In the Medicare Part D prescription drug program, the "lesser of" logic ensures that Medicare beneficiaries are not paying more than their Medicare plan's negotiated retail price for their drugs - even when their plan's cost-sharing could amount to a higher price.
For example, if your local pharmacy offers an every-day retail
pharmacy price of
$4 for your prescription (not a sale price) and the retail price is less than your Medicare Part D plan's copay of
$8, you will be charged the lower every-day retail price of
$4. In the same way, if
$4 is your Medicare Part D plan's negotiated retail price for your prescription, you can expect to pay the plan's
$4 negotiated retail drug price and not your plan's
$8 co-pay.
Why is the lessor of rule so important to you?
When you choose a Medicare Part D plan, you may find that one of your low-costing medications is now on a high-costing drug tier - and this may cause some undue stress as you contemplate your increased drug costs. For example, you may use a common medication that has a retail price around
$10, but your Medicare Part D plan has moved the low-cost drug to formulary Tier 3 that has a
$30 co-pay. You
will not pay the
$30 co-pay, but instead, never pay more than your plans
$10 negotiated retail drug price.
Examples of the lessor of logic
The following example is from the 2019 Q1Rx Drug Finder (
Q1Rx.com) using a low-cost generic (Bupropion HCL) that is organized by many Medicare Part D plans as a Tier 3 Preferred Brand Drug. You can see that the first Medicare plan's average retail price for this drug is
$8.92, but the co-pay is
$42 - using the "lessor of logic", you would pay the
$8.92 retail price and
not the $42 co-pay. The second Medicare Part D plan in the list shows an average retail cost of $18.25 with a $47 co-pay, again, you would pay no higher than the retail cost of $18.25 and not the $47 co-pay. (See
Q1Rx.com/2019/FL/60505015801)
Question: Where can I find the "lessor of" rule stated?
You can find the "lesser of" logic in your own Medicare Part D drug plan's Evidence of Coverage document (the 200+ page book that you received either electronically or printed when you enrolled in your plan) and the rule should read something like:
"If your covered drug costs less than the copayment amount listed in the chart, you will pay that lower price for the drug. You pay either the full price of the drug or the copayment amount, whichever is lower." [emphasis added]
The "Lesser of Logic" applied in Medicare Part D prescription drug plans
is also explained in the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
(CMS) Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 5: Benefits and
Beneficiary Protections, in Section 20.6 "Negotiated Prices".
In this section, CMS holds:
"Part D sponsors [such as Aetna or United HealthCare or WellCare] must
provide enrollees with access to negotiated prices for covered Part D
drugs as part of their qualified prescription drug coverage. This
access to negotiated prices must be provided even when no benefits are
otherwise payable on behalf of an enrollee due to the application of a
deductible or other cost-sharing. Negotiated prices will take into
account negotiated price concessions for covered Part D drugs that are
passed through to enrollees at the point of sale, such as:
• Discounts;
• Direct or indirect subsidies;
• Rebates; and
• Other direct or indirect remunerations
In addition, negotiated prices must include any applicable dispensing
fees (discussed in section 20.7 [of the same CMS manual]).
Although negotiated prices do not have to be made available for drugs
that are not covered Part D drugs, they must be made available
throughout the benefit – including in any phase of the benefit, such as
the deductible, in which an enrollee is responsible for 100 percent
cost-sharing – for all covered Part D drugs. Part D sponsors must ensure
that their payment systems are set up to charge beneficiaries the lesser of a drug’s negotiated price or applicable copayment amount in all phases of the benefit.
Example: A beneficiary’s drug is on a $10 cost-sharing tier. However,
the negotiated price of the drug is $4. The beneficiary never pays more
than $4.
In addition, uniform negotiated prices must be available to plan
enrollees for a particular covered Part D drug when purchased from the
same pharmacy. In other words, the negotiated price for a particular
covered Part D drug purchased at a particular pharmacy must always be
the same regardless of what phase of the Part D benefit an enrollee is
in. (To the extent that the negotiated price fluctuates based on
fluctuations in Average Wholesale Price (AWP), the actual cost to the
beneficiary may vary from purchase to purchase; however, the negotiated
rate, absent any contractual changes in the reimbursement rate between
the pharmacy and the Part D sponsor, will remain constant for that
drug.)"
(Rev. 14, Issued; 09-30-11, Effective: 09-30-11, Implementation: 09-30-11) [emphasis added]
This same "Lesser of Logic" concept was also repeated in other CMS examples:
Suppose your Medicare Part D plan has a $310 initial deductible (that
is, you pay 100% of the first $310) and now you only have $75 remaining
before you satisfy this Initial Deductible. You need a refill for one
of your [Tier 3] medications and your drug purchase has a negotiated
retail cost of $100. During your Initial Coverage phase, the co-payment
for this Tier-3 medication is $40 (or you pay $40 and your Medicare
Part D plan pays the remaining $60).
So in our example, you would pay the first $75 to leave the Initial
Deductible phase and then have $25 that was left over [from the original
$100 drug cost] in the Initial Coverage phase [this transaction is also
known as a "
Straddle Claim"]. Since the remaining $25 retail cost is less than the $40 co-pay, you would pay the $25 for a total of $100.
You
would not pay the $40 co-pay because your total would then be $115 -
which is more than the $100 negotiated retail drug price.
Again, you would pay the "lesser of" either the retail price of $100 or the co-payment total of $115.