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Market Access Strategic Execution Consultant

Krishna Patel

Freelance Market Access Strategic Content Developer

Who Is This Really For?

Who Is This Really For?

On the same day, both Harvard Business Review and Adam Fein exposed the reality of consolidation within the health care system.

Harvard Business Review predicts that the pandemic will speed up this process. “Given the financial difficulty that many providers have suffered during the pandemic, this trend is likely to continue, reducing competition and increasing prices.”

It seems like the big players are riding the wave (for now, at least).

What I’m wondering is: is this the ultimate truth (big guys get to have all the fun), or is this the perfect opportunity for a new guy (not necessarily little—just new) to creep in and make it reign?

Scott Galloway points out that our health care industry is the industry with the lowest net promoter score (basically, it’s a broken system—as if we needed someone to tell us this). Therefore, the health care industry is ripe for incumbents to be replaced by newcomers.

Generally speaking, smaller companies are more nimble than larger companies. Will the sheer size of a large conglomeration inhibit itself to react/adjust to the borderline-prophetic Great Dispersion as suggested by Scott Galloway? This could very well be the perfect opportunity for a newcomer who wants to eat the pie (not just a slice…but all of it).

To put all of this in a different way, here are 2 questions: (1) Who is this [the vertical and horizontal integrations] for? (2) Who will this be for? Hint: many people have the answer to the first question; the second question cannot be Googled.

To put all of this in a 3rd way: Seth Godin says, ’empathy is at the heart of design.’

Resilience Through A Payment System

Resilience Through A Payment System

Resilience. It’s an under-appreciated word. It’s one of those things that we miss, after we lose something—when it’s too late—when there’s kenopsia.

‘Resilience’ is the word Health Care Payment Learning & Action Network (HCPLAN) uses to describe the promise of alternative payment models (APMs).

To be honest, I never thought of APNs under the light of resilience until HCPLAN’s presentation. They pointed that fee-for-service (FFS)-only providers suffered throughout the pandemic (sometimes fatally) because of the lost revenue due patients not showing up. In contrast, providers that were part of a pre-paid system (APMs) had predictable income so could adopt innovative practices (i.e. greater use of telehealth before the FFS model caught up to let them know that they would get paid for such virtual services). Members of APMs had more freedom to experiment with offerings within the realm of value-based care compared to FFS models.

HCPLAN creates a lofty vision that a resilient payment system can encourage care for the whole person, address social risk factors, and rewards providers for keeping patients healthy.

Can a revamped payment system really usher such a utopian health care system? Or is this overly zealous promise? What are the key 20% elements of the alternative payment model that could make provider organizations 80% more resilient? 

If none of these questions resonate with you, have you ever drawn the connection between APMs and resilience?

Catch the Raindrops Before They Become Hurricanes

Health care is in for flipping its thinking from defensive to offensive, according to Scott Galloway. He cites CDC data suggesting that 90% of health care spending is linked to chronic and mental health conditions. A widely cited Health Affairs article suggests that only 8% of the population takes advantage of preventative care. ‘Instead of detecting diseases when they’re raindrops, we wait until they become hurricanes that flood and overrun the health care system.’

Let’s not point fingers, because we are all to blame at some level (patients, providers, payers, manufacturers, me—all of us).

It’s hard to let go of our old ways, but sometimes that’s the only choice. The more something doesn’t work, the more we want to hold on to the fantasy that it does.

Flipping our thinking from defensive to offensive, by catching diseases in their early stages, American health care can be more efficient and effective.

I love the way Rohan Rajiv states, ‘walking a mile in another person’s shoes is powerful. Perspective makes us humans.’

What can we let go? What can we pick up?

What can we do to help switch from a defensive to offensive strategy?

ICER’s Influence Is Expanding. Now What?

When it comes to US market access, it is common to solicit input from a variety of payer types in order to benchmark an asset’s clinical evidence against payer demands and determine optimal product positioning. However, the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER) has been making frequent headlines over the past couple of years, raising the question of its degree of influence on market access.

