes is
described in the transfers section of this regulatory impact analysis.
Consumers also select health insurance plans based on their
understanding of relevant plan characteristics, including premiums,
cost-sharing, formulary coverage, and in-network providers. Research
shows that consumers often do not understand their health insurance
plans and would better understand a simpler plan.\66\ Research specific
to Medicare Part D suggests beneficiaries place a greater weight on
premiums than out-of-pocket costs, are most likely to choose the plan
with the lowest premiums.\67\ Oftentimes they select the plan with the
lowest premiums when plans with higher premiums and more comprehensive
coverage were actuarially favorable.\68\ However, consumers in poorer
health or with higher drug costs are more likely to anticipate their
future drug spending and choose a plan that places them at less
financial risk. Also, as stated earlier, a beneficiary paying 20
percent coinsurance on a drug with a $100 WAC and 30 percent rebate
effectively pays 28 percent of the plan's cost after accounting for
payments made by the manufacturer to the PBM. Thus, the publication of
premiums and cost-sharing amounts that more accurately reflect the
discounted price of a prescription drug could help align consumer
understanding of health insurance benefits with reality and help
consumers to choose the health insurance plans that best meet their
needs. These effects are described in the benefits section.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\66\ Loewenstein G et al. Consumers misunderstanding of health
insurance. Journal of Health Economics. 32 (2013) 850-62.
\67\ Abaluck and Gruber. Evolving Choice Inconsistencies in
Choice of Prescription Drug Insurance. Am Econ Rev. 2016 Aug.,
106(8): 2145-84.
\68\ Heiss, Leive, McFadden and Winter. Plan Selection in
Medicare Part D: Evidence from Administrative Data. J Health Econ.
2013 Dec., 32(6): 1325-44.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Federal government pays a significant portion of the premium
for every Medicare Part D beneficiary and subsidizes the cost-sharing
of beneficiaries eligible for the Part D Low Income Subsidy (LIS). If
this rule increases or decreases premiums, Federal spending on premium
subsidies will also increase or decrease, potentially outweighing
estimated Federal savings associated with this rule. These potential
effects are described in the transfers section of this regulatory
impact analysis.
Stakeholders involved in the manufacture, sale, distribution, and
dispensing of prescription drugs, as well as those who provide
prescription drug coverage, will need to review this policy and
determine how it affects them. They may also need to make changes to
existing business practices, update systems, or implement new
documentation and recordkeeping requirements. These effects are
described in the costs section of this regulatory impact analysis.
After the close of the comment period, CBO independently estimated
the impact of the Proposed Rule.\69\ The CBO analysis was substantially
similar to the CMS Office of the Actuary (OACT) analysis of the
Proposed Rule. One significant difference is that CBO expects that
rather than lowering list prices, manufacturers would offer the
renegotiated discounts in the form of point-of-sale chargebacks. In
addition, the CBO analysis includes transfer effects related to the
costs of implementation of the rule. Despite
[[Page 76721]]
these differences, the transfer effects of the rule estimated by CBO
are within the range of estimates presented in the Proposed Rule, and
as a result, we do not provide additional substantial discussion of
CBO's estimates of these transfers in the final rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\69\ Congressional Budget Office. ``Incorporating the Effects of
the Proposed Rule on Safe Harbors for Pharmaceutical Rebates in
CBO's Budget Projections--Supplemental Material for Updated Budget
Projections: 2019 to 2029,'' May 2019, https://www.cbo.gov/system/files/2019-05/55151-SupplementalMaterial.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The CBO analysis also includes additional analysis not conducted
for the Proposed Rule. Part of this analysis related to guidance on
Part D bids for the 2020 plan year and a CMS demonstration that was
contemplated, but not finalized, in 2019. CBO analyzed the impact of
the rule on Medicare Part A, B, and D utilization. On net, these
changes are expected to reduce Medicare spending. According to the CBO
analysis, the rule will increase prescription drug utilization,
resulting in increased Part D spending. This increase in Part D
spending is estimated to be offset by savings in Medicare Parts A and
B. As previously described in detail in this impact analysis, the range
of actuarial estimates for this rule range from $100 billion in reduced
federal spending if more than 100 percent of rebates are converted into
list price concessions and Part D plans exert greater formulary
control, to $196 billion in increased Federal spending, if
manufacturers reduce price concessions in Part D. There is wide
variation in the analyses conducted that makes it difficult to project
with certainty the impact of the policy change on federal spending. The
Secretary, in applying the modeling assumptions and the range of
available estimates, coupled with the fifteen-year history of the
program (including its competitive dynamic), has projected that there
will not be an increase in federal spending, patient out-of-pocket
costs, or premiums for Part D beneficiaries as required by the
Executive Order. The Department further believes that the rule will
make beneficiary medications more affordable and lead to lower cost
sharing for patients.
The Department has considered the wide variation of potential
transfer impacts in the analyses conducted and has decided to proceed
with this rulemaking based on its view that the rule will have
significant transparency and prescription adherence benefits for
Medicare beneficiaries.
Comment: Multiple commenters suggested that impact estimates
indicate that premiums for plans will increase, but the estimates do
not account for how this will affect enrollment. One commenter noted
that a study shows that a $100 increase in MA-PD premiums leads to 34
percent increase in plan switching.
Response: We appreciate commenters' feedback but would note that a
change of $100 in monthly premiums is several orders of magnitude
outside the range of potential impacts discussed in this rule. We would
further note that since the inception of the Medicare Part D program,
the base beneficiary premiums have ranged from $27 to $35, but the
number of enrollees in Medicare Part D have increased every year.\70\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\70\ CMS, 2020 Annual Report, Boards of Trustees
Fed. Hospital Ins. & Fed. Supp. Medical Ins. Trust Funds,
available at https://www.cms.gov/files/document/2020-medicare-trustees-report.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: One commenter noted that the estimates rely on the
standard plan design (full deductible and 25 percent coinsurance) on
all non-low-income beneficiaries in the initial coverage limit and
coverage gap, when in reality, the majority of Part D plans use
actuarial equivalents of the standard benefit that have smaller
deductibles. This commenter suggested that estimates of beneficiary
cost-savings are overstated because they assume 100 percent deductibles
for all patients.
Response: We disagree with the commenter. Use of the standard
benefit design does not inherently build any bias into the estimates.
All basic plans must provide coverage that is actuarially equivalent to
the standard benefit so the net effects on the modeling are at most
modest.
Comment: One commenter stated that the estimates suggest that the
transition to a chargeback system will result in $170.9 billion in
extra Federal spending that will provide a net benefit to
manufacturers.
Response: We agree with the commenter that several of the estimates
included in the proposed rule estimated transfers from the Federal
government to manufacturers. OACT estimated that there will be $196.1
billion in additional Federal spending that will partly reduce
individuals' out-of-pocket spending and will partly result in
additional manufacturer revenue. However, other actuarial estimates
based on strategic industry responses to this final rule range from $99
billion in reduced federal spending (Part D plan sponsors increased
formulary controls and obtained additional price concessions) to $140
billion in increased Federal spending (if manufacturers reduced price
concessions in Part D to offset list price decreases in other markets).
Comment: One commenter noted that the estimates do not account for
transfers related to the administrative burden necessary for a
transition to a wholesaler chargeback system.
Response: We agree in part with the commenter that a wholesaler-led
chargeback system is a possible outcome of this rule and note that
CBO's estimate does account for changes in premiums related to
administrative burden, and CBO's estimates are well within the range of
estimates provided in the Proposed Rule. OACT did not make any explicit
assumptions with respect to potential additional administrative
expenses in administering the wholesaler chargeback system.
C. Affected Entities
Comment: One commenter suggested that the Department underestimated
the number of entities (specifically, PBMs and pharmaceutical
wholesalers) affected by the rule, underestimated the categories of
entities affected by various categories of impacts, and offered
suggestions for improving discussion of the impact on pharmacies.
