A new deal reached today between the Government
and the pharmaceutical industry means that more
patients will benefit from a wider range of innovative
drug treatments at a fair price to the NHS. The
flexible pricing scheme agreed will ensure that
medicines fairly reflect their value to patients,
branded drugs will see their price cut, and industry
innovations will be encouraged and rewarded. As
a result, patients will have faster access to new
medicines that are clinically and cost effective.
The deal may adversely affect British Asian pharmaceutical
companies reliant on making generic drugs or those
focussed on parallel imports - as branded drugs
become cheaper, the demand for generic products
may wane.
Today's agreement with the
pharmaceutical industry meets commitments set
out both in Lord Darzi's review of the NHS earlier
this year and the National Cancer Director's review
of access to medicines. It also reflects the Office
of Fair Trading's recommendation that value should
be better reflected through the PPRS.
The headline agreements with
industry include:
* a cut in the cost of
drugs sold to the NHS: a 3.9 per cent price
cut will be introduced starting in February
2009.
* a further price cut
of 1.9 per cent will be introduced in January
2010;
* Subject to discussion
with affected parties, the Department of Health
will also introduce generic substitution from
January 2010. There would be further price
adjustments on January of each year aimed
as the proportion of savings from generic
substitution varies with time;
* action to support innovation
so patients have faster access to new medicines
that are clinically and cost-effective;
* a new non-contractual
voluntary scheme providing stability and predictability
in Pharmaceutical Pricing for the next 5 years;
* new and more flexible
pricing arrangements that will enable drug
companies to supply drugs to the NHS at lower
initial prices, with the option of higher
prices if value is proven at a later date;
and
* the more systematic
use of patient access schemes by drug companies
to allow access to medicines which have not
initially been assessed as cost or clinically
effective by NICE.
Alan Johnson said: "A
more flexible approach to pricing is in everyone's
interest. It gets clinically and cost effective
drugs to more patients - providing cheaper options
where clinically appropriate - delivers value
for money for the NHS and the tax payer, and creates
a better market for the pharmaceutical industry
while supporting research and innovation.
"Patient access schemes
together with flexible pricing of pharmaceuticals
will also enable the NHS to offer more patients
a wider range of more expensive drugs as recommended
by the National Cancer Director Mike Richards
in his recent Report on improving access to medicines
for NHS Patients."
Dr Richard Barker, Director
General of the ABPI said: "This landmark
deal marks a turning point for patients, the NHS
and the pharmaceutical industry. For the first
time, the PPRS is much more than a simple economic
agreement that looks at price alone.
"It is an all-encompassing
package that encourages the discovery of new,
more effective medicines, while at the same time
allowing NHS patients to access these treatments
more quickly.
"With the Department
of Health, we have developed a solution that addresses
the immediate needs of patients and their families,
and the NHS.
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