Founded in 2006, ICER calls itself “the nation’s independent watchdog on drug pricing.” The description itself does not settle well with critics of ICER. Craig Garthwaite, a well-published thought leader on the relationship between drug prices and innovation, was interviewed last month by The Incidental Economist. In the interview, Garthwaite noted that “lowering drug spending” is the wrong goal as it can be detrimental to innovation of new medicine. Instead, “The goal of high-value spending is a good goal. With all health care spending, the idea is not that we want to lower spending, the idea is that we want value for money. Even the idea that 18% is ‘too much of GDP to spend on health care’ is a misnomer. The idea is that we want to get the best value we can.” He went on to express, “I don’t believe ICER is as independently beneficial as other people might. I think it has a particular point of view. And I have concerns about an organization that was started with the idea of decreasing costs that says it’s going to come up with an independent view of the value of a product.”

A key function of ICER is to publish reports evaluating whether a drug’s price aligns with the value it offers to patients. Through clinical and economic evidence assessment, ICER researchers arrive at a “value-based price benchmark” for each drug (i.e. a target price range that would achieve incremental cost-effectiveness ratios between $100,000 and $150,000 per QALY gained). Prior to finalization of these reports, ICER solicits feedback and additional evidence from manufacturers, payers, providers, and patients to guide any final revisions. According to Advisory Board, only a third of ICER’s reports have found drugs to be cost effective and fairly priced.

Considering ICER’s bias against drug prices, it makes one concerned of the extent of influence of ICER’s recommendations on payers and reimbursement policies.

ICER’s growing influence has been confirmed by small surveys of payers conducted by independent organizations. A recent survey conducted by ICON in July 2019 and published in November 2019 captured responses from total of 31 respondents from PBMs, MCOs, and IDNs (mostly pharmacy and medical directors). According to the publication, 23% of respondents were extremely familiar with ICER reports, processes, and assessments (up from 18% in the 2018 survey). Forty-two percent had referred to ICER assessments to inform the design of an outcomes-based contract (a sharp increase from 18% just the year before). Other more common utilizations of ICER reports were to provide references for a literature review as part of the drug information/review process (61%), to inform choice of a preferred product(s) within a therapeutic class (58%), to inform prior authorization/step edit criteria (58%), and to use as a negotiation point for rebate/pricing discussions (55%). The publication noted that “While most payers find ICER’s cost-effectiveness useful, they noted that they have not made a ‘hard line’ to set a threshold where coverage will be cut off. Payers leverage ICER reports in the initial assessment phase, and if the drug falls within the cost-effectiveness threshold, payers usually will not take additional steps or add other conditions in determining coverage.”

With the growing influence of ICER, manufacturers have been taking ICER assessments seriously and even participating in the review processes in various ways.

On the conforming end of the spectrum, some manufacturers have provided relevant unpublished data to ICER for analysis and accepted ICER’s value-based benchmark price at launch, as did Sanofi-Regeneron in 2017 with dupilumab.

At the opposite end of the spectrum, manufacturers have generated the required clinical evidence in order to flip ICER’s decision in their favor. In a rare move, ICER reversed its decision on the value of 2 new migraine drugs in February 2020. According to ICER’s Chief Medical Officer, David Rind, “Following the publication of the previous iteration of our report, we worked closely with Allergan to identify high-quality evidence demonstrating additional clinical benefits for ubrogepant beyond the 2-hour time point required by the FDA for the clinical trials. This additional benefit, which likely also applies to rimegepant, supports a near doubling of ICER’s health-benefit price benchmark for these two treatments.”

With conformity on one end and conversion on the other, there are many other ways in between to engage with ICER. Evidera offers suggestions that sound much like the way manufacturers traditionally engage with payers. For example, manufacturers can offer relevant primary and secondary literature which feeds key assumptions for ICER’s economic models. They can also anticipate ICER’s decision and plan for ways of engagement by developing early cost-effectiveness models in-house. Finally, the insights gathered from payers, clinical experts, and patient focus groups can be used to develop approaches to better align product value stories and prepare for pricing negotiations.

