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At EPA Congress 2026 in Amsterdam, Anna Smith, NAVLIN Daily's Head of News, spoke with Neil Grubert, independent market access consultant, after his presentation on the key policy changes shaping the global access environmentIn the discussion, Grubert reflected on the interaction between U.S. Most Favored Nation (MFN) policy and changing policies in Europe and beyond, as well as why China deserves more attention Stay tuned as we publish interviews with other speakers and experts we interviewed at EPA
Japan’s Central Social Insurance Medical Council (Chuikyo) has approved the listing of 14 new medicines on the National Health Insurance (NHI) reimbursement price listThe batch includes several high-profile oncology and rare disease therapies, notably Janssen’s Rybrofaz (amivantamab/ vorhyaluronidase alfa), Chugai’s subcutaneous Lunsumio (mosunetuzumab), GSK’s Blenrep (belantamab mafodotin), Servier’s Voranigo (vorasidenib), and PTC Therapeutics’ Sephience (sepiapterin), all of which are expected to achieve peak annual sales exceeding ¥10 billionInterestingly, there are a few medicines that gained regulatory approval in Japan but will not be included in the next NHI listing: GSK's Exdensur (depemokimab), Eli Lilly's Inluriyo (imlunestrant), and Recordati's Inrebic (fedratinib)

Poland’s Ministry of Health has announced the second reimbursement list of 2026, introducing 16 new therapies, primarily in oncology, while extending funding for hundreds of existing treatments and outlining new legislative tools designed to strengthen the country’s pharmaceutical securityAmong the 16 drugs added to the list are Johnson & Johnson Innovative Medicine’s (J&J) Rybrevant (amivantamab) in combination with carboplatin and pemetrexed for adults with advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) with activating epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) exon 20 insertion mutations, BMS’ Breyanzi (lisocabtagene maraleucel) for the treatment of lymphoma in adult patients, and Pierre Fabre’s Braftovi (encorafenib) plus Mektovi (binimetinib) for adult patients with NSCLC with the V600E mutation in the BRAF gene“A new trend since January this year is to include the first equivalents of original drugs in the reimbursement scheme to a greater extent. In this announcement, we have introduced five new substances of significant importance to the population,” Deputy Minister of Health Katarzyna Kacperczyk stated, adding “as many as 243 decisions concern the continuation of therapies already covered by reimbursement”
Astellas has reportedly secured a more favourable price for Izervay (avacincaptad pegol) in Japan, after citing Trump’s Most Favored Nation (MFN) policy when negotiating with the authorities. Okamura did say it remains unclear whether Japanese authorities explicitly considered MFN in their deliberations. However, he noted that “The outcome suggests a shift in the government’s stance”The drug carries a U.S. list price of more than USD 2,000 per vial. In Japan, it was set at ¥142,522 (approximately USD 900)Japan is particularly prominent in MFN deliberations, as it is a reference basket country under all three models, GLOBE, GUARD, and GENEROUS
The U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) released a memo providing further details regarding its short-term plans for covering GLP-1s for obesityAlthough the agency plans to launch its BALANCE demonstration for Medicare Part D in January 2027, CMS is also running a short-term "bridge" program that will operate outside of Medicare Part D’s coverage and payment flow in the interim. According to the agency, beneficiaries enrolled in Medicare Part D who meet the negotiated access criteria will have access to these drugs at a co-pay of $50 per month Meanwhile, CMS also opened the application period for State Medicaid agencies and Medicare Part D Plan sponsors to apply for participation in the BALANCE Model. State Medicaid programs can apply to participate beginning May 1, 2026, with a rolling start, while Part D plans can join beginning January 2027
Pharmaceutical companies could lose regulatory market protection in individual EU countries if they fail to make medicines available within three years of a formal request from national authorities, according to the newly released compromise text of the EU’s revised Pharmaceutical Directive“Where within three years after a Member State submitted its request… the marketing authorization holder has not… made the medicinal product available and supplied it continuously… the market protection… shall not apply within that Member State,” the text statesThe European Parliament's Public Health Committee is expected to vote on the final text on March 18. This will be followed by a vote in the plenary session of the European Parliament and the formal adoption of the legislation by the Council of the EU in a few weeks
Last week, NAVLIN Daily brought you on-the-ground coverage from the EPA Congress in Amsterdam, alongside major policy developments shaping global drug pricing; from rising U.S.–UK tensions over cost controls, to new disclosures showing some voluntary MFN agreements are limited to three years Pfizer withdrew its EMA marketing authorization application for Zumrad (sasanlimab) in non-muscle invasive bladder cancer, meaning that its Joint Clinical Assessment (JCA) has also been discontinued The U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has extended the deadline for drug manufacturers to apply to the voluntary GENEROUS Model; an MFN model that was widely discussed across the EPA congress throughout the week
A panel at the World Evidence, Pricing and Access (EPA) agreed that under Most Favored Nation (MFN), “Launch or no launch [in ex-U.S. markets] becomes a binary decision. If there’s no launch, everybody loses, patients, the healthcare system and the company.”Dierk Neugebauer, VP for market access and government affairs at Bristol Myers Squibb, suggested that markets left unserved by multinational companies could create opportunities for other manufacturers. “China is waiting for something like this,” he said. “If companies decide not to launch in certain markets, others may step into that gap”On top of this, Alan Crowther, general manager at EVERSANA, argued that global pricing is increasingly becoming a “zero-sum game,” while Ulrik Haagen Panton, VP global pricing at Novo Nordisk, suggested “Net price referencing is potentially a dealbreaker" for existing confidential mechanisms
China is rolling out the first eight batches of its centralized procurement round, with contracts active until 2028. Procurement officials are calculating basic quantities, while remaining quantities are allocated by medical institutions to additional suppliers offering prices equal to or below the quotation benchmarksOver 51,000 medical institutions participated in the last procurement round, with 1,091 companies bidding for 4,623 products. The process favored oral solid drugs over injectables and saw strong competition in oncology and chronic disease areas, while specialty drugs drew fewer biddersBig players like Qilu Pharmaceutical excelled, maintaining a win rate above 95%, but hundreds of smaller firms secured just one product. Ambroxol injection led in popularity with 48 suppliers winning bids. Leading manufacturers are likely to grab a larger market share as they ensure stability in supply
Speaking at the World Evidence, Pricing and Access (EPA) Congress in Amsterdam, Sandro Cesaro, Head of Europe Market Access & Pricing at AstraZeneca, encouraged companies to “Act locally, think globally” when launching in the “new world order”While acknowledging that the EU pharma legislation has “a good objective,” Cesaro cautioned that policymakers must avoid introducing conditions that inadvertently undermine incentives for innovationHe warned that the emergence of MFN-type policies could accelerate the trend toward global price interconnectivity, particularly with the proposed net price transparency initiatives that Trump is planning