West Virginia
Contractor for W. Va. public employees system pays itself way more for some drugs than necessary – Ohio Capital Journal
Express Scripts, the company that handles drug transactions for West Virginia public employees has — in some cases — paid itself more than 100 times as much for the most expensive class of drugs than it could have paid if it had gotten them elsewhere, according to pricing data obtained by the Ohio Capital Journal.
Express Scripts — which is the subject of an antitrust suit in Ohio — did not dispute the data, but a spokesperson said that the company uses its heft as a pharmacy middleman to save customers money. And both Express Scripts and the West Virginia Public Employees Insurance Agency said that one can’t just look at reimbursements for select drugs and draw conclusions about the plans’ overall performance.
Neither responded to some specific questions about Express Scripts’ practices.
In a rapidly consolidating marketplace where just a few players control an ever-wider swath of transactions, Express Scripts is not alone in awarding its own pharmacies huge markups. Similar instances have been found in other insurance systems in other states.
Paying itself and its competitors
The West Virginia Public Employees Insurance Agency, or PEIA, uses St. Louis-based Express Scripts as its pharmacy benefit manager. In that capacity, Express Scripts agrees to cover medications in exchange for discounts from drugmakers. It reconciles claims at the pharmacy counter. It bills the state.
And crucially, it determines how much to reimburse pharmacies that fill prescriptions for the agency.
When it comes to “specialty” drugs — think medicines for diseases such as cancer that can cost thousands of dollars a month — Express Scripts requires PEIA members to get their medicines from its own mail-order pharmacy, Accredo, or from a network of 20 specially qualified pharmacies.
Those pharmacies are located only in patches of West Virginia. There are six in Huntington, two in Morgantown, one in Gallipolis, Ohio, but none in Charleston, the capital city where many state employees and retirees live, according to a list provided by the West Virginia Department of Administration. The others are scattered in small communities across the state.
So it’s unclear how many PEIA members have much of a choice about using a pharmacy other than Accredo when they or their family members are unlucky enough to need a specialty drug.
But it is clear that for at least 23 specialty drugs, Express Scripts has at times paid wildly more to its own mail-order pharmacy than it would have if it used prices listed on publicly available databases.
Fruth Pharmacy owns 17 stores in West Virginia, six in Ohio and one in Kentucky. Late last year, President Lynne Fruth received Accredo pricing information obtained through the PEIA patient portal that contained some eye-popping numbers.
For example, at least sometimes Express Scripts’ Accredo charged West Virginia taxpayers $4,300 for a month’s supply of the prostate cancer drug abiraterone. That’s 110 times as much as the $39 you would pay if you were charged the price on a database kept by the federal government — National Average Drug Acquisition Cost, or NADAC, — plus a $10 dispensing fee.
In the case of the brain cancer drug Temozolomide, the Express Scripts-owned pharmacy charged $12,000 a month more than a Kentucky Medicaid patient would have to pay, according to the Fruth analysis, done by Andy Becker, Fruth’s vice president for pharmacy.
Express Scripts was paying its mail order pharmacy $13,118 a month in taxpayer money for the drug on that day. But a maximum-allowable cost list published by the Kentucky Department of Medicaid priced the drug at $900, according to Becker’s analysis.
In all, it listed 23 drugs for which public pricing was available. Of those, Express Scripts/Accredo upcharges ranged from $109 a month to $12,000. Markups on 17 of the drugs exceeded $2,000 a month.
Who benefits?
The Capital Journal shared the analysis with Express Scripts and West Virginia state officials.
While the size of the markups might appear to be startling, Express Scripts spokeswoman Justine Sessions said they only represent a small selection of the prescriptions her company handles for PEIA.
“Choosing isolated examples of individual medications among the thousands covered by PEIA’s plan does not provide meaningful insights about the overall medication cost, affordability and safety that we help ensure for them and their members,” Sessions said in an email.