Manufacturers should not feel like ICER is cornering them into unfairly reducing prices of their assets. An organization still in its adolescence, ICER is receptive to cross-industry feedback and criticism. It is willing to evolve, as is evidenced by the 2020 Value Assessment Framework which incorporates real-world evidence, creates processes for re-evaluating evidence, and develops a new methodology to evaluate transformative (likely high-cost), curative therapies.

Far from perfect, one of the many flaws that remain to be fixed is that its value-based price benchmarks are determined for patient populations at-large rather than specific subpopulations. The Alliance for Aging Research argues that such an approach discriminates against older adults, people with disabilities, and veterans as they would be deemed ‘too expensive’ to receive care.

As ICER’s role in reimbursement policy is expected to expand, the organization should be viewed as a partner rather than a contender which is both molding and being molded by manufacturers.

It’s time to make big strides and turn heads; let’s go.

Outpatient Oncology Groups Attracting Private Equity Investment

When it comes to buying medical practices, hospitals and health systems aren’t the only ones writing checks. According to a JAMA article published earlier this week, the number of private equity firms looking to purchase practices has continued to increase.

Private equity firms are short-term owners of the physician practice groups. They pool money from investors and use it to buy physician practices, create value beyond the purchase price, then sell off the combined portfolio company and return the profits to the investors. Investors are looking to get their money back usually in 3-5 years. They typically get three to five times return on investment over that time. Ultimately these private equities sell the consolidated physician groups to larger buyers such as hospitals, health systems, and payers.

Medical Economics reported that according to the Medical Group Management Association (MGMA), there were $15 billion in deals in 2017, $22.3 billion in 2018 and well over $60 billion as of October 2019. Halee Fischer-Wright, MD, president and CEO of MGMA had noted that “I don’t see it slowing down….[In 2018], there were 200 private equity deals closed, and as we entered October [2019], we [were] looking at about 250 to 300 deals [in 2019].” This first wave of private equity investment has already hit specialties like orthopedics, dermatology, urology, anesthesiology, and gastroenterology, where profits are highest. A number of medical groups, particularly in dermatology and ophthalmology, are already on their second private equity owner, following a “liquidity event.”

Advocates say that private equity partners can help physician groups achieve an economies of scale in order to develop market leverage. Targeted ‘platform’ practices are bought with the plan to expand the foundation into a broader network which spans across the region and perhaps even nationally. The larger network would share management, billing procedures, staffing, credentialing, accounting, and other services. The economies of scale would also be useful for purchasing. For example, private equity-backed groups have more clout to negotiate better deals with payers (i.e. risk-based contracts). They can also invest in EHR upgrades and other technologies in order to compete more effectively in the modern health care of 2020.

There are many different models of these private equity owned physician groups, depending on the deal that is struck between the practice and private equity firm. In most cases, the equity firms focus on the business side of medicine and leave the clinical decisions to the doctors.

As investors have crowded sub-specialties such as dermatology and gastroenterology, they’re drifting into low-competition environments such as outpatient oncology that also promise lucrative gains.

Private equity partners can help oncology groups ready for new value-based payment models. Unlike heart failure and diabetes, the training wheels are not yet coming off of oncology when it comes to value based models. Many, many challenges remain in oncology in the move from value-based theory to practice. For example, the fragmented nature of oncology care has resulted in lack of data transparency in many cases, hindering participation in these value based models. VMG Health believes that roll-up and consolidation strategies in oncology will likely increase the use of technology and data management as well as reporting and tracking of Key Performance Indicators (KPIs).

Private equity partners can also help oncology groups become one-stop shops for all needed services as they can enable ownership of valuable practice assets such as ancillary services. For example, I wouldn’t be surprised if these practices build capabilities for in-house lab testing. According to the 2019 Genentech Oncology Trend Report, 38% of OPMs plan to conduct majority of their next generation sequencing (NGS) testing in-house by 2021 (up from 16% in 2018) in order to bring down cost and speed up the turn-around time for test results). NGS is of particular interest to oncology practices considering there are already over 100 FDA-approved targeted therapies in oncology and they remain the focus of much anticancer drug development.

