Access Insights 2024: Key Nuggets Surrounding the Chess Endgame

Albert Thigpen, co-founder, Talentwise Consulting, offers highlights of the drug commercialization panel that he participated in.

In a video interview with Pharma Commerce, Albert Thigpen, co-founder, Talentwise Consulting, discussed how the panel on “Playing the Chess Endgame–Healthcare Policies Targeting Drug Commercialization” underscored the complexities of implementing the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), predicting significant challenges for stakeholders like retail pharmacies, payers, and pharmacy benefit managers. They highlighted concerns about the unintended consequences of negotiated maximum fair prices (MFPs), particularly on the generics industry and oncology drug distribution, which could complicate decisions for companies and affect in-office dispensing practices. Overall, the panelists noted that the IRA's intricate framework might lead to unforeseen difficulties in the healthcare landscape.

Thigpen also emphasized the importance of taking a long-term and measured perspective for manufacturers when it comes to strategic approaches to pricing and commercialization in light of future US. healthcare policies. He noted that, similar to the evolving landscape of Medicare Part D over the past 20 years, the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) will also undergo significant changes. Manufacturers should prepare for initial challenges and be ready to reassess their strategies annually, adapting to new rules and market dynamics as they emerge. This approach may involve delaying product launches or adjusting commercialization tactics based on negotiated MFPs and market conditions, akin to the strategies seen with AbbVie and Humira. Beyond that, Thigpen dove into key trends impacting the pharmacy benefit management and specialty pharmacy spaces, while providing a crash course on retail consumerism.

A transcript of Thigpen’s conversation with PC can be found below.

PC: What were the main nuggets that came out of your “Playing the Chess Endgame–Healthcare Policies Targeting Drug Commercialization” panel?

Thigpen: I think probably the biggest takeaway is that the IRA is complicated. The implementation of it is going to be super complex. I think the panel universally agrees that the implementation of the IRA that has implications on the retail pharmacies, the payers, the patients, the PBMs, in general, hasn't quite been architected in the way for success, and we're just planning on some train wrecks, as we had referred to it in the panel. I think that's the first thing.

The second thing is that the MFPs that have been negotiated as a result of the IRA are going to have some unintended consequences across the board to other constituents—for example, the generics industry. How does a generic company decide to launch or not launch because the MFP has already been negotiated to a very low point already, and what are the unintended consequences of that? Negotiating an MFP on an oncology drug: going forward, how much does that impact, or have an unintended consequence of a physician that does in-office dispensing? I think for the vast, high level, I would say the IRA is complex. It's not fully thought out of all the consequences that will occur. We're starting to figure out some of those solutions, but very murky waters as we know it today.