Response: We agree that wholesalers are affected by this rule but
lack concrete data to estimate the number of affected wholesalers. The
commenter suggested ten wholesalers are affected. To ensure we do not
undercount, we will estimate that approximately twenty wholesalers are
affected by the rule. The commenter suggests 66 PBMs, rather than the
60 estimated in the Proposed Rule, are affected by the rule. We are
unable to verify the source underlying this information and retain the
estimate that approximately 60 PBMs are affected by the rule. The
commenter suggested small pharmacies largely use 20 pharmacy services
administration organizations (PSAOs) to provide administrative
services, such as negotiation, on their behalf. As a result, we have
adjusted estimates to assume that costs affecting pharmacies occur at
each pharmacy and drug store firm and each of 40 PSAOs to ensure we do
not undercount. We have also revised the analysis to reflect that a
broader pool of entities may be affected by impacts in all categories
discussed below.
This rule will affect the operations of entities that are involved
in the distribution and reimbursement of prescription drugs to Medicare
Part D prescription drug benefit enrollees. According to the U.S.
Census \71\ and other sources,\72\ there were 67,753 community
pharmacies (including 19,500 pharmacy and drug store firms and 21,909
small business community pharmacies), 1,775 pharmaceutical and medicine
manufacturing firms, and 880
[[Page 76722]]
direct health and medical insurance carrier firms operating in the U.S.
in 2015. In 2018, there were 44 PBMs listed in the Pharmacy Benefit
Management Institute directory.\73\ Organizations are required to pay a
fee if they choose to register, and therefore we estimate that
participation in the directory is incomplete and that the total number
of PBMs operating in the U.S. is approximately 60. As described above,
we estimate that the rule affects approximately 20 pharmaceutical
wholesalers. Finally, a 2013 GAO study \74\ identifies 22 PSAOs, and
notes there may be more in operation. We adjust this upward and
estimate the rule affects 40 PSAOs. As noted previously, we assume that
costs affecting pharmacies are incurred at each pharmacy and drug store
firm and each PSAO.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\71\ U.S. Census Bureau, Statistics of U.S. Businesses,
available at https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/susb.html.
\72\ Qato, Zenk, Wilder, et al. PLoS One. 2017 Aug 16;12(8).
\73\ https://www.pbmi.com/PBMI/Directory/Pharmacy_Benefit_Manager_Directory.aspx, last accessed July 13,
2018.
\74\ https://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-13-176.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We note that this rule no longer amends the discount safe harbor to
exclude rebates offered to Medicaid MCOs.
Finally, the rule will affect Medicare prescription drug enrollees.
CMS reports there were 44,491,003 enrollees with Part D prescription
drug coverage in December 2018.\75\ CMS reports there were 80,184,501
beneficiaries in Medicaid in 2016, 65,005,748 of which were enrolled in
any type of managed care plan. However, these beneficiaries are less
likely to be significantly affected, given Medicaid's low beneficiary
cost-sharing requirements and the decision not to finalize inclusion of
Medicaid MCOs in the amendment to the discount safe harbor.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\75\ https://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Statistics-Trends-and-Reports/Dashboard/Medicare-Enrollment/Enrollment%20Dashboard.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Department estimates the hourly wages of individuals affected
by this rule using the May 2016 National Occupational Employment and
Wage Estimates provided by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.\76\ We
note that, throughout, estimates are presented in 2016 dollars. We use
the wages of Medical and Health Services Managers as a proxy for
management staff, the wages of Lawyers as a proxy for legal staff, and
the wages of Network and Computer Systems Administrators as a proxy for
information technology (IT) staff throughout this analysis. To value
the time of Medicare prescription drug benefit enrollees, we take the
average wage across all occupations in the U.S. We assume that the
total dollar value of labor, which includes wages, benefits, and
overhead, is equal to 200 percent of the wage rate. Estimated hourly
rates for all relevant categories are included below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\76\ https://www.bls.gov/oes/2016/may/oes_nat.htm.
\77\ https://www.bls.gov/oes/2016/may/oes_nat.htm.
Table 1--Hourly Wages 77
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Medical and Health Services Managers........................... $52.58
Lawyers........................................................ 67.25
Network and Computer Systems Administrators.................... 40.63
Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Enrollees................... 23.86
------------------------------------------------------------------------
D. Costs
Comment: We received a number of comments on our assumptions
associated with the costs of the Proposed Rule. Various commenters
suggested the Department underestimated administrative burden generated
by the Proposed Rule, and two commenters provided quantitative feedback
on the burden estimates. In addition, a report discussing the Proposed
Rule provides additional quantitative feedback on the cost
estimates.\78\ Another commenter suggested information technology
improvements would require thousands of hours of effort.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\78\ See https://getmga.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/MGA-Report-on-Proposed-Rebate-Restriction-3.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Response: The Department has substantially revised estimates of
administrative burden in response to public comments. These changes
take a number of pieces of information into consideration. First, a
single commenter provided the most substantial quantitative feedback on
the cost estimates in the Proposed Rule, with alternative estimates
greatly exceeding those in the Proposed Rule. The commenter also
sponsored the report discussed above; the comment and the report both
suggest much more moderate changes to the cost analysis. This suggests
a range of reasonable estimates. Second, this commenter represents a
subset of entities affected by the rule. Other categories of entities
expressed confidence that the rule can be implemented quickly,
suggesting the rule is less burdensome for some entities than described
in the most comprehensive quantitative comments, and reflecting the
fact that the implementation may be more resource intensive for some
entities than others. In addition to adjusting estimates in response to
this feedback, we have provided ranges of impacts to reflect
uncertainty regarding the rule's effects on administrative burden.
Finally, we received feedback on the timing of impacts for Medicare
enrollees who learn of and respond to the changes generated by this
rule. However, the commenter did not provide any rationale to support
this feedback, and as a result these estimates were not changed. More
detail on specific changes can be found in the sections on affected
entities above and the cost estimates below.
In order to comply with the regulatory changes in this rule,
affected businesses would first need to review the rule. The Department
estimates that this would require an average of 5 to 15 hours, with a
primary estimate of 10 hours, for affected businesses to review,
divided evenly between managers and lawyers, in the first year
following publication of the final rule. As a result, using wage
information provided in Table 1, this implies costs of $13.4 to $40.2
million, with a primary estimate of $26.8 million, in the first year
following publication of a final rule after adjusting for overhead and
benefits.
After reviewing the rule, businesses would need to review their
policies in the context of these new requirements and determine how to
respond. For some affected businesses, this may mean substantially
changing their pricing models, and engaging in lengthy negotiations
with other businesses. For others, much more modest changes are likely
needed. The Department estimates that this would result in affected
businesses spending an average of 50 to 150 hours, with a primary
estimate of 100 hours, reviewing their policies and determining how to
respond, divided evenly between lawyers and managers, in the first year
following publication of the final rule. In years two through five, the
Department estimates this would result in affected businesses spending
an average of 5-15 hours, with a primary estimate of 10 hours,
implementing policy changes, with 20 percent of time spent by lawyers
and 80 percent of time spent by managers. As a result, using wage
information provided in Table 1, the Department estimates costs of
$133.9 to $401.7 million, with a primary estimate of $267.8 million, in
the first year and $12.4 to $37.2 million, with a primary estimate of
$24.8 million, in years two through five following publication of the
final rule after adjusting for overhead and benefits.
This rule imposes documentation and reporting requirements on PBMs
for parties choosing to use the PBM services fee safe harbor. In
particular, PBMs and pharmaceutical manufacturers must
[[Page 76723]]
have a written agreement signed by the parties that covers all of the
services the PBM provides to the manufacturer in connection with the
PBM's arrangements with health plans for the term of the agreement and
specifies each of the services to be provided by the PBM and the
compensation associated with such services. In addition, PBMs must
disclose to the health plan and to the Secretary (upon request) their
services rendered to each pharmaceutical manufacturer related to the
PBM's arrangements to furnish pharmacy benefit management services to
the health plan. In addition, PBMs also must disclose to the Secretary
upon request the fees paid for such services. We believe that these
written agreements already exist as a matter of standard business
practice, as they need to be in place in order to enforce contractual
arrangements between these entities. As a result, we believe that the
documentation requirement merely codifies standard practice, and
therefore imposes no marginal costs on affected entities. We believe
that the disclosure requirements will not require PBMs to generate new
information or retain additional records related to their interactions
with pharmaceutical manufacturers or health plans. However, we believe
that the disclosure requirements will result in additional disclosure
to health plans and potentially the Secretary. We estimate that each
PBM will provide this information an additional 25 to 75 times per
year, with a primary estimate of 50 times each year. We estimate that
these disclosures will require an average of 4 hours, with 50 percent
of time spent by managers, 25 percent of time spent by attorneys, and
25 percent of time spent by IT staff. As a result, using wage
information provided in Table 1, the Department estimates costs of $0.7
to $2.1 million, with a primary estimate of $1.4 million, in each year
following publication of the final rule after adjusting for overhead
and benefits.
