U.S.
drug prices should reflect value to patients: expert
panel
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[October 24, 2015]
By Caroline Humer and Bill Berkrot
BOSTON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - A panel of
medical experts said on Friday the prices of prescription medicines in
the United States need to be brought in line with the value they bring
to patients instead of continuing to let drugmakers set any price they
choose.
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"Americans at the same time are getting tremendously ripped off with
drugs and also getting tremendous value and we almost never know
when we're getting ripped off and when we're getting real value and
that has to change," said Steven Pearson, president of the Institute
for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER), an independent non-profit
group that evaluates clinical and cost effectiveness of new
medicines.
Panelists taking part in Drug Pricing: Public Health Implications,
presented by Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in
collaboration with Reuters, saw serious limitations in solutions
being proposed by politicians to rein in prices that are vastly
higher than what the rest of the world pays.
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton recently proposed
capping patient co-pays as a way to help people cope with rising
out-of-pocket medical costs.
But Meredith Rosenthal, professor of Health Economics and Policy at
Harvard, likened that to minor pain relief. "The patient is bleeding
and now you've numbed it ... and you haven't gotten to the root of
the problem."
Calls to allow the government Medicare program to negotiate drug
prices as it does the cost of so many other aspects of medical care
were deemed unrealistic or problematic.
"In this country we are millions of miles away from the idea that
Medicare is going to have some kind of stamp to say here is the
price of a drug," ICER's Pearson said.
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New cancer treatments that can cost well over $100,000 a year, and
far more when combination therapies are used, were of particular
concern.
"I'm appalled at how many Americans are going into bankruptcy
because of outrageous costs," said Dr. Lowell Schnipper, chairman of
the American Society of Clinical Oncology's Value in Cancer Care
Task Force.
He called for a systematic way to determine if a new cancer medicine
is of low, medium or high value to patients, and suggested perhaps
only paying for drugs when they work.
Schnipper was not in favor of solutions that remove incentives for
drugmakers to spend money needed to develop important new medicines.
"As a doctor who treats patients I want new drugs," he said. "Some
of these are nothing short of miraculous. We need to reward
innovation in some way."
(Reporting by Bill Berkrot; Editing by Toni Reinhold)
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