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Dr. Frederick Banting courtesy of the New Tecumseth Public Library

Why Does Insulin Cost More Than Ever? It's All In The Way It's Made

Linda von Wartburg
23 May 2007
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Banting Gives It Away - Insulin was discovered in 1921 by Fred Banting and Charles Best. In a generous gesture that unfortunately didn’t start a trend, they sold the patent for a dollar so that cheap insulin would quickly become available. It worked like a charm: within two years, Eli Lilly had sold 60 million units of its purified extract of pig and cow pancreas.

Patents Premiere

The first insulin did not last long in the body, forcing people with diabetes to inject themselves several times a day with the sword-like needles that were available at the time. In the 1950s, longer-acting insulin was developed to reduce the number of painful injections. Each improvement came with a patent, and each patent came with a price increase. Still, even with the new patents, insulin was fairly cheap. Many people recall paying less than a dollar a vial for insulin in the 1960s. Even in 1975, our editor-in-chief paid only $2.99 a bottle.

The Era of Biologics

In 1978, researchers at the biotech company Genentech did something that had never been done before: they manipulated bacteria into making human insulin. Insulin became the first pharmaceutical biologic; that is, a protein made biologically, by living organisms, instead of chemically. The making of insulin as the first biologic was the dawn of the biotech era.

Eventually, yeasts were also used as tiny insulin-making factories. Once the gene for human insulin was inserted into one yeast DNA, the yeast did what yeasts do: it multiplied ad infinitum, and each new yeast came with a little copy of human insulin. This breakthrough, naturally, carried with it a big, profit-making patent.

Advance of the Analogs

In 1996, the Food and Drug Administration approved the first insulin analog. Newer insulins are called analogs because they’re analogous to human insulin: like it, but not quite exactly. Before being put into the yeast, the human genetic material is slightly changed, to produce slower or quicker acting insulin, for instance. Each one of these improvements comes, of course, with a patent. And all these patented insulins cost - big time.

Where's the Generic?

Eventually, patents do expire. And when patents expire, generics generally leap into the market. Why not generic insulin? Because even though biologics have been on the market since the 1980s, the FDA has never told the generic companies how they can get generic biologics approved. There are no official guidelines for approval of generic insulin.

Generic Shortcuts

Insulin guidelines would need to answer one basic question: whether generic insulin manufacturers can use the usual generic shortcuts to approval. When generic manufacturers copy standard drugs, they aren’t forced to repeat the exhaustive clinical testing that the drugs went through to get approved in the first place. All they need to prove is that the generic version contains the same active ingredient as the name brand, in the same purity, quality, and strength. The generic maker isn’t forced to start from scratch and re-prove the drug’s safety and effectiveness. This shortcut is called “piggybacking” on the clinical studies originally done by the drug company that invented the drug.

FDA Guidelines are a No-Show

Because the FDA has not supplied guidelines to the generic companies on how to achieve approval of generic insulin, they don’t know what to do. Can they piggyback or not? The FDA said in 2001 that it was developing guidelines for approving generic insulin, but it never did. Now the FDA says that it no longer plans to issue guidelines for each biologic medicine, one by one. Instead, it’s announced that it will develop global guidelines applicable to all biologic generics, from simple insulin to the latest super proteins. This announcement has caused a lot of protest because such complex guidelines would take much longer to produce than a single set of guidelines targeted to insulin alone.

No Piggybacking for Biologics, Says the BIO

Some say the FDA’s foot-dragging has been influenced by lobbyists from the Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO), which represents the biotech pharmaceutical companies. The BIO says that the shortcuts awarded to conventional generic drugs don’t apply to biologics, even simple ones like insulin. According to the BIO, the critical element in regular drugs is simply the active ingredient, but for biologics, it’s different: it’s all about the little creatures in the manufacturing process, and that’s much more complex.

Just Give Us A Guideline

For safety reasons, Novo Nordisk and Lilly both oppose the FDA allowing generic insulin to piggyback without repeating clinical studies. But generic drug makers note that biologic insulin has been around since the eighties. It’s relatively simple, they say, and costly clinical trials would only raise the price prohibitively high. They concede that the approval process for generic biologics should be more stringent than for conventional generic drugs. They just want some guidance from
the FDA so they can get started.

Patents Pending

In any case, some biotech companies are beating the generics to the punch by manufacturing cheap editions of their own expired patents. For instance, Novo Nordisk makes ReliOn/Novolin, which is simply its patent-expired biologic human insulin. It’s sold at Wal-Mart for $19.96 a vial.

The problem is, most people favor the newer insulin analogs over the older varieties of insulin. That’s one reason the big pharmaceutical companies aren’t too worried. Even if FDA guidelines are created and generics do make it to market by 2008 or 2009, the major companies don’t expect to lose many patients to generics. Insulin analogs themselves could become targets for generics in 2014, when their patents begin to expire. But by then, the major drug companies are confident that they will have newly patented next generation insulins on the market.

