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Generic
Pharmaceuticals saved $734 Billion over last
decade
Even greater savings
would result from increasing funding for
FDA, creating a workable pathway for Biogenerics, expanding utilization of
Generics
ARLINGTON, Va., May 7 /PRNewswire/ -- The
Generic Pharmaceutical Association (GPhA)
today released the results of an independent
analysis commissioned from IMS Health, the
leading healthcare market intelligence
company, revealing that using generic
pharmaceuticals saved the American health
care system more than $734 billion in the
last decade (1999-2008), with approximately
$121 billion in savings in 2008 alone.
GPhA released the analysis as part of its
year long celebration of the 25th
anniversary of the 1984 Drug Price
Competition and Patent Term Restoration Act,
commonly called the Hatch-Waxman Act.
"In 1984, it was predicted that the
Hatch-Waxman Act would save our country $1
billion in the first decade.
"Now, generic medicines save more than that
every three days," said GPhA President and
CEO Kathleen Jaeger.
"These savings are truly remarkable and
demonstrate the real value of generic
medicines for consumers and the entire
health care system."
In the mid 1990s, the Congressional Budget
Office released an analysis showing that in
1994, the 10th anniversary of the enactment
of Hatch-Waxman, annual savings from
generics had reached approximately $8
billion to $10 billion.
The new data released today shows that by
1999 -- 15 years after Hatch-Waxman became
law -- generics were generating $49 billion
in annual savings.
From 1999 to 2004, generic savings increased
steadily at an annual rate of between 3% and
10%, with savings growing from $49 billion
in 1999 to $69 billion in 2004.
Beginning in 2005 and continuing through
2008, the savings generated by generics grew
at a double-digit annual pace, with the
highest growth rate coming in 2008 when the
savings topped $121 billion, a full 20%
ahead of the prior year.
The higher growth rates seen during the more
recent years of the study were driven by two
factors:
-- an increase in the overall percentage
of generic utilization from 61% entering
2006 to 69% by the close of 2008; and
-- the loss of patent protection by several brand-name blockbusters,
including Pravachol(R), Ambien(R), Fosamax(R),
Zoloft(R) and Zocor(R).
The analysis also found that generics
introduced prior to 1999, generated
approximately $552 billion of the $734
billion in total savings.
Savings generated by generic products
introduced between 1999 and 2008 provided an
additional $182 billion in savings during
the period, with nearly half of this coming
from 2006 to 2008.
Approximately 60% of the $121 billion in
savings achieved in 2008 came from generics
approved over the past 10 years.
Treatments in the therapeutic categories of
metabolism, cardiovascular, anti-infectives,
and central nervous system (CNS) have
experienced the highest growth in savings as
a result of generic utilization.
More than 57% of the total savings between
1999 and 2008, totaling some $420 billion,
came from the cardiovascular and CNS
categories.
Generic metabolism and anti-infective drugs
combined to account for an additional 19% of
the savings.
In total, these four therapeutic categories
resulted in overall savings of $561 billion,
or 76% of total savings.
"To give some context to the magnitude of
the savings created by generic
pharmaceuticals over the past decade, one
needs only consider that the $734 billion
exceeds the cost of the Troubled Assets
Relief Program approved last fall, and is
nearly the cost of the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act approved in February,"
Jaeger noted.
"The Hatch-Waxman Act is perhaps the most
important piece of pro-consumer legislation
enacted over the past 25 years.
It established a balance between protecting
intellectual property, which provides the
incentives to innovate new medicines, and
encouraging the development of safe,
effective and more affordable generic
versions of existing drugs.
"Among the flawed arguments during the
debate over Hatch-Waxman in 1984 was the
claim that generic competition would harm
innovation.
"In fact, since the enactment of
Hatch-Waxman generic competition has helped
unleash unprecedented investment in new drug
research and development, which in turn has
led to a period of unparalleled
pharmaceutical innovation," Jaeger said.
GPhA noted that the study is predictive of
the greater savings that could be achieved
in future years through the implementation
of initiatives to:
-- increase investment in FDA's Office of
Generic Drugs (OGD) to ensure the timely
review and approval of new generic
pharmaceuticals;
-- establish a science-based biogeneric
approval pathway that promotes innovation
while providing access to more affordable
versions ofversions of
lifesaving biologic medicines; and ; and ; and ; and
-- encourage greater use of FDA-approved
generic medicines in publicly-funded
prescription drug benefit plans, such as
Medicaid, Medicare and other federal/state
programs. For example, a 1% increase in the
generic utilization rate in the Medicaid
program could yield approximately $490
million in added annual savings.
"The data on the tremendous savings
generated by generic competition provide
dramatic evidence that increasing the
availability and use of generic medicines
are immediate steps that can be taken to
further increase health care savings,"
Jaeger said.
Study Background
In early 2009, GPhA commissioned IMS Health
to conduct an analysis of the savings
created by generic utilization from 1999
through 2008.
The principle objective of the analysis was
to quantify the total cost savings generic
pharmaceuticals provide to the overall U.S.
health care system.
The analysis included only those
pharmaceutical molecules for which generic
and brand products were available to
consumers and prescribers.
The analysis utilized IMS data of sales and
volumes for both branded and generic
products to estimate cost savings.
For an explanation of the study methodology
see
www.gphaonline.org.
The generic substitution rate in the U.S. in
2008, according to IMS statistics, was
approximately 69%, with generic medicines
filling more than 2.6 billion of the
approximately 3.8 billion prescriptions
dispensed.
However, spending on generic prescriptions
accounted for just 16 cents of every dollar
spent for prescription medicines.
About GPhA
GPhA represents the manufacturers and
distributors of finished generic
pharmaceuticals, manufacturers and
distributors of bulk pharmaceutical
chemicals, and suppliers of other goods and
services to the generic industry.
Generic pharmaceuticals filled 69% of
prescriptions dispensed last year in the
U.S. but consumed just 16% of the total drug
spending. Additional information is
available at
www.gphaonline.org .
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