We expect that this rule will also lead businesses affected by the
rule to update their IT systems for processing claims and payments. For
these entities, the Department estimates that this will require an
average of 40 to 120 hours, with a primary estimate of 80 hours, in the
first year following publication of the final rule to make these
changes. In years two through five, the Department estimates this this
will require an average of 10 to 30 hours, with an average of 20 hours,
in each of these years. We note that these estimates are in line with a
comment suggesting thousands of hours are required for covered entities
to make IT changes in response to this rule. Using wage information
provided in Table 1, we estimate this will generate costs of $66.7 to
$200.1 million, with a primary estimate of $133.4 million, in the first
year following publication of the final rule, and $16.7 to $50.0
million, with a primary estimate of $33.3 million, per year in years
two through five following publication of the final rule after
adjusting for overhead and benefits.
Medicare prescription drug benefit enrollees will also spend time
responding to the rule. In particular, the Department believes that
this rule will result in changes to the characteristics of Medicare
prescription drug plans. Once enrollees become aware that changes have
been made, we believe they will review available plans to determine the
plan which best suits their needs. The Department expects that Medicare
enrollees will become aware of these changes gradually over time. In
particular, the Department expects that 20 percent of enrollees will
become aware of these changes in each of the five years following
publication of the final rule, and that responding to these changes
will require an average of thirty minutes per enrollee. As a result,
using wage information provided in Table 1, we estimate costs of $209
million in each of the first five years following publication of a
final rule after adjusting for overhead and benefits.
This rule may lead to shifts in the composition of affected
industries by affecting the extent to which entities vertically
integrate, and the rate at which entities of various sizes
(particularly small entities) enter and exit the market. Vertical
integration is a strategy where a firm acquires business operations in
a different sector of the supply chain and reimbursement system.
Entities are affected by this rule to the extent that their business
models depend on using rebates, and rebates are streamlined regardless
of where they are paid if a company is vertically integrated. As a
result, this rule may affect incentives for vertical integration for
affected entities. For example, PBMs, plan sponsors, and pharmacies may
want to vertically integrate as a result of this rule. At the same
time, the potential loss of retained rebate revenue by PBMs may cause
existing vertically integrated businesses to consider new
organizational structures. These changes, in turn, may generate costs
and benefits.
E. Benefits
Comment: A commenter suggested that the Proposed Rule does not
clearly articulate the benefits of replacing rebates with up front
price reductions, noting that it only qualitatively describes two
possible benefits: Transparency, which the commenter did not find
compelling, and adherence and outcomes, which the commenter suggested
is not adequately explored. Multiple commenters suggested that the
estimates do not account for Part D plan behavioral changes and do not
account for offsetting savings in Medicare Parts A and B.
Response: We have updated the analysis to reflect evidence on the
rule's effects on behavioral changes and note that these estimates
suggest the rule generates substantial benefits to the public.
It is difficult to accurately quantify the benefits of this rule
due to the complexity and uncertainty of stakeholder response. As such,
the Department relied on qualitatively describing two potential
benefits in the Proposed Rule.
First the Department anticipates the enhanced transparency of
premiums, out-of-pocket costs, and improved formulary designs will help
beneficiaries make more actuarially favorable decisions, because the
new point-of-sale price reductions negotiated by PBMs would be
reflected in the price paid by beneficiaries at the point of sale for
those enrolled in health plans electing to use the new safe harbor
protecting certain point-of-sale reductions in price on prescription
pharmaceutical products.
Second, with reduced out-of-pocket payments, patient adherence and
persistence with prescription drug regimens may improve. Patients
abandoned 21 percent of all prescriptions for branded drugs processed
by pharmacies in the United States in the fourth quarter of 2017,\79\
and copayment or coinsurance amounts can be a predictor of
abandonment.\80\ While there may be a variety of reasons patients may
not pick up a medication, one factor that may impact patient decision-
making is the out-of-pocket cost of a prescription. One study suggested
that for chronic myeloid leukemia, patients using tyrosine kinase
inhibitors were 42 percent more likely to be non-adherent (which may
include delaying the purchase of, never purchasing, or switching their
prescription to a less optimal choice) if they were in the higher
copayment
[[Page 76724]]
group compared to the lower copayment group.\81\ The intent of this
rule is to lower the out-of-pocket costs for prescription drugs for
some Medicare prescription drug enrollees. The pricing decisions of
drug companies, and negotiations between manufacturers and PBMs, will
determine how plan sponsors make formulary decisions that determine
whether beneficiaries pay more or less in out-of-pocket costs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\79\ IQVIA Institute for Human Data Science, Medicine Use and
Spending in the U.S.: A Review of 2017 and Outlook to 2022, April
2018, p. 31.
\80\ William H. Shrank, et al., The Epidemiology of
Prescriptions Abandoned at the Pharmacy, 153 Annals Internal Med.
633 (2010).
\81\ Stacie B. Dusetzina, et al. ``Cost Sharing and Adherence to
Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors for Patients with Chronic Myeloid
Leukemia.'' 32:4 Journal of Clinical Oncology. Feb. 2014.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Furthermore, lower out-of-pocket costs may lead to fewer enrollees
abandoning prescription drugs. This could result in beneficiaries
filling more prescriptions, thus increasing spending, as prescriptions
that were once unaffordable are now attainable. It could also lead to
lower total costs-of-care, if increased adherence led to improved
health outcomes. The Department is unable to estimate the extent to
which this rule would reduce abandonment across all drug markets or the
resulting health benefits of higher adherence of prescription
drugs.\82\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\82\ Given data available at this time, it is not possible to
calculate any particular impact from the COVID-19 public health
emergency on these effects. However we note that the Medicare
Current Beneficiary Survey (MCBS) COVID-19 Summer 2020 Supplement
and preliminary 2019 MCBS data'', available at https://www.cms.gov/files/document/medicare-current-beneficiary-survey-covid-19-data-snapshot.pdf, indicates that only 8% of Medicare beneficiaries
surveyed between June 10, 2020 and July 15, 2020 had forgone
prescription drugs or medications during the COVID-19 public health
emergency. We would expect such a figure to decrease by the time
this rule is implemented in 2022. These points, considered alongside
the expected increase in prescriptions from plans' relaxation of
`refill too soon' edits, suggest there is no particular reason to
believe the effects of this rule will be materially different as a
result of the COVID-19 public health emergency.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, the reduction in abandonment could benefit pharmacies
by reducing costs related to storage and tracking of abandoned
prescriptions.
F. Transfers
The provisions of this rule are specifically aimed at incentives
related to pharmaceutical list prices as set by manufacturers,
increases in these prices by manufacturers, rebates paid by
manufacturers to PBMs acting on behalf of Part D plan sponsors, and the
misalignment of incentives caused by concurrently increasing list
prices and rebates. A significant, though difficult to quantify,
potential transfer resulting from this rule would be the reduction of
list prices and/or a reduction in the annualized increases thereof.
Retrospective rebate-based contractual arrangements between
manufacturers and PBMs and health insurers may be renegotiated to match
these regulations' new conditions. Manufacturers may reset their
pricing strategies to better match net pricing trends and strategies.
Changes in list prices could flow throughout the entire pharmaceutical
supply chain and reimbursement system.
Medicare Part D
If manufacturers reduced their current list prices to an amount
equal or similar to their current net prices, there would be less
impact on premiums and a decline in net prices could result in a
decrease in premiums. If manufacturers did not reduce their list
prices, beneficiary and Federal spending on premiums might increase and
beneficiary cost-sharing might not decrease.
If Part D plans changed their benefit structures (e.g., increased
formulary controls, greater use of generic drugs), and sought to
prevent or ameliorate premium increases, they may be able to obtain
additional price concessions from manufacturers. If list price
reductions and increased price concessions led to lower net prices and
gross drug costs in Part D plans, beneficiary and Federal spending on
premiums and cost-sharing could decrease. If Part D plans were unable
to achieve additional price concessions, and net prices increased,
beneficiary and Federal spending on premiums and cost-sharing could
increase.
