DRUG PRICE SCRUTINY LIKELY CONTINUES — Drugmakers aren’t likely to catch a break from Vice President Kamala Harris if she becomes the Democratic nominee and is elected president. The Californian will tout the Biden administration’s Inflation Reduction Act on the campaign trail in the coming months — and her 2019 presidential campaign hinted at additional drug pricing policy that could resurface. That platform included legislative calls to empower HHS to set a fair price for any prescription drug that is no more than 100 percent of its average price in comparable high-income countries such as Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Japan and the United Kingdom. Harris called for that price to be updated at least annually — and capped for inflation. “All profits pharmaceutical companies make from selling a drug above the fair price in the United States will be taxed at a rate of 100 percent. These funds will go directly back to consumers in the form of rebates,” Harris’ 2019 platform stated. A reviled pharmaceutical industry policy — so-called march-in rights — appears to have an ally in Harris. The National Institute of Standards and Technology recently sought comment on a draft framework for how agencies should consider exercising march-in rights — where the government can award a patent for research it funded to another firm to potentially lower prices. “If the actions outlined above are not sufficient to bring down an abusive price for drugs that resulted from publicly funded R&D, Harris will use existing authority under the Bayh-Dole Act to ‘march-in’ and license a drug company’s patent to a lower-cost competitor,” her 2019 policy platform stated. Catherine Hill, spokesperson for the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, said the trade lobby would work with any presidential administration on policies to increase patient access and innovation. “Previous price controls adopted by the Biden administration threaten to stifle that innovation,” Hill said in an email. Harris said she would also urge HHS to use its authority to allow drug importation for “excessively priced” drugs from other comparable countries, such as Canada, “consistent with rigorous safety standards.” Under the Biden administration, the FDA granted Florida permission to pursue a drug importation plan from Canada, but the program has not gotten off the ground. The likely 2024 Democratic nominee also wanted to end what she described as a “tax loophole” on direct-to-consumer advertising by pharmaceutical companies — and direct proceeds to the National Institutes of Health for research treatments. The former attorney general said she would appoint a Department of Justice head “who will prioritize investigations of abusive drug pricing practices to ensure pharmaceutical companies are not violating federal law or engaging in anticompetitive behaviors.” IT’S TUESDAY. WELCOME BACK TO PRESCRIPTION PULSE. The CDC is actively investigating an outbreak of Listeria linked to meats sliced at delis that has led to 28 hospitalizations and two deaths across 12 states. Send news and tips to David Lim (dlim@politico.com or @davidalim) and Lauren Gardner (lgardner@politico.com or @Gardner_LM).
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