One report listed the top 5 drugs where Medicare spends the most money. While they are expensive, they are not the drugs with the highest price tag . .
. merely ones that receive the most money from CMS.
To clarify, the most expensive drugs are rarely used, often as a last resort and generally only for a few months until the patient expires.
By comparison, the top 5 drugs that receive the most funding from Medicare are
listed below. Price estimate is for one dosage (mg/number of pills) based on 2022 PDP pricing, using CVS pharmacy.
ELIQUIS
5mg/60 - $141, SilverScript PLUS
REVLIMID 10mg/21 - $5,114, Elixir RxSecure
XARELTO 20MG/30 - $141, SilverScript PLUS
JANUVIA 100mg/30 - $141, SilverScript PLUS
TRULICITY 1.5mg pen (4 pack) - $141, SilverScript PLUS
Above pricing from Medicare.gov . . . which is notorious for being wrong, especially this time of year.
Using a more reliable drug plan finder
(with weekly formulary updates) and got different results.
ELIQUIS - $47
REVLIMID - $6496
XARELTO - $47
JANUVIA - $47
TRULICITY - $47
All of the above (except Revlimid) are considered tier 3 with SilverScript PLUS, no deductible plan. Revlimid is tier
5.
What Revlimid Is Used For:
Treatment of Multiple Myeloma
Treatment of transfusion-dependent myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) patients with deletion 5q cytogenetic abnormality with or without additional cytogenetic abnormalities.
Treatment of Mantle Cell Lymphoma (MCL)
Note: If a drug has been approved for one use, physicians may elect to use this same drug for other problems if they believe it may be helpful.
https://chemocare.com/chemotherapy/drug-info/revlimid.aspx
You have reached the end of this newsletter . . . almost . . .
The mid October letter SHOULD be less technical and have SOME specifics
about 2023 drug plans.
I expect a LOT of changes for 2023 . . . higher plan premiums, higher co-pays and possibly fewer drug plans.
Many carriers will not be able to meet the deadlines for DC mandated changes and
will possibly pull their plan off the market for next year unless modifications to IRA are made in the next few weeks.
Health insurance companies must revise Medicare Advantage and Part D materials to reflect the new law prior to the upcoming open enrollment period, which begins Oct. 15
and ends Dec. 7. Insurers must notify enrollees about the insulin and vaccine policies by Sept. 30 and distribute revised benefit summaries and update their websites by Oct. 15, CMS directs in the memorandum.
https://www.modernhealthcare.com/medicare/medicare-plans-must-update-materials-comply-new-law?
This is looking like a train wreck of the magnitude made possible by bureaucrats who have no understanding about how the real world operates.
Beam me up, Scotty!
Perhaps now you know why I call this the SAUSAGE edition . . .