Overall, whether oncologists belong to a larger entity (i.e. IDN) or are part of a private equity owned physician group, there is no mistake of the shift from the traditional “brute force” approach of extensive product promotion and individual physician engagement to a value-driven approach that yields financial return and improved quality.

Value propositions and messages must align with the positioning of these private equity owned oncology groups. Successful market access teams embrace an outside-in approach. They understand what constitutes value in the eyes of these customers’ external stakeholders (i.e. patients and payers) and then work inward to understand how this translates into value requirements of key internal stakeholders such as P&T decision makers and clinical influencers. This helps to build trust and achieve the common goal of helping patients.

Additionally, an opportunity for business-to-business relationships is something to consider. For example, manufacturers like Amgen are making a place for themselves at table through value-based partnerships.

Our healthcare system is continuing to evolve along with the changing technology and need for more accessible care. That’s why it’s important, as it is interesting, to keep up with the trends.

It’s time to make big strides and turn heads–let’s go.

Timely involvement of market access is critical

Have you heard of the saying, “Don’t wait til you’re thirsty to dig a well?” In a recent interview conducted by Covance, 47% of health care industry professionals in the US stated that they initiated market access activities at either Phase III or peri-launch, even though only 12% agreed that this was appropriately timed. As a matter of fact, 88% of the respondents believed that the ideal time to bring in market access folks was at Phase II–or even before then. I believe that these statistics are especially relevant for products that are first-to-market.

Market access teams can help a product achieve preferred formulary status, fast uptake, and a favorable market share. However, if the product has crummy data to begin with, there’s not much that anyone can do other than to generate new data that can actually be used to support the desired messages (though this can take additional YEARS). Unfortunately, I’ve witnessed this sad reality before and wished that the manufacturer had consulted someone who could inform clinically meaningful endpoints or relevant study population that would reflect the realistic target population for the product.

In order to avoid pushing a cart with square wheels, it’s important to involve your market access folks starting Phase II–don’t wait until Phase III.

It’s time to make big strides and turn heads–let’s go.

Providers shouldn’t be bothered with prior authorizations when payers can do it on their own

PBMs claim to impose formulary restrictions (e.g., prior authorizations, step therapies, and quantity limits) in order to ensure that the right patients receive the right drugs in the right manner.

However, living in the 21st century, one would think that PBMs would already have access to all of the patient information that they’re requesting from providers–right? If PBMs could access patient information electronically in real-time, there would be no need for prior authorizations and patients would be able to know the exact cost of their treatment when they’re sitting with their providers.

This would be revolutionary for market access as it could help to solve the problem of prescription abandonment. Research suggests that 66% of prescriptions that get rejected at the pharmacy require prior authorization, of which 30% are abandoned by patients.

Furthermore, in the spirit of rising health care costs: the Council for Affordable Quality Healthcare suggests that each manual prior authorization costs $3.50 for plans and $6.61 for providers. Electronic prior authorizations would bring the cost down to $2.80/transaction for payers and $0.03 for providers.

When there is so much to be said for electronic prior authorizations, why are manual prior authorizations still plaguing our health care system?

According to Point-of-Care Partners, a leader in the EHR frontier, electronic prior authorizations and real-time pharmacy benefit checks are a relatively new trend which are quickly gaining traction with the help of certain legislative rules. This phenomenon will also slowly permeate medical benefit drugs as well as devices, procedures, and services covered under the medical benefit, though that will take some time.

There are a number of market access teams who are taking matters into their own hands in order to help facilitate the transition to electronic prior authorizations and real-time pharmacy benefit checks in order to circumvent prescription abandonment.

It’s time to make big strides and turn heads–let’s go.

Curiosity is like a flashlight

Imagine you’re on a camping trip and you’re hiking back to your tent in the pitch dark. You have little more than a flashlight to guide the way. You cannot see the tent from where you are because the flashlight is only able to reveal what’s 20 feet beyond you. Even then, you have faith that if you continue walking, the flashlight will continue to light up the next 20 feet until you finally reach your destination.

