We're going to be gouged on new COVID treatment
The New Jersey-based pharmaceutical giant Merck is facing accusations of price gouging after it charged the U.S. over $700 per patient for a taxpayer-funded coronavirus treatment that, according to research, costs just $17.74 to produce.
Last
week, Merck announced plans to request emergency
federal authorization for molnupiravir after a late-stage clinical trial showed that a five-day course of the
antiviral drug cut the risk of Covid-19 hospitalization or death in half in
patients with mild-to-moderate cases.
The
same day Merck unveiled the results of the trial and White House officials
hailed the drug as another possible tool against Covid-19, the New York
Times reported that "the federal
government has placed advance orders for 1.7 million courses of treatment, at a
price of about $700 per patient"—far more than the estimated cost of
manufacturing the drug.
According
to an analysis by Melissa Barber of Harvard T.
H. Chan School of Public Health and Dzintars Gotham of King’s College Hospital
in London, "the cost of production for molnupiravir capsules is US$1.74
per unit, or US$17.74 per five-day regimen."
"Adding
an allowance for 10% profit margin and taxes in India, we arrive at an
estimated sustainable generic price of US$1.96 per capsule or US$19.99 per five-day
regimen," the researchers concluded.
Dean
Baker, a senior economist at the Center for Economic and Policy Research, noted
that the $712 price-per-course price the U.S. government is set to pay for
molnupiravir amounts to a roughly 4,000% markup.
Quartz's Annalisa Merelli reported last week that with Merck expecting to produce 10 million courses of molnupiravir before the end of 2021, the company "could bring in revenue up to $7 billion."
"This
would make it, in only a few weeks, one of the 10 most lucrative drugs
ever," Merelli observed.
If
authorized by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, molnupiravir—which Merck
developed in partnership with the Miami-based firm Ridgeback
Biotherapeutics—would be the first antiviral pill approved to treat Covid-19,
potentially a major breakthrough in the fight against the global pandemic.
But
it's unclear how accessible the treatment will be for people in the U.S. and
around the world, given its cost and Merck's monopoly control over production.
Numerous countries, including Singapore and Thailand, are already racing to secure access
to the drug.
"Governments
must break Merck's monopolies so generic companies can expand supply and slash
prices globally," said Asia Russell, executive director of
Health GAP.
Heidi
Chow of the Jubilee Debt Campaign decried the $700-per-patient price the
U.S. government paid for molnupiravir as "another example of Big Pharma
reaping billions from public investment into research by charging extortionate,
rip-off prices for lifesaving Covid drugs."
"This
is why we need to waive patents on all Covid treatments and vaccines,"
said Chow.
As The
Intercept's Sharon Lerner reported Tuesday, molnupiravir was
developed with the help of tens of millions of dollars in U.S. government
funding.
"The
Defense Threat Reduction Agency, a division of the Department of Defense,
provided more than $10 million of funding in 2013 and 2015 to Emory University,"
from which Ridgeback licensed the drug in 2020, Lerner noted.
"The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, part of the
National Institutes of Health, also provided Emory with more than $19 million
in additional grants."
In
addition to slamming Merck for selling the drug to the U.S. at a price 40 times
higher than the cost of production, public health advocates stressed the Biden
administration has an obligation to ensure that the treatment is made widely
available and affordable to all.
"The
public funded this drug, and therefore the public has some rights, including
the rights you have it available under reasonable terms," Luis Gil
Abinader, a senior researcher at Knowledge Ecology International, told The
Intercept.
Abinader
pointed to the federal government's so-called "march in" rights under
the Bayh-Dole Act. That law, enacted in 1980, allows the government to intervene and license a federally funded
drug to a third party if the manufacturer fails to make the medicine
"available to the public on reasonable terms." The U.S. government
has never exercised its march in rights to drive down the cost of a drug.
"The
pressure for march-in rights around this drug is going to be huge,"
Abinader said of molnupiravir. "When the Biden administration negotiates
another supply agreement with Merck, they should probably leverage those rights
in order to get a better price."