Medicare can pay for obesity drugs like Wegovy in certain heart patients

FILE - Donna Cooper holds up a dosage of Wegovy, a drug used for weight loss, at her home, March 1, 2024, in Front Royal, Va. The popular weight-loss drug Wegovy may be paid for by Medicare 鈥 as long as patients using it also have heart disease and need to reduce the risk of future heart attacks, strokes and other serious problems, federal officials said Thursday, March 21. (AP Photo/Amanda Andrade-Rhoades, File)

Medicare can pay for the popular weight-loss drug Wegovy 鈥 as long as the patients using it also have heart disease and need to reduce the risk of future heart attacks, strokes and other serious problems, federal officials said Thursday.

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services issued new guidance that says Medicare Part D drug benefit plans 鈥 which are offered through private insurers 鈥 could cover anti-obesity drugs that are approved for an additional use.

The move could pave the way for thousands of new prescriptions, resulting in billions of dollars in increased spending, analysts have said.

In practice, the guidance opens the door to wider coverage of Wegovy, the brand name of Novo Nordisk鈥檚 obesity medication semaglutide. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration this month that allows Wegovy to be used to reduce the risk of cardiovascular events in people who are overweight or have obesity and also have existing heart disease.

showed that Wegovy cut the risk of heart attack, stroke and other problems by 20% versus a placebo, or dummy drug, in such patients. Cardiologists and other experts said use of semaglutide to reduce the risk of often fatal or disabling conditions could change the way heart patients are treated.

Wegovy carries a price tag of more than $1,300 a month, or $16,000 per year.

Part D plans could begin covering the drug 鈥渟ome time this year,鈥 said Tricia Neuman, a Medicare policy specialist at KFF, a nonprofit that researches health policy.

鈥淢edicare plans may be reluctant to move quickly to cover Wegovy given its relatively high price, particularly because they won鈥檛 be able to adjust premiums before next year,鈥 she said.

Even if plans do allow coverage, people who meet the criteria may still face other restrictions. Plans may require higher out-of-pocket fees, prior authorizations or step therapy, in which a patient is required to try a lower-cost drug before proceeding to the new treatment, Neuman said.

Medicare Part D plans are prohibited by law from covering obesity medications used for chronic weight management alone, and that would not change, CMS officials said.

Private insurers are evaluating the guidance 鈥 and the new indication for Wegovy 鈥 before making coverage decisions, said a spokesperson for AHIP, America鈥檚 Health Insurance Plans, an industry trade group.

Drugmakers and obesity advocates have been pushing for expanded coverage, that would require Medicare to pay for the obesity drugs.

At issue has been whether the cost of the expensive medications will be offset by the savings of reduced spending on medical care related to obesity 鈥 and, now, heart disease.

One lingering obstacle to broader use is limited supply of the drug, which has been for more than a year, according to the FDA. Novo Nordisk officials say they鈥檙e working to increase production and access.

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The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute鈥檚 Science and Educational Media Group. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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