GLP-1 Medications Fuel $806B U.S. Prescription Drug Spending Spree

Prescription drug spending in the United States rose by 10.2% to nearly $806 billion last year, thanks in part to the popularity of GLP weight-loss drugs. GLP-1s are now the top drug category by total spending and the fastest-growing segment in the market, according to the report from the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists.

Looking ahead to 2025, researchers caution that proposed U.S. tariffs on pharmaceutical ingredients and components, especially those sourced from China, could exacerbate shortages and push patients toward more-expensive brand-name alternatives.

“GLP-1s are transforming how we treat metabolic disease, but their rise coincides with growing concerns about supply chain vulnerability,” said Eric Tichy, PharmD, MBA, lead author of the report and division chair of supply chain management at Mayo Clinic. “Tariff-related cost increases could hit the most cost-effective drugs the hardest and ultimately affect hospitals, clinics and patients who depend on affordable generics.”

Among the highlights of the report:

  • Clinic drug spending rose by 14.4% to $158.2 billion, while nonfederal hospitals saw a more modest 4.9% increase to $39 billion. With GLP-1 shortage issue largely resolved, continued growth in this category is expected, although direct-to-consumer channels may complicate efforts to track usage trends.
  • Overall U.S. drug spending is projected to increase by between 9% and 11% in 2025, with clinic expenditures rising from 11% to 13% and hospital spending growing between 2% and 4%.
  • Oncology spending continues to grow at a double-digit pace, driven by the introduction of new high-cost drugs and broader application of existing therapies.
  • Vaccine expenditures have declined post-pandemic, even with new vaccine products on the market. This trend may continue because of growing antivaccine sentiment.
  • New generics and biosimilars may help moderate overall spending growth by providing lower-cost alternatives as key patents — including for Entresto, a widely used heart failure drug – expire.

“As medication spending continues to shape the financial and operational realities of health care, this report, along with the American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy’s quarterly medication pipeline updates, offers pharmacy and health-system leaders the insights they need for effective planning,” said Daniel J. Cobaugh, PharmD, senior vice president of professional development and publishing at ASHP. “It brings clarity to complex trends and supports informed, forward-looking decision making.”

 

Source Link

Recommended Articles

Schumer Announces Health Care Plan

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer officially unveiled Democrats’ plan for a health care vote next week, saying Thursday on the chamber floor his caucus will propose extending soon-to-expire Affordable Care Act subsidies for three years. “This is the bill, a clean three-year extension of ACA tax credits, that Democrats will bring to the floor of ...

Read More

House Votes To Pass 5-Year Hospital At Home Extension, Sending Bill To The Senate

The House of Representatives unanimously voted to pass a bill Monday that extends the Medicare hospital at home program for five years. Hospital at home providers have been mired in uncertainty for years. Though Congress has repeatedly extended hospital at home flexibilities, it often only does so for a handful of months at a time. ...

Read More

Lobbyists Are Salivating For More Of Trump’s Drug Price Deals

Lobbyists for some of the world’s largest drug companies are parading a new pricing deal in the U.K. as a model the rest of Europe should emulate if it wants to keep drugmakers from bailing for America. To President Donald Trump and the lobbyists’ delight, British officials agreed to spend 25 percent more on new ...

Read More

Senate Barrels Toward Failure On Health Care

Senators have about a week before they’re set to vote on soon-to-expire Affordable Care Act subsidies. Most of them already believe the chances for a bipartisan breakthrough by then are roughly zero. There’s no clear momentum for any plan that would avoid a lapse in tax credits that could raise insurance premiums for 20 million ...

Read More
arrowcaret-downclosefacebook-squarehamburgerinstagram-squarelinkedin-squarepauseplaytwitter-squareyoutube-square