| Medicare drug plans that cover seniors like Moore are allowed to 
			charge steep copayments for the latest cancer medications, whose 
			cost can run to tens of thousands of dollars a year. About 1 in 6 
			beneficiaries aren't filling their prescriptions, according to 
			recent research that has put numbers on a worrisome trend. 
 Officials at Medicare say they're not sure what happens to those 
			patients - whether they get less expensive older drugs that 
			sometimes work as well, or they just give up. Traditionally, 
			chemotherapy has been administered intravenously at a clinic or 
			doctor's office. Pills, a relatively new option, are thought to 
			represent the future of cancer care.
 
 Moore, 65, was operated on in February for an advanced form of 
			kidney cancer. She said both her cancer and kidney specialists 
			agreed that a drug called Sutent probably offered the only chance to 
			keep the disease in check. It's a capsule taken at home.
 
 But she was unprepared for what happened when she went to fill her 
			prescription.
 
			
			 
 "I cried," said Moore, who lives in a small town in central 
			California. "What can you do when the only thing out there that can 
			maybe give you some quality of life is unaffordable? I was 
			devastated. I didn't know what to do."
 
 Private insurance companies that deliver the Medicare prescription 
			benefit say the problem is that drug makers charge too much for the 
			medications, some of which were developed from taxpayer-funded 
			research. The pharmaceutical industry faults insurers, saying 
			copayments on drugs are higher than cost-sharing for other medical 
			services, such as hospital care.
 
 Others blame the design of the Medicare prescription benefit itself, 
			because it allows insurers to put expensive drugs on a so-called 
			"specialty tier" with copayments equivalent to 25 percent or more of 
			the cost of the medication.
 
 Drugs for multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis and hepatitis C 
			also wind up on specialty tiers, along with the new anti-cancer 
			pills. Medicare supplemental insurance - Medigap - doesn't cover 
			those copayments.
 
 "This is a benefit design issue," said Dan Mendelson, president of 
			Avalere Health, a research firm that collaborated in a recent 
			medical journal study on the consequences of high copayments for the 
			new cancer drugs.
 
 Cost-sharing should only be used to deter wasteful treatment, he 
			explained. "It is hard to make the argument that someone who has 
			been prescribed an oral cancer medication doesn't need the drug," 
			added Mendelson.
 
 The study last month in the Journal of Oncology Practice found that 
			nearly 16 percent of Medicare beneficiaries did not fill an initial 
			prescription for pills to treat cancer, a significantly higher 
			proportion than the 9 percent of people with private insurance who 
			did not follow through.
 
 Forty-six percent of Medicare beneficiaries faced copayments of more 
			than $500, as compared to only 11 percent of patients with private 
			insurance. Among people of all ages, 1 in 4 who faced a copayment 
			over $500 did not fill their prescriptions. Cancer is more prevalent 
			among older people.
 
 "Obviously, we're leaving a lot of folks off the bus, standing at 
			the curb, if they can't afford the medications," said Dr. Lowell 
			Schnipper, who chairs the American Society of Clinical Oncology's 
			task force on the cost of cancer care. It advises doctors to discuss 
			costs with patients up front, to avoid surprises.
 
 Medicare officials say there are currently no plans to rework the 
			design of the prescription benefit.
 
 
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			column]
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			But "nobody is more concerned about access than we are," said Dr. 
			Jeff Kelman, Medicare's chief medical officer.
 For many seniors, Kelman suggested, the situation is not as bleak as 
			what Moore encountered. For example, the prescription plan is 
			designed so beneficiaries who are poor or near poverty face only 
			token copays. For the rest, President Barack Obama's health care law 
			gradually closes the coverage gap known as the "doughnut hole." This 
			year, the new law provides a 50 percent discount on brand name drugs 
			for those in the gap.
 
 The gap starts after Medicare recipients and their insurance plan 
			have spent $2,840 on medications. After that, seniors are 
			responsible for roughly the next $3,600. Once total spending reaches 
			about $6,440, Medicare's catastrophic coverage kicks in and 
			beneficiaries pay only a small amount.
 
 Yet the health care law 
			could be struck down by the courts or repealed if Republicans win 
			the White House and Congress next year. Even if the law stands, 
			assistance after seniors end up in the gap doesn't take away the 
			initial shock at the pharmacy counter.
 "The underlying problem is with the basic structure," said Joe 
			Baker, president of the Medicare Rights Center, a New-York based 
			advocacy group. "Even before you get to the doughnut hole, you've 
			got a problem."
 
 One solution would involve requiring drug plans to lower copayments 
			for cancer pills. But the trade-off is likely to be an increase in 
			premiums for all beneficiaries.
 
			
			 
 Rita Moore had to try to find her own way out of the dilemma. She 
			lives in Corcoran, Calif., and still works as resident manager of an 
			apartment building for seniors.
 
 Moore decided to apply to Pfizer's prescription assistance program 
			for patients who can't afford Sutent and other drugs the company 
			makes. Pfizer approved a year's worth of free medication, but it 
			took about two months to collect and review all the medical and 
			financial paperwork.
 
 "They were very helpful, but it wasn't a fast process," said Moore. 
			In the meantime, she wasn't being treated. The cancer spread and is 
			now close to her spine and her body's main artery.
 
 "This is kind of strange," Moore said. "After you've worked all your 
			life, you get something catastrophic and you run into news like your 
			drugs are going to cost $2,400."
 
 [Associated Press 
			RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR]Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This 
				material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or 
				redistributed.
 Associated Press Medical Writer Lauran Neergaard contributed to 
			this report.
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