In an interview, Fruth said that she didn’t believe Accredo was taking losses on other drugs that came anywhere near matching the markups it was getting on those in Becker’s analysis.
“If it’s OK for you to pay $11,000 for a $900 drug, show me somewhere that you’re dispensing an $11,000 drug and paying only $900 for it,” she said. “I’m absolutely certain that you can’t show me that.”
Analyses show that having only a few drugs responsible for large profits is not unusual.
The drug-pricing analysis firm 3 Axis Advisors in 2020 examined Florida Medicaid data and found that for generic medications, just 1.3% of the drugs dispensed accounted for nearly half (48.3%) of the markups over the prices listed on the NADAC database. In other words, huge markups on a tiny slice of drugs accounted for a huge portion of the profit being taken out of the program.
Also, the Wall Street Journal in September analyzed the cancer drug imatinib and determined that CVS Caremark and Express Scripts — the two largest pharmacy benefit managers — were paying well over 100 times as much for the medication than was Mark Cuban’s Cost Plus Drug Company, which charges a straight 15% markup plus $10 in shipping and dispensing fees. The big PBMs were in many instances paying those high prices to their own mail-order pharmacies, according to the analysis.
In the case of the West Virginia Public Employees Insurance Agency, it’s unclear what portion of expensive specialty drugs are being filled by Express Scripts’ Accredo pharmacy, and what portion is being filled by the members of the 20-store specialty network.
When asked for a specific breakdown, Express Scripts’ Sessions didn’t provide one, saying instead, “The large majority of specialty pharmacy claims are dispensed by network pharmacies other than Accredo.”
Becker of Fruth Pharmacy said his company and others are reluctant to join the network. They suspect that while Express Scripts is reimbursing its own mail-order pharmacy lavishly, it reimburses competitors at rates that don’t meet their costs.
“They’re not going to pay you $1,000 for a $50 drug,” Becker said. “They’re going to pay you $20 for a $50 drug.”
Express Scripts spokeswoman Sessions was asked whether Express Scripts reimbursed its own mail-order pharmacy the same amount for the same drug on the same day as it does and those in its specialty network.
“We offer in-network pharmacies competitive reimbursement rates,” she said.
Congressional concern, investigations and a lawsuit
Sessions said her company’s contract with the tax-funded West Virginia Insurance Agency guarantees savings.
“We ensure that customers receive the best discount on each fill — regardless of where they choose to access their prescriptions,” she said. “Because we offer pricing guarantees that help to control drug spend across drug categories over an annualized period of time, our clients often pay less for drugs overall. Should we fail to meet the pricing guarantees, we make up the financial difference for our clients, which can translate into savings for members.”
But members of the U.S. Senate and other public officials have been questioning such statements.
In the wake of the Wall Street Journal’s reporting last year, U.S. Sens. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., and Mike Braun, R-Ind., wrote Cristi Grimm, Inspector General of the Department of Health and Human Services.
They noted that each of the nation’s big-three pharmacy benefit managers is part of a “vertically integrated” health giant that also combines a major insurer and pharmacy — at least of the mail-order variety. They are: Cigna/Express Scripts, CVS/Aetna and UnitedHealth/OptumRx.
The latter two companies have been also buying up doctors’ offices and if Cigna/Express Scripts is successful in buying Humana, it will be getting into that business as well.
When Braun and Warren say the businesses are vertically integrated, they mean they’re major players in multiple sectors that do business with each other, raising concerns about self dealing. For example, an in-network CVS/Aetna doctor could write a prescription that would be filled at an in-network CVS pharmacy, which would be reimbursed by CVS Caremark, which controls pharmacy networks. Since CVS would be paying itself at each step, it would remove the incentive to keep costs down.
Referring to the high prices for specialty drugs that the Wall Street Journal found the companies paid themselves, Braun and Warren wrote, “One key factor driving these high prices appears to be the fact that insurers own other key links in the drug supply chain: pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) and pharmacies.”
