Thank you, Mr. Chair.
The Canadian Generic Pharmaceutical Association and its Biosimilars Canada division would like to thank the committee members for this opportunity to contribute to the study of Bill C‑64, An Act respecting pharmacare.
Making medicines more affordable and accessible is the key value proposition of generic and biosimilar medicines, which today are used to fill more than three-quarters of all prescriptions in Canada. Expanding the use of generics and biosimilars helps drug plans to fund innovative treatments for patients and contributes to the overall sustainability of drug plans.
Not surprisingly, maximizing the use of these cost-efficient treatments to help fund pharmacare was a key recommendation of the pharmacare advisory council report in 2019.
We have provided a brief to members and will focus our remarks today on three main areas: the medications to be covered for patients under the proposed pharmacare regime, guiding principles for bilateral agreements, and bulk purchasing, which has not been defined.
On the list of drugs, expanding access to ensure all Canadians can benefit from the life-saving and life-altering medicines they need is an important objective. However, the list of diabetes and contraceptive medications in the February 29 pharmacare announcement is not comprehensive. There are important gaps that need to be addressed. We have highlighted these in our brief.
The current non-comprehensive approach also raises patient equity concerns, as it could lead to suboptimal prescribing of the medicines that are made available to the public for free and lead to suboptimal health outcomes for patients.
We are also concerned that the non-comprehensive approach may provide a disincentive for public drug plan formularies to continue their coverage of a broad range of prescription medicines and provide a disincentive to expand coverage to include new drugs in the future. These same concerns apply to drug plans provided by Canadian employers.
We recommend that all diabetes drugs and contraceptives that are currently reimbursed by public drug programs in Canada be covered if pharmacare is implemented. This principle should also apply to medicines added in the future.
On guiding principles, under Bill C-64 the federal government must negotiate and enter into bilateral agreements with individual provinces and territories. An important guiding principle for drug formulary management that is already employed by public drug programs in Canada is to reimburse for only the low-cost alternative product of a pharmaceutical active substance.
In order to help ensure the sustainability of the plan, Bill C-64 should be amended to clarify that only generic and biosimilar medicines will be reimbursed once they are authorized for sale by Health Canada and enter the Canadian market. This principle should be included in all bilateral pharmacare agreements.
On bulk purchasing, “bulk purchasing” is not defined in Bill C-64. It is not clear what this means. It is important to recognize that Canadian governments already combine their purchasing power to negotiate internationally competitive drug prices for Canadians. They do this through the pan-Canadian Pharmaceutical Alliance, or pCPA.
It is critical that the pharmacare regime respect the existing pharmaceutical pricing infrastructure to ensure stability of the Canadian drug supply. This will ensure that Canadians continue to benefit from access to both cost-saving generic and biosimilar medicines and the innovative new medicines Canadians need.
Prices for generic medicines are controlled through the pCPA tiered pricing framework. This provides a stable and predictable environment for generic manufacturers to continue to provide existing medicines for Canadians and make the investments to launch new cost-saving drugs.
According to pCPA, joint efforts between pCPA and CGPA have resulted in savings of more than $4 billion to participating drug plans over the past 10 years. These savings will continue to grow through a new three-year agreement between CGPA and pCPA that came into force on October 1 of last year.
The pCPA also negotiates prices for biosimilar medicines that are set to be significantly lower than the list price for the original biologic drugs. The expanded use of biosimilars has saved public drug plans hundreds of millions of dollars that have been reinvested into coverage for innovative new therapies and the overall sustainability of drug programs.
We recommend that governments continue to exercise their power to collectively negotiate drug prices in Canada through the pCPA.
In closing, thank you again for inviting the CGPA and its Biosimilars Canada division to appear as witnesses on Bill C-64. Jody and I would be pleased to answer any questions you may have.
Thank you.