Under the Part D program, plan sponsors pay network pharmacies a
negotiated rate for a covered Part D drug that is intended to cover a
pharmacy's acquisition cost (termed the negotiated price at section
1860D-2(d) of the Act), plus a dispensing fee. Currently, pharmacies
are not a part of the financial flow related to rebates that are paid
after the point of sale, nor do beneficiaries receive any out-of-pocket
benefit from these rebates. This means that beneficiaries, whose cost-
sharing for Part D covered drugs is calculated as coinsurance, or a
percentage of the price of the drug dispensed, are charged a percentage
of the price paid to pharmacies (or the full price prior to meeting
their deductible), which almost always does not include the rebates
plans receive through PBMs from manufacturers. Removing the existing
safe harbor protection for retrospectively paid rebates that are not
reflected in the prices paid at the point of sale may reduce
beneficiary out-of-pocket spending for Part D covered drugs. If list
prices did not decrease or point-of-sale chargebacks were not reflected
in the prices paid at the point of sale, beneficiaries could see an
increase in premiums without the benefit of decreased cost-sharing.
Below, this section discusses the potential specific effects within
Part D on premiums, benefit design thresholds, and Federal outlays for
the portions of the benefit subsidized by the Medicare Part D program.
The Department's Medicare Part D analysis is based on OACT's work
commissioned specifically for this rulemaking \83\ and two commissioned
actuarial analyses independent of OACT.\84\ OACT ``directs the
actuarial program for CMS and directs the development of and
methodologies for macroeconomic analysis of health care financing
issues.'' The two external actuarial firms were chosen based on their
commercial experience assisting plan sponsors with their plan bids. We
have not asked these organizations to revise the estimates they
prepared before release of the Proposed Rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\83\ CMS Office of the Actuary, Proposed Safe Harbor Regulation
(Aug. 30, 2018). The OACT analysis is posted as supplementary
material in the docket for this rule at regulations.gov.
\84\ Wakely Consulting Group, Estimates of the Impact on
Beneficiaries, CMS, and Drug Manufacturers in CY2020 of Eliminating
Rebates for Reduced List Prices at Point-of-Sale for the Part D
Program (Aug. 30, 2018); Milliman, Inc., ``Impact of Potential
Changes to the Treatment of Manufacturer Rebates'' (Jan. 31, 2019).
The Wakely and Milliman analyses were posted as supplementary
material in the docket for this rule at regulations.gov. Certain
discussions of the Milliman analysis, including some citations and
figures, in the Proposed Rule contained unintentional errors that we
have corrected throughout this section of the final rule. These
corrections do not materially change the RIA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
There are significant differences in the assumptions the respective
actuaries used to estimate stakeholder behavior. OACT predicts that
while some current rebates will be retained by manufacturers, future
price increases will be smaller and fewer. Per OACT's assumption,
rather than reducing list prices and offering discounts to achieve
current net prices, the expected behavior is to reduce future price
increases so that post-rule net prices converge over time to meet the
trend on pre-rule net price forecasts. As such, OACT predicts that the
Federal government would increase spending on premium subsidies for
Medicare beneficiaries, and that consumers and private businesses would
experience decreased overall spending.
Because drug manufacturers pay a portion of the drug costs incurred
by beneficiaries in the Part D coverage gap, their expenses would be
reduced in relation to the reduction of beneficiary spending in the
coverage gap. The Milliman non-behavioral analysis estimates gross drug
costs would
[[Page 76725]]
decrease by $679.7 billion and coverage gap discount payments would
decrease by $20.6 billion over the same period.\85\ Federal spending
would increase by $34.8 billion, and beneficiary spending would
decrease by $14.5 billion.\86\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\86\ Milliman, Inc., Impact of Potential Changes to the
Treatment of Manufacturer Rebates (Jan. 31, 2019). See Appendix A1,
Scenario 1A, page 1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition to the actuarial analysis described above, the economic
analysis of this rule is also informed by stakeholder comments and
meetings in response to the drug pricing blueprint.\87\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\87\ Comments are available for viewing at https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=CMS-2018-0075-0001.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
All three of these analyses contemplate and quantify the behavioral
changes by plans in the form of changes to benefit offerings, or by
manufacturers in the form of changes to pricing processes but differed
in their assumptions. All three assessed pharmaceutical manufacturers'
unique opportunity to adjust their overall pricing and rebate strategy
but differed in the assumed amount of rebates that would be retained by
manufacturers, if any, and the effect on list and net prices.
The OACT analysis assumed manufacturers would retain 15 percent of
the existing Medicare Part D rebates, that 75 percent of the remaining
rebates would be applied as discounts to beneficiaries, and that
manufacturers would apply the remaining 25 percent to lower list
prices. OACT based this assumption on the belief that consumer
discounts provide less return on investment to drug manufacturers than
rebates and that resetting the rebate system would allow manufacturers
to recapture forgone revenue streams such as those that occurred from
the changes in the Coverage Gap Discount Program included in the
Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018. OACT's assumption would lead to higher
net prices in Medicare Part D at the beginning of time period analyzed,
while the reduced-price increase trend would lead to post-rule net
prices eventually converging to pre-rule net price forecasts. Each of
the analyses took varying approaches to the treatment of discounts and
acknowledge uncertainty around this assumption. The Milliman and Wakely
analyses assumed that all existing manufacturer rebates would be passed
along as either list price reductions or discounted prices at the point
of sale.
Milliman provided six additional scenarios based on a range of
strategic behavior changes by stakeholders, including increased
formulary controls, increased price concessions, reduced price
concessions in Part D to offset list price decreases in other markets,
decreased brand unit cost trend, and increased utilization and
decreased brand unit cost trend. These scenarios are intended to
bookend the baseline analysis by showing a range of possible scenarios,
given the uncertainty inherent in such a policy change. Tables 2 and 4
later in this section present the main assumptions and findings of the
analyses we discuss.
Only one analysis contemplated, but did not seek to quantify, the
behavioral change of beneficiaries choosing lower-cost plans, switching
from PDPs to MA-PDs, or in the form of increased persistence and
adherence caused by induced demand due to decreased out-of-pocket
costs.
We note that all the actuaries who submitted analyses developed
different results based on differing, yet plausible, assumptions. The
sheer size of the Medicare Part D program makes these results sensitive
to small differences in assumptions, particularly over a ten-year
period. As such, there are often good reasons for small differences in
assumptions that are neither right nor wrong but may be reasonable
within a plausible range of outcomes. The different assumptions made
include the initial values used for the direct subsidy and base
beneficiary premium, the pattern of future costs, the granularity with
which growth rates or future effects are applied uniformly or based on
product type. The actuarial analyses used to prepare this impact
analysis are posted as supplementary material in the docket for this
rule at regulations.gov.
Effect on Beneficiary Spending
This rule will likely impact beneficiary spending on the Part D
program. As noted above, the Department is presenting three actuarial
analyses (six total scenarios) conducted under various behavioral
assumptions.
The projected decrease in beneficiary spending on premiums and
cost-sharing that would have occurred in 2020 was $1.0 to $1.6 billion.
The projected decrease in beneficiary spending on premiums and cost
sharing that would have occurred from 2020 to 2029 ranges from a
decrease of $59.5 billion to an increase of $12.3 billion. Individuals
who qualify for the LIS pay low or no premiums to enroll in the Part D
benefit and have their cost-sharing obligations under each benefit
phase reduced significantly (called the Low Income Cost Sharing Subsidy
or LICS). We expect a smaller effect among these enrollees (about 30
percent of total Part D enrollees) than among those not receiving the
LIS and LICS.
All three actuarial reports support the conclusion that non-LIS
Medicare beneficiaries enrolled in, and actively utilizing, plans with
coinsurance-based cost-sharing structures for covered outpatient drugs
for which their respective plan has negotiated a rebate, will likely
see lower out-of-pocket cost-sharing at the pharmacy counter as a
result of this regulatory change.
OACT, Wakely and five of the six Milliman scenarios considered by
the Department suggest total beneficiary cost-sharing would decrease
and that the decrease in total beneficiary cost-sharing would offset
any increase in premiums across all beneficiaries, regardless of
assumptions regarding whether or not manufacturers retained rebates or
applied a percentage of them as list price reductions, or PBMs and plan
sponsors changed formularies or obtained additional price concessions.