They continued,”Cigna/(Express Scripts), UnitedHealth/(OptumRx), and CVS/Aetna each own or are affiliated with the country’s three largest PBMs, which in theory negotiate drug prices with pharmaceutical manufacturers on behalf of insurers and set prices at the pharmacy. However, when those same insurers and their vertically integrated PBMs also own their own specialty pharmacies, they can profit handsomely. That’s because insurers are not just the payers at the end of the transaction; instead, through their PBMs and pharmacies, they are also the recipients of those funds.”
Regulators and law enforcement are taking note.
In 2022, the Federal Trade Commission announced a major investigation into the practices of the big pharmacy benefit managers.
Then last May, Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost sued Express Scripts, Humana and others under state antitrust law, essentially accusing them of colluding behind a veil of secrecy to fix prices and punish companies that go against them. In the suit, Yost also goes after Ascent, a Switzerland-based “group purchasing organization” formed by Express Scripts’ parent company in 2019. Critics say the purpose of its formation is to avoid scrutiny of its drug-pricing practices.
CVS and UnitedHealth have formed similar companies in recent years. The FTC last year added those companies to its antitrust probe.
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West Virginia
This week in West Virginia history: April 19-25
CHARLESTON, W.Va. — The following events happened on these dates in West Virginia history, compiled by the West Virginia Humanities Council from its online encyclopedia, e-WV.
April 19, 1896: Writer Melville Davisson Post was born in Harrison County. His best-known works are the Randolph Mason series, published in three volumes, and the more successful collection Uncle Abner: Master of Mysteries.
April 19, 1902: Author Jean Lee Latham was born in Buckhannon. She wrote a number of children’s books, including Carry On, Mr. Bowditch, which won the 1956 Newbery Award.
April 20, 1823: Gen. Jesse Lee Reno was born in Wheeling. He graduated from West Point in 1846 with another cadet from western Virginia, Thomas J. Jackson, later known as “Stonewall.” Reno was the highest-ranking officer from present West Virginia killed in the Civil War.
April 20, 1863: President Abraham Lincoln issued a proclamation that in 60 days, West Virginia would become a state. The occasion was marked 100 years later during the state’s Centennial celebration with a special ceremonial session of the West Virginia Legislature on April 20, 1963, in Wheeling.
April 20, 1909: Fiddler Melvin Wine was born near Burnsville in Braxton County. A favorite of old-time music enthusiasts nationally, he was chosen as a National Heritage Fellow in 1991 by the National Endowment for the Arts — the highest recognition given to a folk artist in the United States.
April 20, 1939: Poet Irene McKinney was born in Belington, Barbour County. Gov. Gaston Caperton appointed her state poet laureate in 1993, and she served in that capacity until her death in 2012.
April 21, 1908: Musician Phoeba Cottrell Parsons was born in Calhoun County. Parsons’ traditional clawhammer banjo style, unaccompanied ballad singing, riddles and storytelling have influenced countless younger musicians.

April 21, 1936: President Franklin Roosevelt established the Jefferson National Forest. The West Virginia portion of the forest includes about 19,000 acres in Monroe County.
April 22, 1908: Marshall “Little Sleepy” Glenn was born in Elkins. Glenn coached basketball at West Virginia University from 1934 to 1938 and football from 1937 to 1940. He was inducted into the WVU Sports Hall of Fame in 1992.
April 22, 1948: Grammy-nominated singer-songwriter and musician Larry Groce was born in Dallas, Texas. He is best known as the longtime host and artistic director of the Mountain Stage radio program.
April 22, 2003: Activist Judy Bonds, a Raleigh County native, received the Goldman Environmental Prize for her fight against mountaintop removal mining. Her efforts inspired thousands and turned a local West Virginia issue into a national cause.

