The Minnesota 340B Report Is Out

Explanation: The 340B Drug Pricing Program was designed to help patients access more affordable medicines. Since 1992 manufacturers have provided billions of dollars in steep discounts on outpatient medicines to safety-net clinics and qualifying hospitals expecting that those entities would use the savings to ensure vulnerable patients have access to needed medicines.

Brian: The data has some gaps — as the state (Minnesota) recognizes — but it’s still a fantastic resource for seeing how the program operates at a more granular level.

. . .

The caveats belong up front. Because of the way that the Minnesota statute was written, there’s a lot of reporting that did not happen. Notably, data on office-administered drugs — think oncology meds — weren’t included in what providers passed along. 

That oversight was corrected in legislation passed this year, but it leaves a gap in the first tranche of numbers: as much as 80% of 340B dollars are associated with medicines given in the office (as opposed to at the pharmacy). 

So the topline number, $630 million in profits, is a “substantial underestimate.” That’s not my take. That’s how the state characterized the findings. 

Stating the obvious, $630 million is still a lot of money. And it’s instructive to understand how the state arrived at the $630 million number. 

Minnesota providers spent $734 million to buy meds at 340B prices. Another $120 million went to “external operating expenses” (more on that in a moment). And the providers received $1.5 billion in reimbursement. 

For those who like to see the math: $1.5B – ($734M + $120M) = $630M in net profit. 

  • The $120 million in “external operating expenses” is what was siphoned off by contract pharmacies and third-party administrators, most of which are for-profit entities, many of which are owned by PBMs or private-equity firms. In other words, $16 of every $100 in 340B profit didn’t help patients or the providers. It got sucked up by middlemen. That’s a problem. 
  • The report breaks down 340B profits on a drug-by-drug basis, which is illuminating. Every Humira scrip nets covered entities $3,400. Each insulin script brings in $400. Eliquis? $558
  • It also shows 340B profits on a provider-by-provider basis, which is going to allow for some worthwhile calculations to be made, and — quite possibly — some great journalism to be performed. For instance, no hospital made more money from 340B than M Health Fairview University of Minnesota Medical Center ($129 million). That’s noteworthy, because, per the Pioneer Institute’s analysis of charity care, the University of Minnesota Medical Center spent 0.5% of its operating revenue on charity care in 2022. (The U.S. average was about 2.3%.) Should that raise questions about how that $129 million was spent
  • Not everyone profits in the same way. Indeed, not everyone profits, period. Sure, U of M made more than $100 million in profits. But a handful of safety-net federal grantees showed a loss on 340B, meaning that they bought medicines but never got reimbursed. In other words: real charity care. That raises questions, too: is the system truly set up to support those who need the support the most? 

This is only the start of the analysis. I can’t wait to how others look at and use the data. And I really can’t wait for next November, when we’ll presumably have a fuller look at actual 340B spending  and some longitudinal data.

The drug pricing feast: Who’s getting their fill this month? 46brooklyn Research