In market access, curiosity is like that flashlight. Having curiosity has helped me uncover so much knowledge. In fact, I’m learning new things all the time when I charge ahead with curiosity in my hand. 

Curiosity brings knowledge, which makes one valuable in market access.

Charlie Munger, considered to be Warren Buffett’s right hand man, is famously quoted for saying, “Go to bed smarter than when you woke up.”

Seth Godin, a renowned author and entrepreneur, says that he spends 16 hours per day learning, reading, or doing research.

Ask questions, watch, listen…you’ll be surprised at what you’ve been missing.

It’s time to make big strides and turn heads–let’s go.

Oncology clinical pathways have become powerful market access barriers

It’s no surprise to anyone that the cost of oncology care is hard to keep up with. According to the Summer 2019 Magellan RX Management Report, oncology agents account for 34% of the total medical pharmacy spend for commercial, 46% for Medicare, and 35% for Medicaid.

Medical benefit oncology drugs are a sore spot for payers as these drugs are difficult to manage with traditional utilization management tools such as step edits and quantity limits. As a matter of fact, many payers will admit that using these utilization management tools are like using blunt instruments. Many of these payers (but not all) see oncology clinical pathways as the answer to their prayers.

Oncology clinical pathways (decision algorithms used by providers to drive treatment decision making) are gaining traction as key value-based incentive tools that are slowly replacing traditional utilization management tools. According to the 2019 Genentech Oncology Trend Report, 48% of surveyed oncologists heavily rely on pathway recommendation when choosing between multiple drugs with similar mechanism of action such as anti-PD-1 immunotherapies (wow!). According to the report, payers incentivize oncology practices to use pathways by establishing preferred provider status among those who use specific pathways and claiming that pathways streamline PA processing. In return, practices incentivize or enforce their oncologists to utilize clinical pathways through electronic or EHR notification.

Since oncology clinical pathways influence 1 in 2 providers, they have become another potential barrier for market access teams. How can manufacturers ensure favorable placement of their products in competing clinical pathways? According to the Pharmaceutical Commerce Magazine, pathways-development committees strive to remain free from bias and are very strict about the type of information manufacturers can submit for consideration. Therefore, even though manufacturers cannot directly approach pathways-development committees, these committees look to various authoritative/peer-reviewed resources that can inform them about real-world evidence, head-to-head comparisons, and cost effectiveness. Such data can be communicated via peer-reviewed journals and meetings, AMCP dossiers, and ICER reviews–to name a few communication channels.

It’s time to make big strides and turn heads–let’s go.

When driving your market access strategy, don’t forget to look in the rear view mirror

I was talking to a friend who is the Market Access Director for a small biopharmaceutical company that is close to filing an NDA for a first-to-market product in a rare disease with a high level of unmet need. It was exciting to hear him present the drug’s promising clinical trial results–I’m so excited for all the patients who could benefit from this drug! My friend seemed equally as excited.

Then, I asked him, “Will you have any competition?” He confidently responded that their product would be the first and would be followed by 3 other products, but not for at least another 6 months. This scenario sounded like a rerun of my market access experiences in long-acting injectable antipsychotics, hepatitis C drugs, and immunotherapies in oncology. 

Sure, he may avoid market pressures for the first 6 months, but what then? Once the competitors start marching in, payers will view his product and all of his competitors’ products as the same, and will engage in a price war in a race to the bottom. This will not only pose a blow to his organization, but contribute to the gross-to-net bubble problem (discussed in a previous blog) which increases overall health care costs for the nation.

That’s why it’s important to keep an eye on the rear view mirror. Doing so enables market access strategists to condition the market in their favor for situations foreseen in the near future. The rear view mirror should give information about the competition’s product profile and product journey. The driver (market access strategist) would then study the rear view mirror to identify opportunities and act on them appropriately.

In my friend’s example, the competitors have a high incidence of acute kidney injury, which is already a significant concern for this patient population. Fortunately, his drug had no reported incidence of acute kidney injury. Great…now we were getting somewhere. 

It’s time to make big strides and turn heads–let’s go.

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