340B could have a new cop on the beat. Hospitals are worried.

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The Trump administration is pushing significant changes to the healthcare status quo that it says will save money, improve oversight and make the $4.9 trillion sector more efficient.

Many of the HHS’ most controversial actions since President Donald Trump took office in January have sparked widespread discussion or been litigated in court as the healthcare industry looks to adjust to the “move fast and break things” mentality of the new Washington.

But one proposal, to reshuffle which HHS agency is responsible for a massive federal drug discount program, has largely flown under the radar — despite the fact that it could have sweeping repercussions on U.S. hospitals and clinics that serve the neediest Americans.

The HHS wants to move oversight of 340B from the Health Resources and Services Administration to the CMS, a move that could prove negative for the the two-thirds of U.S. hospitals that rely 340B to fund patient services, cover uncompensated care and, in some cases, keep their doors open.

The potential change is putting providers on edge. And covered entities are right to be worried, given the CMS’ bellicose history with the program, according to experts.

“This could be truly devastating for some of these covered entity providers,” said Sarah Bowman, a principal with public accounting firm PYA who advises hospitals and health systems on 340B compliance.

But increased scrutiny of how 340B dollars are being generated and used is probably a good thing, especially amid mounting evidence of fraud and abuse in the drug discount program.

“If I was a hospital or a covered entity that was reliant on the 340B program, and I was told anything was going to change, not just who’s regulating it but that anything was going to change, I would be very concerned,” said Antonio Ciaccia, a drug market expert and the president of consultancy 3 Axis Advisors. “And the reason is because 340B has become gasoline in the tank for a lot of these institutions, rightly or wrongly.”

CMS versus 340B

Outside stakeholders scrambled to get a clearer picture of changes afoot at the HHS after Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced a top-to-bottom overhaul of the department in the spring. Rumbles emerged that oversight of 340B could shift from the Health Resources and Services Administration, where the program has sat since it was founded in 1992, to the CMS as part of the restructuring, while HRSA and several other divisions would be folded into the new Administration for a Healthy America.

The HHS’ budget request released early June solidified that top regulators were pursuing those changes.

Shifting the program to CMS will “allow for streamlined processes and the ability to utilize in-house drug-pricing resources and expertise,” the budget document says. Under the proposal, the CMS would have $12 million to oversee 340B, the same budget that HRSA had this year.

Moving 340B under the CMS is not just a routine change to the letterhead, experts said. Instead, it could bode ill for the safety-net providers that benefit from the drug discount program, which was designed to help vulnerable and low-income patients access medications by requiring drugmakers to give discounts on outpatient drugs to certain hospitals and clinics that qualify.

Roughly 3,000 hospitals benefit from discounted drugs under the program, which accounted for a record $66.3 billion in purchases in 2023, according to government data. That’s up more than 50% from $43.9 billion just two years prior.

Critics of 340B say the program has mutated well beyond its original intent. Drugmakers argue that hospitals are manipulating 340B in order to profit, while hospitals say drugmakers are attempting to avoid shelling out discounts they’re owed to protect their bottom lines. That’s as 340B savings can be steep — generally 20% to 50% off the list price of a drug.

In disputes between the hospital and pharmaceutical industries over 340B, HRSA has typically sided with hospitals, which benefit from the agency’s interpretation of 340B law.

But the CMS has a different track record when it’s brushed up against the program.

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