However, the analyses that estimated higher premiums found that more
beneficiaries would pay more for premiums than they would save in cost-
sharing, suggesting that out-of-pocket impacts are likely to vary by
individual and the greatest benefit of these transfers accrues to
sicker beneficiaries (e.g., those with more drug spending and/or those
using high-cost drugs).
However, it is important to note that the effect of this rule on
individual beneficiaries depends on whether they use medications, what
behavioral responses manufacturers and plans adopt in response to the
rule, and whether the manufacturers of the drugs in their regimen are
paying rebates.
Analyses that contemplated increased price concessions or benefit
design changes predicted beneficiaries having lower premiums and out of
pocket costs overall. Table 2 describes the net beneficiary impact
predicted by each analysis and assumption. (Scenarios 5, 6, and 7 in
the Milliman analysis are available online rather than reproduced here,
since they are not referenced further in our write-up.)
[[Page 76726]]
Table 2--Beneficiary Impacts, per Beneficiary per Month, Estimated for CY 2020 to CY 2029
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Milliman, scenario Milliman, scenario Milliman, scenario Milliman, scenario
OACT 1 2 3 4 Wakely
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Modeled Assumptions........ 15 percent 100 100 More than 20 percent 100
of current Part D percent of current percent of current 100 percent of of current Part D percent of
rebates retained Part D rebates are rebates are rebates are rebates are current
by manufacturer. converted into converted into converted into retained by manufacturer
75 percent list price list price list price manufacturers rebates are
of remaining concessions concessions. concessions (same (same agnosticism converted into
amount applied to (agnostic on list Part D agnosticism on how on how applied). reductions in
per-sponsor/PBM price reductions plans exert applied). 80 percent drug costs at the
negotiated versus up front greater formulary Part D of current Part D point of sale.
discounts. discounts). control. plans exert rebates are No
25 percent greater formulary converted to price beneficiary or
of remainder control. concessions (list plan behavioral
applied as price or changes are
reduction to list discounts). assumed.
price.
No
beneficiary or
plan behavioral
changes are
assumed.
Premium \88\............... +25%............... +$4.03, +13%....... +$1.27, +4%........ +$0.61, +2%........ +$6.84, +21%....... N/A.
Cost-sharing............... -18%............... -$6.23, -12%....... -$9.85, -19%....... -$9.68, -19%....... -$4.97, -10%....... N/A.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total.................. -4%................ -3%................ -10% \89\.......... -11%............... +2%................ N/A.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Premiums
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\88\ Since 2010, Medicare has published guidance defining de
minimis variation in Medicare Part D plan bids. The de minimis
amount was $2 for the 2020 plan year. Milliman scenarios 2 and 3
estimate a de minimis level of variation from existing premium
estimates.
\89\ Corrected from the Proposed Rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As explained in the Proposed Rule, all analyses that assumed no
behavioral changes that would reduce net prices below current net
prices would have seen Part D premiums increase in 2020 and beyond. The
estimated increase in 2020 Part D premiums ranged from $3.20 per
beneficiary per month to $5.64 per beneficiary per month (PBPM).
The Milliman analyses that contemplated behavioral changes that
increased price concessions beyond current levels and/or greater
formulary controls predicted a significant decrease in premiums
compared to the baseline scenarios presented in Table 3 of the Milliman
analysis. (That is, premiums would increase 2 percent to 4 percent over
the ten-year period, a de minimis level of variation, rather than 6
percent to 21 percent without such assumptions.)
Out-of-Pocket Spending
Absent behavioral changes leading to lower list and net prices, two
groups of beneficiaries would benefit most from this rule: (1)
Beneficiaries that are prescribed and dispensed high cost drugs and (2)
beneficiaries with total drug spending into the coverage gap. The range
of total decreased beneficiary cost-sharing that would have occurred in
2020 was estimated to be -$8.01 PBPM to -$4.85 PBPM.
However, reductions in cost-sharing would only accrue to
beneficiaries using drugs for which manufacturers are currently paying
rebates. For example, a beneficiary taking a brand-name drug in a
competitive class may see his or her coinsurance-based cost-sharing for
the drug reduced significantly, if behavioral changes in response to
this policy result in rebates largely being converted to point-of-sale
reductions in price. By contrast, a beneficiary using high-cost drugs
in protected classes is less likely to benefit from a reduced pharmacy
purchase price, because manufacturers generally offer low or no rebates
to plans for these drugs, since drugs in protected classes must be
included on Part D plan formularies.
The analysis by OACT estimated the annual changes in benefit
parameters as a result of the proposed rule; this analysis has not been
updated to reflect the change in effective date for reasons discussed
above. See Table 3 below.
Table 3--Part D Standard Benefit Design Parameters With and Without This Rulemaking
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Year 2020 2021 2022 2023 . . . 2029
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Baseline:
Deductible................................................. $435 $460 $490 $520 ....... $725
Initial Coverage Limit..................................... 4,010 4,250 4,520 4,800 ....... 6,690
Catastrophic Limit......................................... 6,350 6,750 7,150 7,600 ....... 10,600
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Drug Costs at TrOOP Limit \90\................... 9,296 9,874 10,470 11,126 ....... 15,515
Under Rule:
Deductible................................................. 435 405 395 420 ....... 580
Initial Coverage Limit..................................... 4,010 3,740 3,630 3,840 ....... 5,310
Catastrophic Limit......................................... 6,350 5,950 5,750 6,100 ....... 8,400
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Drug Costs at TrOOP Limit........................ 9,296 8,699 8,416 8,919 ....... 12,297
Difference (Percent):
Deductible................................................. 0% -12.0% -19.4% -19.2% ....... -20.0%
Initial Coverage Limit..................................... 0% -12.0% -19.7% -20.0% ....... -20.6%
Catastrophic Limit......................................... 0% -11.9% -19.6% -19.7% ....... -20.8%
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Drug Costs at TrOOP Limit........................ 0% -11.9% -19.6% -19.8% ....... -20.7%
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 76727]]
Under OACT's analysis, the majority of beneficiaries would see an
increase in their total out-of-pocket payments and premium costs;
reductions in total cost-sharing will exceed total premium increases.
The minority of beneficiaries who utilized drugs with significant
manufacturer rebates would experience a substantial decrease in costs,
causing average beneficiary cost across the program to decline.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\90\ This limit varies by beneficiary, according to the mix of
brand and generic drugs taken. As presented here, this figure is
calculated assuming that only brand-name drugs are dispensed, which
represents the lowest possible estimate for this threshold.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Medicare beneficiaries with lower levels of drug spending were
expected to benefit by way of a lowered deductible. Following the first
year of this new environment, and into the second year as well, the
Part D benefit design thresholds are projected to change to the benefit
of lower-cost beneficiaries, providing lower out-of-pocket payments for
these beneficiaries. Because the Part D benefit design's parameters are
calculated annually to account for aggregate growth in Part D spending,
and because the estimated potential effects of this regulation would be
to reduce aggregate spending levels to more closely match net spending
trends, the applicable deductible would decrease for plan year 2021.
Beneficiaries whose spending is above the current deductible amount but
lower than the coverage gap would benefit from a reduced deductible.
OACT also found that while the deductible and initial coverage
limit would decrease, the patient out-of-pocket spending threshold to
enter catastrophic coverage would increase significantly in the second
year as the full effects of reduced purchase prices are incorporated.
The out-of-pocket threshold is set in statute and updated annually by
aggregate Part D program growth. Because overall beneficiary spending
levels would now match the net price of drugs rather than their list
prices, progress toward the out-of-pocket limit would be slowed, though
total dollars paid by beneficiaries would not change aside from
statutory and annual updates.
Milliman's analysis did not incorporate changes to the Part D
benefit thresholds, and these actuaries based their break-even analyses
on the 2019 threshold amounts. Their analysis projects that the
distribution of changes is far from uniform, and that the impact of the
change is concentrated around the non-LIS beneficiaries who account for
about 70 percent of the benefit. The break-even point would be $3.20
per beneficiary per month in cost-sharing reductions. Beneficiaries
with cost-sharing reductions above that point would save money, and
those with cost-sharing reductions below that figure would spend more
on premiums than they saved in cost-sharing. Their analysis also
projects about 7 percent of non-LIS beneficiaries do not use any
medication, and therefore would see premium costs exceeding reductions
in cost-sharing ($0 reductions in cost-sharing). Up to 30 percent of
non-LIS beneficiaries have drug costs such that they could directly
benefit from the changes in the point-of-sale costs by enough to make
up for the average increase in premium. The remaining 63 percent of
beneficiaries may or may not have their out-of-pocket costs reduced
enough to offset any potential premium increase, depending on the mix
of brand and generic drugs used. All else constant, these members
generally do not have enough cost-sharing savings to fully offset the
increase in premium. However, they may benefit from changes to
copayments made by plan sponsors to maintain the minimum required
actuarial value of 25 percent.
