Under the Inflation Reduction Act, the federal government for the first time will negotiate directly with drug companies to determine the prices that Medicare will pay for certain high expenditure drugs covered under Medicare Part D (starting in 2026) and Part B (starting in 2028). Part D covers retail prescription drugs and Part B covers physician-administered medications.
This new requirement is the culmination of years of debate among lawmakers in Congress, and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services is implementing the program according to the timeline established in the law. Meanwhile, the drug industry and others have filed several lawsuits seeking to block the effort. This week CMS faces a deadline to submit proposed prices to manufacturers for certain drugs.
These three charts explain key elements of the drug negotiations process and what it means for Medicare beneficiaries, the timetable according to which the process will unfold, and the public’s views about requiring the government to negotiate drug prices.
1) The first ten Part D drugs selected for Medicare price negotiation on August 29, 2023 include treatments for diabetes, blood clots, heart failure, psoriasis, rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn’s disease, and blood cancers. Collectively, Medicare spent more than $50 billion on those drugs in a recent 12-month period. The number of drugs subject to price negotiation will increase in future years. The Congressional Budget Office has estimated that negotiated prices will reduce Medicare spending on drugs subject to negotiation, translating into nearly $100 billion in federal savings between 2026 and 2031. Price negotiations also could lower costs for some patients and boost utilization by helping to make these drugs more affordable for Part D enrollees.