Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison is leading a bipartisan group of 32 attorneys general asking the U.S. Supreme Court to review a case that could otherwise limit state regulation of pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs).
These companies are hired by health insurers to manage drug benefits within heath plans, which includes everything from setting co-pays for medications to creating pharmacy networks where patients can fill prescriptions.
Minnesota, Oklahoma and other states say PBM practices, in some cases, have enriched insurance companies, hurt independent pharmacies and made it harder for patients to afford and access their medicines.
In August 2023, an appellate court sided with the Pharmaceutical Care Management Association, a trade group for PBMs, in a legal challenge to certain regulations for how companies can manage pharmacy networks in Oklahoma.
“Review by this court is therefore necessary to ensure that states continue to be able to enforce needed consumer protections and prevent the blatant abuses that PBMs would otherwise engage in,” the attorneys general said in an amicus brief filed Monday with the Supreme Court.
The Pharmaceutical Care Management Association said it would continue to defend the appellate court’s decision.
“The Oklahoma law is designed to regulate how employers and unions structure their prescription drug benefits,” Greg Lopes, a spokesman for the trade group, said in a statement to the Star Tribune. “Requiring plan sponsors to include unsafe or inefficient pharmacies in their provider networks, and forbidding health plans from using common cost-containment tools like preferred networks, will increase prescription drug costs for plans and patients.”
Minnesota is home to two of the nation’s largest PBMs.