The March 2019 Medicare Part D plan formulary (drug lists) data includes the addition of 198 new
National Drug Codes (NDCs) to the Medicare Part D program. These NDCs represent 137 different drugs, many with multiple strengths.
72 New Generic Drugs Introduced in March 2019
See our article
https://Q1News.com/747.html for highlights of the 72 newly-added generics.
35 New Brand-Name Drugs Introduced
In addition to the 72 new generics, 35 new brand-name drugs, some with multiple strengths, were added to Medicare Part D plan formularies. These drugs include, AJOVY®, ALTRENO®, ARIKAYCE®, BRAFTOVI®, BRYHALI®, COPIKTRA®, DELSTRIGO®, EMGALITY®, EPIDIOLEX®, EVEKEO®, GALAFOLD®, ILUMYA®, LOKELMA®, LORBRENA®, MEKTOVI®, MULPLETA®, NALFON®, NIVESTYM®, NOCDURNA®, ORILISSA®, PANZYGA®, PIFELTRO®, PLIXDA®, RELEXXII®, SYMTUZA®, TAKHZYRO®, TALZENNA®, TIBSOVO®, TIGLUTIK®, VIZIMPRO®, XEPI®, XOFLUZA®, XYOSTED®, YUPELRI®, ZTLIDO®.
What is the NDC?
The
NDC uniquely identifies a particular drug, manufacturer, strength, and packaging combination. The NDC is often shown on your prescription bottle as an 11-digit code (see the charts below) or could be formatted as 00000-0000-00 where the first set of numbers identifies the manufacturer, the second set of number identifies the product and strength, and the third set of numbers identifies the packaging. You can read more here:
https://Q1FAQ.com/155.html
There are many reasons for NDCs to be added to the Medicare Part D program, a summary for all 198 new NDCs is as follows:
Reason for NDC Addition |
Occurrences |
New Delivery Form |
7 |
New Drug |
59 |
New Drug and Strength |
73 |
New Manufacturer |
24 |
New Manufacturer and Delivery Form |
1 |
New Manufacturer and Strength |
8 |
New Packaging |
6 |
New Strength |
17 |
New Strength and Delivery Form
|
3 |
Total New NDCs |
198 |
Reminder:
(1) Medicare Part D plans (
PDPs and MAPDs) can change their formulary or drug list during the year and may drop one of your formulary medication mid-year for specific
Medicare-allowable reasons (such as a new generic drug is available), but there are
steps you can take if your medication is no longer covered by your prescription drug plan.
(2) Your Medicare Part D plan
may notify you if the plan drops a medication you are currently using - unless a brand-name drug is being replaced with a generic equivalent.
The following chart details the first 198 new manufacturer / drug-strength / packaging combinations (NDCs) that were added to one or more Medicare Part D formularies in the most recent updates. You can click on the Drug Code (NDC) or Drug Name below to go to our Q1Medicare.com Drug Finder (
Q1Rx.com) to see the details of how this drug is covered by all Medicare Part D Plans in Florida -- You can then change the state to your state for details in your service area.