The department of pharmaceuticals has asked the National Pharmaceutical Pricing Authority to review Eli Lilly’s imported insulin prices, kept in check in recent months.
The move could result in prices of imported insulin rising, against the regulator’s attempt to pull these down.
The department, in a recent order, asked NPPA to revisit prices fixed for Eli Lilly’s five imported insulin products and bring these at par with other imported products.
It also asked the regulator to reconsider the relevant information and applicable norms while fixing prices.
The order points out that NPPA must regulate prices within the scope of the Drugs Prices Control Order, unless it is amended.
This comes in the wake of fresh guidelines issued by NPPA, lowering the margin of pharma companies on imported drugs. While the DPCO provides for maximum allowable post manufacturing expenses to “not exceed 50 per cent”, NPPA, through guidelines issued in 2011, changed the margin “to 35 per cent” .
Therefore, these norms formed the basis for price fixation of imported products by Eli Lilly and other such companies.
“This is amendment of the substantive provision of DPCO, (19)95 by changing a variable to fixed percentage based on the availability of the local substitute, which could be one of the factors and not the only factor.
"NPPA has limited the scope of the DPCO, which is beyond the powers of NPPA,” the department said in its order to NPPA.
It added, DPCO provides that landed cost shall form the basis for fixing prices of imported medicines ,with a margin to cover selling and distribution expenses, including interest and importers’ profit, which “shall not exceed 50 per cent”