Spark Therapeutics, whose Luxturna treatment has been recommended
for U.S. approval, told investors last week there was a case for
valuing it at more than $1 million per patient, although it has yet
to set an actual price.
However, the U.S. Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER)
said this week "at a placeholder price of $1,000,000, the high cost
makes this unlikely to be a cost-effective intervention at commonly
used cost-effectiveness thresholds".
The ICER analysis did concede Luxturna was likely to be more
cost-effective for younger patients.
The expected U.S. approval of Luxturna by Jan. 12 is seen as
kick-starting the sector, following disappointing sales of the first
two gene therapies in Europe.
More treatments based on fixing faulty genes using viruses to carry
DNA into cells are coming from companies like Bluebird Bio <BLUE.O>,
BioMarin <BMRN.O> and Sangamo <SGMO.O>.
Spark's Chief Financial Officer Stephen Webster said on Thursday
that gene therapy was upending conventional thinking by offering a
one-time cure, rather than years of repeat prescriptions, but health
systems were struggling to keep pace.
"Gene therapy creates an unusual conundrum because we are fitting a
round peg in a square hole ... it's tough," he told a Jefferies
healthcare conference in London.
Spark would like to say "if it works, pay us, and if it stops
working, stop paying us", Webster told the meeting.
But for Luxturna, which cost some $400 million to develop, such an
offer was impractical, given the mechanics of the U.S. system and a
reluctance by big health plans to move away from upfront payments
for rare disease drugs.
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Longer-term, pay-for-performance models could be adopted for
haemophilia, where the benefits of one-time treatment can be weighed
against the huge cost of regular infusions of blood-clotting
factors, Webster said.
A one-off treatment would slash the need for such expensive care.
But there are also indirect costs and quality of life benefits -
especially in a condition like blindness - that manufacturers argue
should be recognized.
Nightstar Therapeutics CEO David Fellows, whose company is also
developing gene therapies for eye disorders, said calculating gene
therapy's true value was not easy.
"Trying to capture all this into some sort of price algorithm is
very challenging. But we are trying to quantify the emotional
impact, the care-giver impact, the effect on careers and so on," he
told the conference.
(Reporting by Ben Hirschler; editing by Alexander Smith)
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