Bristol's drug pricing
under fire as UK agency rejects Opdivo
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[December 16, 2015]
LONDON (Reuters) - Bristol-Myers
Squibb's closely watched new drug Opdivo, one of the first of a new wave
of cancer medicines that boost the immune system, has been rejected as
too expensive for treating lung cancer by Britain's cost watchdog.
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In draft guidance issued on Wednesday, the National Institute for
Health and Care Excellence (NICE) said using Opdivo, or nivolumab,
in non-small cell lung cancer after chemotherapy did not represent a
cost-effective use of resources.
The U.S. drugmaker said the NICE decision was "deeply
disappointing".
However, the head of Britain's leading cancer research center said
companies needed to do more to bring down the cost of such
treatments.
“Recently we have seen drug companies setting very high prices for
promising immunotherapies, including nivolumab," said Paul Workman,
chief executive of the Institute of Cancer Research.
"There is no question that this pioneering and innovative treatment
improves and extends the life of patients with non-small cell lung
cancer – a disease that has very limited treatment options – but at
this price it is very clearly too expensive."
Immunotherapies offer long-lasting responses in some patients by
releasing the brakes on the immune system, allowing the body's
defenses to recognize and destroy cancer cells, and they are already
starting to change clinical practise.
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But their real promise lies in combination treatments, which will
push up costs further.
"While innovative drugs should command relatively higher prices, the
overall cost of treatment must be affordable," Workman said.
(Reporting by Ben Hirschlerl editing by Jane Merriman and Jason
Neely)
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