Power to the Diabetic People

In spite of everything, consumers do have influence when it comes to generic insulin, if they choose to wield it. As well-known diabetes blogger Scott Strumello states, “Regardless of which insulin we use personally, we should not tolerate regulatory inaction regarding generic insulin. All people with diabetes should urge their legislators to support legislation that removes barriers to price competition in the insulin market.”

ADDENDUM: On February 14, 2007, Rep. Henry Waxman, Rep. Jo Ann Emerson, and Rep. Frank Pallone, Jr., along with Senators Charles Schumer and Hillary Rodham Clinton, introduced H.R. 1038, the “Access to Life-Saving Medicine Act,” which will establish a process through which the FDA will be able to approve lower-cost copies of biopharmaceuticals. See  Henry Waxman's website for details, and send your support.


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Posted by Anonymous on 12 November 2007

It is not only insulin that is costly, but other aids such as the pen needles as well.. My next door neighbour in India told me that she uses just two pen needles a month for sixty injections (2 a day ). I gave her some pen needles before I left to come back to Canada. We all can do a lot more for any of the less fortunate people any where in the world. Roger M. Natarajan, District Chair, Diabetes Awareness for Nova Scotia Lions.

Posted by Anonymous on 19 November 2007

Anyone in the USA paying over $40/vial of Humulin/Humalog needs to search the canadian pharmacies online.I buy 3 vials of Humalog for $100 shipped to my door. The USA prescription drug market is owned by the corporate profiteers.
"For safety reasons, Novo Nordisk and Lilly both oppose the FDA allowing generic insulin"
No, it is for profit reasons. Novolog was approved by the FDA a year before it became available at US pharmacies because NovoNordisk was working out a deal with EliLilly so that they could both overcharge.
The Metrika company came out with a cheap home A1C test and was immediately purchased by the Bayer Corp and removed from stores. Bayer owns most of the labs that charge $100/A1C test. They killed a great company/product for their profit.
I will know we have turned the corner on this problem when pharmaceutical executives start going to jail.

Posted by Anonymous on 27 December 2007

I'm a type 1 diabetic (12yrs) my average is 7.4 but I just lost my RX coverage and am looking for discount NPH insulin online. I wish that there was generic insulin available. I cannot get individual health insurance in Oregon...you know why. Isn't that discrimination? How can that be legal?
Anyway, do you have a link to cheap insulin?

Posted by Anonymous on 5 January 2008

My 26 year old daughter has type 1. Since late in 1989 she has been dependent on daily insulin doses. She now has a pump which works so well for her but the steep increase in the cost of Humalog has her so frustrated that she just wants to give up.
It is hard enough for all of us to make ends meet and young people are having such a hard time trying to live on their own as it is. How are any of us expected to keep up. It is like the phamaceutical companies are penalizing diabetics for being sick!
It's all upside down!
A mom.

Posted by Anonymous on 27 January 2008

I have been diabetic for over 47 years now. In that time I have heard of countless pie in the sky promises in regards to a cure, and/or improvements in treatment IE. non blood letting testing etc... . I guess my basic comment is that I really don't believe that anyone is working for a cure, when there is as much profit made keeping us on the needle. Pharmaceutical companies are only interested in profit and should be treated like what they are. Extortionists of the worst kind! I am now getting older and have many health problems due to my long term diabetes, if it had not been for the fact that my father worked himself into the grave trying to take care of me, I would have perished years ago. Why doesn't anybody seem to care about diabetics? I believe it's because we can live normal lives if we take care of ourselves. That's right, it's normal to have to test your blood 10 times a day and take on an average of 5 insulin injections a day. If everybody had a normal life like that, how long do you suppose that would stay the standard for normal?

Posted by Anonymous on 28 February 2008

humalog thru canada 29 dollars a vial...with no prescrition needed...here in USA 98 dollars = 1 vial why..do we as a people put up with outright theft from medical industry

Posted by Anonymous on 16 March 2008

Ive been diabetic for nine years and recently lost my medical coverage!! even haveing the medical i had, was a nightmare because i was constantly fighting to get the basic diabetic needs covered.. and it is a real shame that i am 23 years old and i am now fighting for my life.. i live in san diego near the mexican border and am now forced to live in mexico because i bearly can afford cost of living here with the coverage i had!! along withe the two insulins i need the strips and syringes, im looking at a min. of 5-600 a month!! with no med. coverage if anything goes wrong!!

Posted by Andrew Olson on 26 May 2008

I have been buying insulin since I was 19 years old and this past weekend, using a prescription, I was astonishsed at the price for a vial of Regular or 70/30: $128.97!?

Can this be possible? The insurance covered the firrst 68.97 and left me with a $60 per vial bill to pay. I thought a vial of insulin was still in the high $40's range ... is there a possibility of a scam between Walgreen's and the insurers to artificially boost the price? What is a regular retail national price, does anyone know?

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