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Prescriptions for Cholesterol Drugs Rise with New Generics
Lipitor Loses Ground, but Crestor and Vytorin Gain; Prices Stable
WASHINGTON, Feb. 13 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Prescriptions for the
cholesterol-lowering medicines known as statins rose by an average of
500,000 a month between October 2005 and December 2006, according to a new
analysis by Consumers Union and Consumer Reports Best Buy Drugs.
The increase was enhanced by the availability of simvastatin -- the
generic version of Zocor -- one of two new generic statins that came onto
the market in the latter half of 2006. The shift suggests aggressive moves
by doctors, insurers, pharmacy benefit managers, pharmacists and consumers
to use the new generics.
"This is further evidence that the market will eagerly welcome a
significant new generic drug, such as simvastatin," says Steven Findlay,
managing editor of Consumer Reports Best Buy Drugs. "It also shows that new
generics can play an important role in extending treatment to more people."
The 500,000 increase represented a 3.9 percent rise -- from an average
12.6 million per month in the period October 2005 to May 2006, to an
average 13.1 million per month in the period June 2006 to December 2006.
The full report can be downloaded at
http://www.crbestbuydrugs.org/press.shtml
The two new generics -- pravastatin and simvastatin -- are the generic
versions of Pravachol and Zocor, respectively, both of which lost patent
protection in 2006 (Pravachol in April and Zocor in June).
By December 2006, simvastatin had garnered 2.5 million prescriptions --
200,000 to 300,000 more than Zocor was averaging per month prior to its
patent expiration.
Pravastatin prescriptions averaged 611,000 a month in the second half
of 2006, and by December had reached 631,000. Pravachol prescriptions fell
from an average 743,000 per month between October 2005 and May 2006, to
133,000 in December 2006.
The analysis assessed the average number of prescriptions per month
divided into two periods (one eight-month span and one seven-month span)
because the number of prescriptions fluctuates month to month. In addition,
the early period was before the two new generics became widely available.
The study also found that an older generic -- lovastatin -- had a surge
in prescriptions, up 14 percent to 1.2 million per month in the latter half
of 2006. That comes on top of a 15 percent increase from late 2004 to
October 2005.
Despite the uptake of the new and old generics, the analysis found that
brand-name statins retained a significant share of all statin prescriptions
-- 71 percent. Lipitor alone accounted for an average 43 percent of all
statin prescriptions in the latter half of 2006. Lipitor lost some ground,
however, slipping from 46 percent of statin prescriptions in the earlier
period (representing a decline of around 216,000 prescriptions per month).
Making up for Lipitor's loss were Crestor and Vytorin. Average monthly
Crestor prescription rose 33 percent and Vytorin prescriptions rose 26
percent between the two time periods.
The study also assessed statin prices, which rose modestly and in line
with general inflation during the period examined. This was due primarily
to price competition and pressure from payers. Both these forces are likely
to intensify in 2007 and 2008, given the statins' status as among the most
widely prescribed drugs.
The study presents prices for pravastatin and simvastatin before
multiple generic versions of either were approved in late 2006. The price
of both generics is widely expected to decline in 2007, and will thus put
further pressure on statin makers and pharmacies to keep a lid on prices.
Wal-Mart and Target in the fall of 2006 added pravastatin to their list of
$4-a-month generic drugs.
Pravastatin and simvastatin are two in a wave of generic versions of
top- selling brand-name drugs that will become available over the next
several years. This offers a substantial savings opportunity to those who
pay the pharmacy bills, including consumers themselves.
The analysis of statin trends accompanies an updated version of a
report for consumers on the statin drugs -- with advice on who needs a
statin, comparisons of the drugs and Best Buys choices. That report is
available free at http://www.CRBestBuyDrugs.org. It is one of 16 in a
series helping consumers find effective and safe medicines that give them
the most value for their health-care dollar. Other Best Buy Drugs reports
compare drugs to treat depression, high blood pressure, asthma, allergies,
migraines, insomnia, and overactive bladder.
Consumer Reports Best Buy Drugs combines a review of the scientific
evidence on the effectiveness and safety of medicines with pricing
information. Every report is peer-reviewed by medical experts. The project
is independently administered by Consumers Union and Consumer Reports with
support from the Engelberg Foundation, a private philanthropy, and the
National Library of Medicine.
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