The $84,000 question: Will focusing on drug prices rein in costs?
The mounting scrutiny of prescription drug prices in the U.S. reached fever pitch when a new drug for hepatitis C was priced at about $1,000 a day. Gilead Sciences' Sovaldi, approved in December, cures the viral liver infection in most cases. it takes about 12 weeks, and costs $84,000.
Health insurers as recently as this week have called the price astronomical and unsustainable. Sovaldi has become the poster child for the outcry over prescription drug prices: In March, Congress sent a letter to Gilead asking it to explain how it set Sovaldi's price, contributing to a swoon in biotech stocks over the following month as investors worried pricing may finally come under pressure in the U.S.
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The problem: Gleevec was priced at about $30,000 when it was approved in 2001, and its cost more than tripled to about $92,000 in 2012. That's lower than other drugs on the market for the disease, like Novartis' Tasigna, at $115,500, and Bristol-Myers Squibb's Sprycel, at $123,500, the authors wrote. The costs, they say, are unsustainable.
Novartis said the majority of patients pay less than $100 out of pocket each month for its CML treatments. Yet doctors argue despite insurance coverage and co-pay assistance, specialty drugs can still be expensive for patients.
"Access really is a problem for a lot of patients in relation to these very costly medicines," said Jerry Avorn, a professor at Harvard Medical School and chief of the Division of Pharmacoepidemiology and Pharmacoeconomics at Brigham and Women's Hospital. "We sometimes think, 'Well, people have insurance, and under Obamacare there's a lot more coverage,' but what that doesn't take into account is that very often there is a very big co-payment that the patient has to come up with that is often many, many hundreds or thousands of dollars."
The American Society of Clinical Oncology, whose annual meeting is in Chicago next week, has started a task force to consider how much value cancer treatments bring patients, aiming to differentiate between those that add just a few weeks or months of survival and have severe side effects and medicines that provide much more substantial benefits.
"It's really the value of the treatment that we're interested in," Lowell Schnipper, chairman of the society's task force and chief of hematology and oncology at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, said in an interview. "By no means is it the focus on cost."
Value vs. price
That balance between value and price is cited frequently by Gilead in its defense of Sovaldi's $84,000 price tag.
"Sovaldi reduces total treatment costs for HCV—taking into account the cost of medications (including those for side effects or complications) and health-care visits—and it represents a finite cure, an important point to consider when comparing the price of a pill or bottle to the lifetime costs of treating a chronic disease," Gilead spokeswoman Cara Miller said in an email.
Some doctors agree.
An index of articles pointing the reader to current information and controversy over the high price of Solvadi.
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