Taken together, the actuarial analyses project reductions in total
cost-sharing would exceed total premium increases; however, impact on
beneficiaries will vary greatly with some beneficiaries seeing savings
while others experience increases in out-of-pocket spending.
Effect on Federal Government Spending
This rule will impact Federal spending on Part D direct premium
subsidies, reinsurance, low income cost-sharing subsidies, and low
income premium subsidies.
If there were no behavioral changes by manufacturers and Part D
plans (e.g., drug prices and benefit designs were held constant), all
three actuarial analyses previously described predicted increased
Federal spending. As explained in the Proposed Rule, the projected
increase in 2020 Federal spending ranged from $2.8 billion to $13.5
billion. The projected increase in Federal spending from 2020 to 2029
ranged from $34.8 billion to $196.1 billion.
The Milliman analyses that contemplated behavior changes that would
lower net prices from current levels predicted Federal spending from
2020 to 2029 could decrease by $78.9 billion if Part D plan sponsors
increased formulary controls, decrease by $99.6 billion if Part D plan
sponsors increased formulary controls and obtained additional price
concessions, but increase by $139.9 billion if manufacturers reduced
price concessions in Part D to offset list price decreases in other
markets.
Table 4 describes the impacts on Federal spending predicted by each
analysis and assumption at the proposed rule stage.
Table 4--Government Spending Impacts, as Estimated for CY 2020 Through 2029
[$Billions]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Milliman, scenario Milliman, scenario Milliman, scenario Milliman, scenario
OACT 1 2 3 4 Wakely
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Modeled Assumptions........ 15 percent 100 100 More than 20 percent 100
of current Part D percent of current percent of current 100 percent of of current Part D percent of
rebates retained Part D rebates are rebates are rebates are rebates are current Part D
by manufacturer. converted into converted into converted into retained by rebates converted
75 percent list price list price list price manufacturers to up front
of remaining concessions concessions. concessions (same (same agnosticism discounts.
amount applied to (agnostic on list Part D agnosticism on how on how applied). No
per-sponsor/PBM price reductions plans exert applied). 80 percent beneficiary or
negotiated versus up front greater formulary Part D of current Part D plan behavioral
discounts. discounts). control. plans exert rebates are changes are
25 percent greater formulary converted to price assumed.
of remainder control. concessions (list
applied as price or
reduction to list discounts).
price.
No
beneficiary or
plan behavioral
changes are
assumed.
[[Page 76728]]
Direct subsidy............. +$258.7, (+119%)... +$215.4, (+193%)... +$174.7, (+157%)... +$180.3, (+162%)... +$221.1, (+199%)... Not avail.
Low income premium subsidy. +$15.4, (+24%)..... +$12.0, (+13%)..... +$3.8, (+4%)....... +$1.9, (+2%)....... +$20.5, (+21%).....
Low income cost-sharing -$57.7 (-15%)...... -$89.5, (-20%)..... -$118.3, (-26%).... -$118.5, (-26%).... -$71.4, (-16%).....
subsidy.
Reinsurance................ -$20.3 (-3%)....... -$103.1, (-13%).... -$139.1, (-18%).... -$163.2, (-18%).... -$30.2, (-4%)......
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total.................. +$196.1, (+14%).... +$34.8, (+2%)...... -78.8, (-5%)....... -$99.6, (-7%)...... +$139.9, (+10%).... N/A.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Direct Premium Subsidy Spending
The Medicare program provides a direct subsidy to Part D plans of
74.5 percent of expected costs. Medicare program payments for direct
subsidies would have increased by an estimated $14.5 to $20.1 billion
(128 percent to 154 percent) in 2020 and $174.7 to $258.7 billion (119
percent to 199 percent) from 2020 to 2029. The increase in program
payments would require plans to smooth the effects of negotiated
discounts across the entire benefit, rather than concentrate them on
the initial coverage limit as is current practice. As noted above,
premiums paid by beneficiaries are predicted to increase overall in
analyses without behavioral changes that would reduce net prices below
current levels.
In the Milliman analysis, the two scenarios that contemplated
behavior changes that would reduce net prices compared to current
levels predicted that Federal spending on direct premium subsidies from
2020 to 2029 could have increased less compared to a scenario with no
behavior change. In these scenarios, Part D plan sponsors increased
formulary controls and/or obtained additional price concessions.
Payments for direct premium subsidies would be higher than under the
scenario with no behavior change, if manufacturers reduced price
concessions in Part D to offset list price decreases in other markets
(as described in the OACT analysis and Milliman scenario 4). See Table
4 for magnitude and percent changes.
Reinsurance Spending
Transforming rebates into upfront reductions in price may result in
fewer beneficiaries reaching catastrophic coverage. This would benefit
the government because the government bears the majority of the cost
(80 percent) for beneficiaries who reach catastrophic levels of drug
spending. As such, all analyses suggested Medicare payments for
reinsurance would have decreased by an estimated $3.0 to $7.9 billion
(6 percent to 17 percent) in 2020 and 3 percent to 18 percent from 2020
to 2029. In the catastrophic coverage phase, Medicare makes payments to
Part D plans for 80 percent of gross drug costs incurred once the
beneficiary reaches the out-of-pocket threshold. As discussed above,
the effect of this rule would be to reduce the effective purchase price
of drugs, which in turn would require more prescriptions before a
beneficiary would enter the catastrophic phase. If fewer beneficiaries
enter this benefit phase, and the prices of the drugs they receive in
this benefit phase are reduced, the Medicare Program would experience
lower reinsurance payments to Part D plans.
Milliman's scenarios that contemplated behavior changes predicted
Federal spending on reinsurance from 2020 to 2029 could have decreased
by $139.1 billion if Part D plan sponsors increased formulary controls,
decreased by $163.2 billion if Part D plan sponsors increased formulary
controls and obtained additional price concessions, and decreased by
only $30.2 billion if manufacturers reduced price concessions in Part D
to offset list price decreases in other markets.
Low Income Subsidy Spending
Medicare payments for LIS enrollees would on net have decreased by
an estimated $0.9 to $5.5 billion in 2020 and $42.3 to $116.6 billion
from 2020 to 2029. Generally, LIS enrollees will not see the same out-
of-pocket savings that non-LIS enrollees will, because they are
assessed cost-sharing based almost exclusively on copayments. However,
payments for the LICS will decrease for the same reasons that Medicare
payments for reinsurance will decrease. Under the provisions of LICS,
the Medicare program makes payments to plans to cover the difference
between the LIS enrollee's copayment and the otherwise applicable
coinsurance. As prices are reduced to account for discounts rather than
applied to the plan liability exclusively, Medicare payments for these
amounts will decrease. These savings were estimated to be $57.7 to
$118.5 billion over ten years.
Analyses that contemplated behavior changes predicted Federal
spending on low income cost-sharing subsidies from 2020 to 2029 could
have decreased by $118 billion if Part D plan sponsors increased
formulary controls, decreased by $119 billion if Part D plan sponsors
increased formulary controls and obtained additional price concessions,
and decreased by $71 billion if manufacturers reduced price concessions
in Part D to offset list price decreases in other markets.