April 23, 1857: Andrew S. Rowan was born in Gap Mills, Monroe County. Rowan, a military officer, was chosen as the messenger when President William McKinley wanted to send a message to Cuban Gen. Calixto Garcia during the Spanish-American War. The 1899 pamphlet A Message to Garcia made the incident famous.
April 24, 1865: McNeill’s Rangers surrendered to Union troops at New Creek — now Keyser. The Confederate guerrilla force probably never numbered more than 100 men at any time but managed to inflict regular damage on Union operations.
April 25, 1863: In what became known as the Jones-Imboden Raid, about 1,500 Confederate soldiers under Gen. William “Grumble” Jones advanced through Greenland Gap, a deep pass through New Creek Mountain in present Grant County. The Confederates encountered 87 Union soldiers who held off several assaults before finally surrendering.
April 25, 1923: Union leader Arnold Ray Miller was born at Leewood on Cabin Creek in Kanawha County. In December 1972, he defeated Tony Boyle to become president of the United Mine Workers and served until 1979.

e-WV is a project of the West Virginia Humanities Council. For more information, contact the council at 1310 Kanawha Blvd. E., Charleston, WV 25301, call 304-346-8500 or visit wvencyclopedia.org.
West Virginia
The 2026 WVU Tommy Nickolich Award Goes to a Parkersburg Native
During the Gold-Blue spring game on Saturday, the West Virginia coaching staff named wide receiver Cyrus Traught the recipient of the 2026 Tommy Nikolich Award.
The award, which is always given out at the end of spring ball, recognizes a walk-on team member who has distinguished himself through his attitude and work ethic. The award is presented in memory of Tommy Nickolich, a former WVU player (1980-82) who passed away from cancer in 1983.
Traugh is a Parkersburg native and graduate of Parkersburg South High School. He began his career at Youngstown State before transferring back home to play for the Mountaineers last season. In his final year with the Penguins, he logged 36 receptions, 409 yards, and a team-leading five touchdowns, two of which came against Pitt.
During the 2025 campaign with the Mountaineers, he saw action against Robert Morris and Kansas, playing 10 snaps against the Jayhawks, but did not record any stats.
Head coach Rich Rodriguez has mentioned him twice this spring as someone who has been doing some good things and making progress. Wide receivers coach Ryan Garrett also showed him some love during his press conference last week.
The Mountaineers completely revamped the wide receiver room this offseason, upping the level of talent at both inside and outside receiver spots, but perhaps Traugh can work his way into the mix if he puts together a strong summer and fall camp. If he’s not a regular in the rotation, he’ll serve as a quality depth piece who can play special teams.
Past Nickolich Award winners:
2025: Clay Ash, RB
2024: Avery Wilcox, S
2023: C.J. Cole, WR
2022: Nick Malone, OL
2021: Graeson Malashevich, WR/H
2020: Osman Kamara, S
2019: Jake Abbott, LB
2018: Evan Staley, K
2017: Nick Meadows, LS
2016: Jon Lewis, DL
2015: Justin Arndt, LB
2014: Michael Calicchio, OL
2013: Connor Arlia, WR
2012: Tyler Anderson, DE
2011: Ryan Nehlen, WR
2010: Matt Lindamood, FB
2009: Josh Taylor, DL
2008: Adam Hughes, LS
2007: Andy Emery, LB
2006: Tim Lindsey, LS
2005: George Shehl, H/DB
2004: Jeff Noechel, LB
2003: John Pennington, WR
2002: Moe Fofana, RB
2001: Jeremy Knapp, TE
2000: Ben Collins, LB
1999: Bryan Lorenz, LB
1998: Mark Corman, TE
1997: David Lightcap, DB
1996: Matt Ceresa, OL
1995: Rob Keys, DB
1994: Randy Fulmore, DB
1993: Matt McCulty, WR
1992: Brett Parise, WR, Ray Wilcox, LB
1991: Keith Taparausky, RB
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