High cost or high value? Specialty pharmaceuticals add to employers’ health care costs
[Click to Enlarge] In 2015, Blue Care Network spent $55.4 million for just 712 members who each took a specialized drug to treat Hepatitis C. That’s a staggering amount of money for such a small group of people — and it’s just one specialty medication. The drug in question — Harvoni from Foster City, Calif.-based Gilead Sciences Inc. — can cure Hepatitis C, a communicable virus that destroys the liver. The prescription medication’s success can avoid the high cost of a liver transplant to save a patient’s life, plus the ongoing costs of anti-rejection drugs for years afterward. The drug’s success rate and high cost pose a dilemma for health insurers and employers, who are paying the rapidly rising bill for the new generation of medications that can treat or cure complex diseases. The catch: Those specialty drugs often come with an enormous price tag. “As outrageously expensive as some of these drugs are, we have to realize there is an economic benefit at the end of the day because of the condition that it’s treating,” said Bob Hughes, the owner and president of Advantage Benefits Group Inc. in Grand Rapids. Hughes calls the high costs associated with specialty drugs “a tidal wave” coming at employers. As the costs of specialty drugs continue to rise and their use grows, Hughes and others suggest that employers need to take a balanced approach in response. They should have a pharmacy benefit in place that’s designed to control costs as well as help employees who are hit with a complex or genetic-based disease to have access to specialty drugs that can treat their conditions. In the case of Harvoni for Hepatitis C — which costs more than $1,000 per dose and must be taken for 82 days — “the opposite of not taking that drug can be a lot worse,” Hughes said. “You have to be careful not to cut off your arm to spite yourself,” he said. “When it’s a drug that really changes a person’s life, it’s hard for the employer to make it go away.” ‘POINT OF PANIC’ The high cost of specialty drugs has been a growing trend over the last few years. However, employer awareness of the resulting cost implications depends on the type of health coverage the company uses, said Shannon Enders, a partner at Lakeshore Employee Benefits in Muskegon. For fully insured employers that are part of a larger risk pool, “I just don’t think it’s resonating,” Enders said. Self-funded employers have the exact opposite reaction. “It’s resonating big time to the point of panic,” Enders said. “It’s getting tougher and tougher to take the high road and say, ‘I want to provide quality health care to my employees.’” Employers with fully-insured health coverage typically already have measures built into their benefits packages by their insurance carriers to address the issue. Self-funded employers should make sure their pharmacy coverage does the same, Enders said. Employers also should make sure their pharmacy benefit requires pre-authorization for a…