Other Stakeholder Impacts
Based on the provisions of this rulemaking, the actuarial estimates
we received estimated that drug manufacturers would have seen revenues,
as measured by changes in gross drug costs and Coverage Gap Discount
Program payments, decrease beginning in CY2020 and each year
thereafter. However, when drug costs net of all discounts and rebates
are considered, the actuarial analyses results converged in finding net
increases in total drug spending. Milliman's Scenario 1 analysis also
estimated an increase in government costs of $34.8 billion over ten
years, with beneficiary costs decreasing by $14.5 billion.\91\ These
changes in revenue will predominantly affect brand-name drugs more so
than generic drugs. Since 2011, brand-name drug manufacturers have been
required to provide a discount applied at the point of sale to
beneficiaries whose claims occur during the coverage gap. Since the
intent of this rulemaking is to reduce the negotiated prices paid by
plans to pharmacies by incorporating up front discounts into them, both
the frequency of beneficiaries entering the coverage gap, and the
length of the coverage gap itself, are potentially reduced by the
rule's effects.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\91\ Milliman, Inc., Impact of Potential Changes to the
Treatment of Manufacturer Rebates, (Jan. 31, 2019). Appendix A1,
Scenario 1A, page 1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: A commenter suggested that the Proposed Rule did not
[[Page 76729]]
adequately account for entities in the pharmaceutical supply chain,
Federal purchases, the 340B program, or the uninsured. The commenter
also suggested that the Proposed Rule did not account for existing
discount programs such as GoodRx when estimating savings for the
uninsured.
Response: The impact on the uninsured is implicitly included in our
Household estimates. We did not explicitly model the effects for those
in the pharmaceutical supply chain, Federal direct purchases, or the
340B program.
Likewise, this rule will affect the way pharmacies are reimbursed.
If list prices come down, pharmacies will experience lower acquisition
costs, and their combined reimbursement from plan sponsors and
beneficiaries will be reduced by the amount of discount provided by
manufacturers to beneficiaries of each plan sponsor. The use of
chargebacks to make pharmacies whole for the difference between
acquisition cost, plan payment, and beneficiary out-of-pocket payment
is described earlier in this rule. The actuarial analyses we
commissioned were not designed to evaluate the effects on the pharmacy
supply chain by moving from a system where reimbursement rates were
divorced from actual negotiated prices after accounting for rebates.
Summary of Part D Impacts
This rule will significantly redirect the dollars flowing through
the Part D program. Several of the positive and negative transfers are
imperfect offsets of one another. For example, the analyses
commissioned for this rule estimated that the amount saved by reducing
cost-sharing exceeds the cost of any increase in premiums for
beneficiaries overall. However, more beneficiaries would pay more for
premiums, if premiums rise, than they would save in cost-sharing,
suggesting that out-of-pocket impacts are likely to vary by individual
and the greatest benefit of these transfers accrues to sicker
beneficiaries (e.g., those with more drug spending and/or those using
high cost drugs).
It is difficult to predict the full extent of the transfers created
by this rule in the absence of information about strategic behavior
changes by manufacturers and Part D plan sponsors in response to this
rule. In scenarios without behavioral changes, enrolled beneficiaries
might have seen premiums increase in 2020 (had the rule become
effective then) by $3.15 PBPM to $5.64 PBPM (8 percent to 19 percent)
but average cost-sharing under their benefits would have declined by
$4.85 PBPM to $8.01 PBPM (10 percent to 14 percent).\92\ However, the
revised effective date of January 1, 2022 for the amendment to Sec.
1001.952(h)(5) of the discount safe harbor will provide manufacturers
and plans with additional time to conduct negotiations and adjust any
business practices as necessary based on the amended safe harbor.
Premium and cost-sharing estimates were calculated on a different basis
by each firm. OACT estimated actual beneficiary paid amounts for all
enrollees on average. Milliman estimated beneficiary payments based
upon the basic benchmark amounts. We present the range across these
calculation types.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\92\ Wakely Consulting Group, Estimate of the Impact on
Beneficiaries, CMS, and Drug Manufacturers in CY2020 of Eliminating
Rebates for Reduced List Prices at Point-of Sale for the Part D
Program (Aug. 30, 2018); Milliman, Inc., Impact of Potential Changes
to the Treatment of Manufacturer Rebates'' (Jan. 31, 2019) Scenario
1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the absence of the stakeholder behavior changes described often
in this section, government payments to plans for direct subsidies,
subsidies for low income enrollees' premiums and cost sharing will
likely increase and be partially offset by reduced payments to plans
for reinsurance, increasing overall by 3 percent to 14 percent in the
2020 estimates.
If manufacturer and plan behavior caused net prices to decrease in
response to this rule, enrolled beneficiaries might have seen premiums
increase 12 percent ($2.70 to $2.77 PBPM) in the first year with a very
accelerated implementation timeline, and average cost sharing under
their benefits may have declined by 12 percent to 13 percent ($5.22 to
$5.44 PBPM) in 2020. Total government payments to plans would have
increased 1 percent to 3 percent, as the net result of increased
payments for direct subsidies (144 percent to 149 percent) and low-
income premium subsidies (12 percent to 14 percent) and decreased
payments for low income cost-sharing (-18 percent to -20 percent) and
reinsurance (-16 percent to -17 percent).
If manufacturer and plan behavior caused Part D net prices to
increase in response to this rule, enrolled beneficiaries would have
seen published premiums increase 22 percent ($5.11) and average cost-
sharing under their benefits might have declined by 9 percent to 14
percent (-$5.22 to -$8.01). Government payments to plans for direct
subsidies and subsidies for low income enrollees' premiums and cost-
sharing would have increased and reinsurance payments would have
decreased.
Medicaid and State Impacts
OACT estimated that the rule would result in estimated aggregate
savings of $4.0 billion for states over ten years, as follows.\93\ The
impact of the rule on Medicaid prescription drug rebates, MCO premiums,
and prescription drug prices could have resulted in net Federal
Medicaid costs of $1.7 billion between 2020 and 2029, and net state
Medicaid costs of $0.2 billion over the same period. OACT also
estimated that state governments would have saved $4.3 billion between
2020 and 2029 through lower prescription drug prices for state
employees. These estimates are at the national level; Medicaid costs,
state employee savings, and the net of the two may vary among states.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\93\ CMS Office of the Actuary. ``Proposed Safe Harbor
Regulation.'' August 30, 2018. The OACT analysis was posted as
supplementary material in the docket for this rule at
regulations.gov in February 2019. The estimated impacts on MCO
premiums in the OACT analysis do not apply to the Final Rule because
we are not finalizing the proposal to remove the existing safe
harbor for Medicaid MCOs. Most of the estimated Medicaid costs in
the OACT analysis, however, are associated with the impacts on
rebates and drug prices rather than the impacts on MCO premiums from
the removal of MCO from the existing safe harbor.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
G. Accounting Statement
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Present value over 5 years by Annualized value over 5 years by
discount rate (millions of 2016 discount rate (millions of 2016
dollars) dollars)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3 Percent 7 Percent 3 Percent 7 Percent
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
BENEFITS:
Non-quantified Benefits.....................................................................................
Improved information for consumers regarding the characteristics of their health insurance plans............
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 76730]]
COSTS:
Quantified Costs................ 1,591 1,448 347 353
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Transfers
($billions) 10
Category years (as
estimated for CY
2020-2029)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Decreased Medicare beneficiary spending.............. -25.2 to -59.5
Decreased employee premium and OOP spending.......... -11.7
Decreased beneficiary premium and cost-sharing -14.5 to -25.2
spending............................................
Changes in Federal spending.......................... -99.6 to 196.1
Decreased State spending (OACT only)................. -4.0
Decreased manufacturer coverage gap discount payments 17 to 39.8
------------------------------------------------------------------------
H. Regulatory Alternatives
One option is no action. This means that there would be no change
in the safe harbor regulations. None of the costs or benefits of the
rule would be realized and Medicare drug plan enrollees will continue
to pay deductibles and coinsurance based on the list prices for
prescription drugs.
This final rule adopts a delayed effective date for the amendments
to Sec. 1001.952(h)(5) of the discount safe harbor consistent with an
alternate described in the proposed rule.
