Drug Prices rise For Seniors who reach
Medicare Part D Coverage Gap
By Jessica
Marcy
KHN Staff Writer
Seniors who hit the coverage gap in their
Medicare prescription drug plans and must
use their own money to buy drugs are facing
price increases that are far outpacing
inflation, a new study finds.
According to the Kaiser Family Foundation,
prices paid by enrollees in standalone Part
D plans who enter the coverage gap increased
5 percent or more since January 2009 for
half of 10 brand-name drugs most commonly
used by seniors. That's almost twice the
rate of inflation over the same period. (KHN
is a part of the foundation).
For example, the price of Actonel, a
treatment for osteoporosis, increased 8
percent, from $91 per month in 2009 to $98
per month in 2010.
Meanwhile, the prices for both Aricept, an
Alzheimer’s medication, and Plavix, a drug
used to prevent blood clots, both increased
by 7 percent during the same period.

Aricept's prices rose from $184 to $198
while Plavix's rose from $142 to $152.
Lipitor, a cholesterol medication, was the
only drug surveyed that decreased in price,
from slightly more than $86 to just under
$86 per month.
The rising prices are part of a longer-term
trend. Between January 2006 and January
2010, the analysis showed, prices of drugs
bought by seniors who hit the coverage gap
increased 20 to 25 percent for Lipitor,
Plavix, Nexium, a drug for acid-reflux, and
Lexapro, a medication for depression and
anxiety; 39 percent for Actonel, and 41
percent for Aricept.
Over the same period, inflation has
increased 9.2 percent while prices for
medical care have surged 16.1 percent.
Researchers examined the prices for specific
medications that don't have generic
substitutes, using data from the Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services.
The prices paid by seniors in the coverage
gap, also known as the "doughnut hole," vary
by drug plan, and depend largely on prices
negotiated between the drug plans and
pharmaceutical companies.
Under Medicare Part D, seniors get
government-subsidized drug coverage until
their total drug spending – by them and
their drug plans -- exceeds a specific
threshold, which is $2,830 in 2010.
They then enter the doughnut hole, and must
spend their own money -- $3,610 this year --
this year before they get "catastrophic"
drug coverage. This coverage is more
generous than their initial coverage.
The amount seniors must pay in the coverage
gap is projected to increase to $5,755 by
2018. In 2007, an estimated 3.4 million Part
D enrollees hit the coverage gap.
The
Democrats' health care legislation
would gradually close the doughnut hole over
the next ten years. The study said that
previous research showed that some enrollees
who reach the coverage gap sometimes skip
needed medications when faced with the full
cost.
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