Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Arthritis Drug Humira Challenged By Biosimilar Costing Half As Much
After 20 years and $200 billion in revenue, Humira 鈥 an injectable treatment for rheumatoid arthritis and several other autoimmune conditions 鈥 has lost its monopoly. Early Tuesday morning, California-based biotech firm Amgen released Amjevita, the first close copy of the best selling drug of all time. At least seven more Humira copycats, known as biosimilars, are expected to debut later this year. (Walker and Gorenstein, 1/31)
Amgen Inc. is challenging one of the world鈥檚 best-selling medications with an unusual strategy: charging two list prices for the same medicine. (Peebles, 1/31)
Underscoring the opaque and confusing nature of pharmaceutical pricing, Amgen announced long-awaited discounts for its biosimilar version of Humira 鈥 the world鈥檚 best-selling medicine 鈥 and the numbers suggest the biggest winners may be health insurers and others in the supply chain, but not patients. (Silverman, 1/31)
On eye health 鈥
One person has died and at least three others are left with permanent vision loss because of a bacterial infection possibly linked to a brand of over-the-counter eyedrops, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. A majority of those affected reported using preservative-free EzriCare Artificial Tears before becoming ill, the CDC reported in a statement dated Jan. 20. (Edwards, 1/31)
The Food and Drug Administration is nearing a decision on the first treatment for geographic atrophy, a progressive eye disease and a leading cause of blindness in older people. Apellis Pharmaceuticals, the drug鈥檚 maker, has expressed public confidence in the data supporting approval. Investors are more divided. (Feuerstein, 2/1)
In other developments from the health care industry 鈥
One of Rhode Island鈥檚 best-known health experts, Dr. Megan Ranney, will be the new dean of the Yale School of Public Health, Yale University President Peter Salovey announced Tuesday. She鈥檒l begin her new job on July 1. Ranney, an emergency room doctor who is the founding director of the Brown-Lifespan Center for Digital Health, became a household name during the COVID-19 pandemic. (Alphonse, 1/31)
Tong Yan grew up in a Chinese-American enclave of Los Angeles in a family that revered food, but thought little of those who carried excess weight. "Definitely there was like an implicit fattist kind of perspective, like small comments that are made about people's weight," Yan says. Obesity did not affect him or his family, but a friend 鈥 who wasn't even that heavy 鈥 became the butt of jokes. "Also implied was that people who are obese are lazy and not motivated," he recalls. (Noguchi, 1/31)
KHN: Podcast: Can They Freaking Do That?!? (2023 Update)聽
The 鈥淎n Arm and a Leg鈥 podcast is back. This season, host Dan Weissmann will tell stories about patients finding creative ways to fight back against outrageous bills.聽This first episode of Season 9 updates a story from 2019 about a listener who got a $35 bill from a medical testing lab she had never heard of. Soon a follow-up bill arrived demanding $1,300 if she didn鈥檛 pay right away. (2/1)