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Eli Lilly said on Tuesday it has begun selling vials of the lowest starter dose of its popular weight-loss drug Zepbound in the United States for $399 for a month supply through its direct-to-consumer website to help increase its availability in the marketplace. Zepbound is typically sold in auto-injector pens, but with easier to manufacture and fill vials Lilly will be able to get the drug to patients more quickly. The 2.

5 milligram and 5mg vials -- the lowest doses of the drug -- will cost $399 and $549 on its website LillyDirect, the company said. It has previously said patients could get the drug in a pen through LillyDirect for $550, making the lowest dose now about $150 less per month, a more than 25% discount. Lilly said the prices were in line with its current offering and a 50% discount to the list prices of competing products, including the popular Wegovy from Danish rival Novo Nordisk.



BMO analyst Evan Seigerman said this is likely a new low price for Lilly, even when taking into account after-market discounts the company gives to big health plans. He estimated that those plans receive Zepbound for between $300 and $400 below the more than $1,000 per month list price. He said Lilly was positioning itself against Novo with patients who may eventually get insurance coverage for the drug.

"I think they're trying to really get more people on (Zepbound) at a price that is more affordable," he added. Lilly and Novo have been struggling to produce enough of their obesity medications to meet soaring demand, but in the last quarter Lilly ramped up its manufacturing while Novo missed expectations. The Indianapolis-based drugmaker raised its sales forecast for the year by $3 billion largely due to demand for its weight-loss and related diabetes medicines.

Lilly's drugs are now listed as available by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, though they are not yet off the FDA's official shortage list where they have been most of the year.

Citi analyst Daniel Grosslight said the move would alleviate the supply bottleneck around auto-injector pens. He said Lilly's offering would take market share from companies offering medications produced by compounding pharmacies, which is allowed in the U.S.

when drugs are in shortage. Should the additional supply in vials get Lilly's drugs removed from the FDA shortage list for good, Seigerman said that would allow the company to more easily sue those selling compounded versions of Zepbound. Shares of Hims and Hers Health, a telehealth company that offers compounded versions of Novo's weight-loss drug for as little as $199 a month, were down nearly 7% at $14.

97. The lowest dose of Novo's Wegovy used to start new patients remains listed as in shortage. Patrik Jonsson, Lilly's president of cardiometabolic health, said in an interview that the vials launch will significantly increase supplies of Zepbound in the U.

S. "We are very confident with both the auto-injectors and the vials that we will be able to supply the needs in the U.S.

marketplace," he said, adding that a big chunk of patients do not progress to higher doses of Zepbound than 5 mg during treatment. Around 86% of commercial healthcare plans cover obesity drugs, according to Lilly. Patients not covered for weight loss, such as those on the U.

S. government's Medicare health plan for older Americans, may otherwise have to pay more than $1,000 out of pocket for a month's supply of Zepbound. Lilly has already launched vials of the product in other countries, including Australia, Canada and Poland, Jonsson said.

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