Americans, regardless of their insurance status, can now access 's most for $35 through the prescription drug savings company , the companies Thursday.

Patients with a valid prescription can specifically access a $35 coupon for Sanofi's Lantus on GoodRx's site and redeem it at more than 70,000 retail pharmacies across the U.S., including , and .

The effort aims to make the $35 price point for Lantus more widely accessible to Americans, even after Sanofi — along with its rivals and — announced sweeping insulin price cuts and out-of-pocket cost caps earlier this year.

Those three companies, which control more than 90% of the global insulin market, moved to slash prices after years of political pressure and public outrage over the high costs of diabetes care in the U.S. Americans pay for insulin than other developed countries, making diabetes the country's .

Sanofi said in March that it would lower list prices for Lantus and cap out-of-pocket costs for people with insurance at $35 a month. But the change won't be effective until January.

The French company also has an existing patient assistance program to cap insulin prices for uninsured diabetes patients at the same price. But some patients have struggled to access the $35 price point, even with that program in place.

That's due to low awareness among patients about copay cards and patient savings programs that can assist with out-of-pocket costs. Health experts and patient advocates have raised concerns that , which manufacturers run, often require people to jump through hoops just to save money.

Pharma companies spend more than $5 billion on marketing patient support programs every year, but only 3% of patients actually use them, according to a from Phreesia Life Sciences.

President Inflation Reduction Act costs for Medicare beneficiaries at $35, but it did not provide protection to diabetes patients who have private insurance.

Roughly 37 million people in the U.S., or 11.3% of the country's population, have diabetes, according to the . Approximately 8.4 million diabetes patients rely on insulin, the said.

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