Another option contemplated by the Department, unrelated to safe
harbor rulemaking, would require sponsors to incorporate into the
point-of-sale price for a covered drug a specified minimum percentage
of the average rebates expected to be received for the therapeutic
class of drugs to which that covered drug belongs. This option,
described in an RFI contained in the proposed rule proposing Contract
Year 2019 Part C & D policy and technical changes,\94\ would require
sponsors to report the point-of-sale price for a covered drug as the
lowest possible reimbursement that a network pharmacy could receive for
that drug, inclusive of all pharmacy price rebates and concessions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\94\ 82 FR 56336, 56419-28 (Nov. 28, 2017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
As discussed above, the RFA requires agencies that issue a
regulation to analyze options for regulatory relief of small entities
if a rule has a significant impact on a substantial number of small
entities. HHS considers a rule to have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities if at least 5 percent of small
entities experience an impact of more than 3 percent of revenue. At the
proposed rule stage, the Department calculated the costs of the changes
per affected business between 2020 and 2024. The estimated average
costs of the rule per business according to this estimate peaked in
2020 at approximately $18,900 and are approximately $2,800 in
subsequent years. The Department notes that relatively large entities
are likely to experience proportionally higher costs and that costs
will occur at a later point in time than if the rule had been finalized
with a 2020 effective date. The U.S. Small Business Administration
establishes size standards that define a small entity. For entities
with standards based on revenue, they ranged from $17.5 million to
$38.5 million in 2017. Since the estimated average costs of the rule
are a small fraction of these thresholds, the Department anticipates
that the rule would not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
VI. Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, we are
required to solicit public comments, and receive final OMB approval, on
any information collection requirements set forth in rulemaking. This
rule imposes documentation and disclosure requirements on PBMs.
Specifically, for one of the new safe harbors, PBMs and pharmaceutical
manufacturers must have a written agreement that specifies their
contractual arrangements and interactions with health plans, and PBMs
must disclose their services rendered and compensation associated with
transactions with pharmaceutical manufacturers related to interactions
between the PBM and the health plan. In addition, PBMs may be required
to disclose this information to the Secretary upon request.
We believe that the documentation requirements necessary to enjoy
safe harbor protection do not qualify as an added paperwork burden,
because the requirements deviate minimally, if at all, from the
information PBMs and manufacturers would routinely collect in their
normal course of business. We believe it is usual and customary for
PBMs and manufacturers to memorialize contracts and other similar
agreements in writing. Ensuring that such writings are comprehensive
and that the actual business activities are accurately reflected by
documentation are standard prudent business practices. However, we
recognize that the disclosure of this information to plans, and
potentially to the Secretary, is not a routine business practice.
List of Subjects in 42 CFR Part 1001
Administrative practice and procedure, Fraud, Grant programs--
health, Health facilities, Health professions, Maternal and child
health, Medicaid, Medicare, Social Security.
Accordingly, 42 CFR part 1001 is amended as set forth below:
PART 1001--PROGRAM INTEGRITY--MEDICARE AND STATE HEALTH CARE
PROGRAMS
0
1. The authority citation for part 1001 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302; 1320a-7; 1320a-7b; 1395u(j);
1395u(k); 1395w-104(e)(6); 1395y(d); 1395y(e); 1395cc(b)(2)(D), (E),
and (F); 1395hh; 1842(j)(1)(D)(iv), 1842(k)(1), and sec. 2455, Pub.
L. 103-355, 108 Stat. 3327 (31 U.S.C. 6101 note).
0
2. Section 1001.952 is amended:
[[Page 76731]]
0
a. Effective January 1, 2022, by revising paragraphs (h)(5)(vi) and
(vii) and adding paragraph (h)(5)(viii); and
0
b. Effective January 29, 2021, by adding paragraphs (h)(6) through (9),
(cc), and (dd).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 1001.952 Exceptions.
* * * * *
(h) * * *
(5) * * *
(vi) Services provided in accordance with a personal or management
services contract;
(vii) Other remuneration, in cash or in kind, not explicitly
described in this paragraph (h)(5); or
(viii) A reduction in price or other remuneration in connection
with the sale or purchase of a prescription pharmaceutical product from
a manufacturer to a plan sponsor under Medicare Part D either directly
to the plan sponsor under Medicare Part D, or indirectly through a
pharmacy benefit manager acting under contract with a plan sponsor
under Medicare Part D, unless it is a price reduction or rebate that is
required by law.
(6) For purposes of this paragraph (h), the term manufacturer
carries the meaning ascribed to it in Social Security Act section
1927(k)(5).
(7) For purposes of this paragraph (h), the terms wholesaler and
distributor are used interchangeably and carry the same meaning as the
term ``wholesaler'' defined in Social Security Act section 1927(k)(11).
(8) For purposes of this paragraph (h), the term pharmacy benefit
manager or PBM means any entity that provides pharmacy benefit
management on behalf of a health plan that manages prescription drug
coverage.
(9) For purposes of this paragraph (h), a prescription
pharmaceutical product means either a drug or biological product as
those terms are described in Social Security Act section 1927(k)(2)(A),
(B), and (C).
* * * * *
(cc) Point-of-sale reductions in price for prescription
pharmaceutical products. (1) As used in section 1128B of the Act,
``remuneration'' does not include a reduction in price from a
manufacturer to a plan sponsor under Medicare Part D or a Medicaid
Managed Care Organization for a prescription pharmaceutical product
that is payable, in whole or in part, by a plan sponsor under Medicare
Part D or a Medicaid Managed Care Organization, provided the following
conditions are met with regard to that reduction in price:
(i) The manufacturer and the plan sponsor under Medicare Part D, a
Medicaid MCO, or the PBM acting under contract with either, set the
reduction in price in advance, in writing, by the time of the first
purchase of the product at that reduced price by the plan sponsor or
Medicaid MCO on behalf of an enrollee;
(ii) The reduction in price does not involve a rebate unless the
full value of the reduction in price is provided to the dispensing
pharmacy by the manufacturer, directly or indirectly, through a point-
of-sale chargeback or series of point-of-sale chargebacks, or is
required by law; and
(iii) The reduction in price must be completely reflected in the
price of the prescription pharmaceutical product at the time the
pharmacy dispenses it to the beneficiary.
(2)(i) For purposes of this paragraph (cc), the terms manufacturer,
pharmacy benefit manager or PBM, prescription pharmaceutical product,
and rebate have the meanings ascribed to them in paragraph (h) of this
section.
(ii) For purposes of this paragraph (cc), a point-of-sale
chargeback is a payment by a manufacturer made directly or indirectly
(through a PBM or other entity) to a dispensing pharmacy equal to the
reduction in price agreed upon in writing between the Plan Sponsor
under Part D, the Medicaid MCO, or a PBM acting under contract with
either, and the manufacturer of the prescription pharmaceutical
product.
(iii) For purposes of this paragraph (cc), the term Medicaid
Managed Care Organization or Medicaid MCO carries the meaning ascribed
to it in section 1903(m) of the Social Security Act.
(dd) PBM service fees. (1) As used in section 1128B of the Act,
``remuneration'' does not include any payment by a pharmaceutical
manufacturer to a pharmacy benefit manager (PBM) for services the PBM
provides to the pharmaceutical manufacturer related to the pharmacy
benefit management services that the PBM furnishes to one or more
health plans as long as the following conditions are met:
(i) The PBM has a written agreement with the pharmaceutical
manufacturer, signed by the parties, that covers all of the services
the PBM provides to the manufacturer in connection with the PBM's
arrangements with health plans for the term of the agreement and
specifies each of the services to be provided by the PBM and the
compensation associated with such services.
(ii) The services performed under the agreement do not involve the
counseling or promotion of a business arrangement or other activity
that violates any State or Federal law.
(iii) The compensation paid to the PBM is:
(A) Is consistent with fair market value in an arm's-length
transaction;
(B) Is a fixed payment, not based on a percentage of sales; and
(C) Is not determined in a manner that takes into account the
volume or value of any referrals or business otherwise generated
between the parties, or between the manufacturer and the PBM's health
plans, for which payment may be made in whole or in part under
Medicare, Medicaid, or other Federal health care programs.
(iv) The PBM discloses in writing to each health plan with which it
contracts at least annually the services rendered to each
pharmaceutical manufacturer related to the PBM's arrangements to
furnish pharmacy benefit management services to the health plan, and to
the Secretary upon request, the services rendered to each
pharmaceutical manufacturer related to the PBM's arrangements to
furnish pharmacy benefit management services to the health plan and the
fees paid for such services.
(2) For purposes of safe harbor in this paragraph (dd), the terms
manufacturer, pharmacy benefit manager or PBM, and prescription
pharmaceutical product have the meanings ascribed to them in paragraph
(h) of this section, and health plan has the meaning ascribed to it in
paragraph (l) of this section.
Dated: November 16, 2020.
Christi A. Grimm,
Principal Deputy Inspector General.
Dated: November 17, 2020.
Alex M. Azar II,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020-25841 Filed 11-20-20; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4152-01-P