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480家药企竞逐第十一批集采,国家医保局强调理性报价
2 1 Shi Ji Jing Ji Bao Dao·2025-08-05 09:17

Core Viewpoint - The National Medical Insurance Administration (NMIA) is advancing the 11th batch of drug procurement, focusing on maintaining clinical stability, ensuring quality, preventing collusion, and avoiding excessive competition in the pharmaceutical industry [1][2][6]. Group 1: Drug Procurement Process - Since 2018, the NMIA has successfully conducted ten batches of drug procurement, covering 435 types of drugs, with the 11th batch now underway [1][2]. - The 11th batch includes 55 drugs, with an average of 15 companies per drug, and some drugs having over 40 companies participating [1][3]. - The procurement process aims to optimize price calculations and ensure that the lowest bid is justified and does not fall below production costs [3][6]. Group 2: Market Impact and Drug Types - The 11th batch primarily includes oral sustained-release and injection forms, with 41.8% being oral forms and 40% being injections [3]. - Notable drugs in this batch include cefazolin, famotidine, and various oral sustained-release formulations, with some expected to exceed sales of 1 billion yuan [4][5]. - The NMIA has reported that the cumulative savings from drug procurement since 2018 amount to approximately 440 billion yuan, with over 360 billion yuan allocated for negotiated drug use [5][6]. Group 3: Regulatory and Quality Assurance - The NMIA emphasizes the importance of quality assurance, requiring that selected drugs have not violated production quality standards in the past two years [3][6]. - The regulatory framework has shifted from merely controlling costs to fostering a healthy industry ecosystem that prioritizes quality and reasonable profits [6][8]. - The NMIA is implementing stricter monitoring and evaluation measures for companies involved in drug procurement to ensure compliance and quality [6][7]. Group 4: Future Directions - The NMIA plans to continue normalizing and institutionalizing drug procurement, aiming to include all clinically necessary and reliable drugs in the procurement scope [8][9]. - Future reforms will focus on enhancing quality supervision throughout the drug lifecycle and improving communication among hospitals, insurance, and regulatory bodies [8][9].