Leading oncology group wary of Trump drug
price proposals
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[June 01, 2018]
By Deena Beasley
CHICAGO (Reuters) - America's leading group
of cancer doctors is wary of new Trump administration proposals for
lowering drug costs, warning that patients must not be barred from
medicines that could help them.
The rising cost of cancer care will be in focus during the annual
meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), which
begins on Friday in Chicago. In recent years, potent new immunotherapies
and treatments that target genetic mutations underlying cancer have
successfully curbed disease in some patients.
But they have come with ever-higher price tags, raising new questions
about how much the United States, already the world's most expensive
health system, pays for medical breakthroughs.
President Donald Trump last month unveiled a "blueprint" to reduce drug
prices by promoting the entry of cheaper rivals to existing drugs and
giving private insurers more scope to negotiate prices.
The administration has since requested feedback on a wide range of
proposals, including no longer requiring Medicare, the government health
plan for the elderly, to cover all approved drugs for certain illnesses,
including cancer.
"It is a balancing act, because we do think that there should be an
ability to negotiate price, but we are always driven by our belief that
patients should not be denied the most effective drugs for their
condition," ASCO's chief executive officer, Dr. Clifford Hudis, told
Reuters. Another idea is to change Medicare's reimbursement of doctors
including a fee calculated as a percentage of a drug's price. Critics
say the payments encourages physicians to use the most expensive drugs.
Hudis said ASCO is not opposed to changing the formula, but argues that
oncology practices will still need to be reimbursed for handling
specialized cancer medicines delivered by infusion or injection.
ASCO, the nation's leading association of cancer physicians, said it
will publicize its full response after submitting feedback to the Trump
administration by a July 16 deadline.
EFFECTIVENESS VS PRICE
U.S. spending on cancer drugs reached almost $50 billion last year -
nearly double since 2012 - and is projected to double again to $100
billion in five years, according to IQVIA, which collects drug sales
data.
Expensive new cancer treatments like Merck & Co's $162,000-per-year
immunotherapy Keytruda and Gilead Sciences Inc's $373,000 blood cancer
therapy Yescarta, which have helped some patients survive previously
untreatable disease, are contributing to the increase.
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President Donald Trump delivers a speech about lowering prescription
drug prices from the Rose Garden at the White House in Washington,
U.S., May 11, 2018. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
But so are much less effective drugs without competitors whose
prices are raised by manufacturers each year. Oncologists and other
specialists benefit by increases on drugs that are administered in
their offices.
Without percentage-based fees, oncology practices would lose "their
ability to make considerable sums off their relationship with the
pharmaceutical industry," said Dr. Peter Bach, director of Memorial
Sloan Kettering's Center for Health Policy Outcomes in New York.
ASCO and other institutions have proposed their own methods for
reducing healthcare costs, but stopped short of urging drugmakers to
lower prices. ASCO has recommended ranking drugs on their
comparative clinical value, including relative efficacy and side
effects, but not price. The group has also suggested that the price
of a cancer drug could vary depending on how effective it is for a
specific indication, or how well an individual patient fares after
the treatment.
The association does not support moving to a flat fee for treating
cancer patients, including drugs, an approach that is being used in
other specialties. That "could force providers to make suboptimal or
lower-value choices," the organization said. At ASCO's annual
meeting, which runs from June 1-5, cancer researchers will provide
new data on survival rates with Keytruda, on the emerging class of
CAR-T cell treatments for blood cancers and on genetically targeted
therapies.
Some research will address the cost question, including a comparison
of treatment costs and outcomes for colon cancer patients in the
United States and Canada.
(Reporting by Deena Beasley; Editing by Michele Gershberg and Leslie
Adler)
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