WEIGHT-LOSS DRUG DILEMMA — A swell of research supports weight-loss drugs’ effectiveness, but whether Medicare will cover them remains in question. Eli Lilly has released new results on an experimental drug that led to a 24-percent weight loss among adults. Another of its drugs led to a 22-percent weight loss. That comes on the heels of Novo Nordisk’s drugs Ozempic and Wegovy showing promising results. The drugs target one of the biggest issues facing U.S. health care: obesity. More than 2 in 5 Americans have obesity, according to the latest CDC data, a number that’s soared in the past two decades. The drugs will have substantial demand. But without coverage, they can cost patients around $16,000 annually. The cost to Medicare could reach nearly $27 billion a year if just 10 percent of beneficiaries use them, according to a recent analysis in The New England Journal of Medicine. That comes as lawmakers seek to avert Medicare insolvency. In 2003, Congress barred Medicare from covering drugs for obesity. Some legislators hope to change that. Sens. Tom Carper (D-Del.) and Bill Cassidy (R-La.) have previously introduced legislation to allow coverage. Barbara Boland, communications director for Rep. Brad Wenstrup (R-Ohio), who has led the House companion, told Pulse it’s a “top priority” and they’re targeting a summer reintroduction. It could face opposition, though — Rep. Greg Murphy (R-N.C.) came out against it at POLITICO’s Health Care Summit this month. Novo Nordisk recently hired law and lobbying firm Arnold & Porter to allow Medicare to cover the treatments. There could be a lot more lobbying in store. “The lobbying effort could dwarf the recent campaign to get Medicare to cover new drugs to manage Alzheimer’s disease,” Tricia Neuman, executive director for KFF’s Medicare policy program, told Pulse. The Biden administration could also use demonstration authority to get coverage, Neuman said. FDA Commissioner Robert Califf said his agency is working with CMS on “what to do” about the drugs. A key question is whether the drugs will save money by averting other costly conditions that obesity worsens. “There are still many unknowns about the long-term risks and benefits,” said Khrysta Baig, lead author of the NEJM analysis, adding that manufacturers could make the cost issue less significant by lowering prices. Researchers at University of Southern California estimated Medicare could save up to $245 billion over 10 years by covering the treatments, but when using current prices, that could cost $4.5 trillion, Baig said. Medicare’s new drug-price negotiation authorities could eventually mitigate that, though, and Alison Sexton Ward, a USC researcher, noted that list prices aren’t reflected in post-rebate prices. WELCOME TO WEDNESDAY PULSE. Anything on the horizon at HHS you’re watching for? We want to hear from you. Reach me at bleonard@politico.com or Daniel at dpayne@politico.com. TODAY ON OUR PULSE CHECK PODCAST, host Megan Messerly talks with Carmen Paun, who describes how the abortion debate in Congress threatens to jeopardize the reauthorization of the AIDS relief program PEPFAR.
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