The approvals from the Florida and Alabama Medicaid health programs
for the poor and disabled mark exceptionally fast acceptance for the
treatment, which can cost up to $113,000 annually for an individual
patient, excluding discounts, said Ameet Mallik, who heads the Swiss
drugmaker's oncology division.
In November, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved Adakveo
and Global Blood Therapeutic Inc's <GBT.O> Oxbryta, which carries a
list price of $125,000 per year.
They are among the first therapies that aim to provide significant
relief from painful symptoms or address the cause of sickle cell
disease, a potentially lethal ailment in which deformed blood cells
limit the oxygen supply to parts of the body.
Strong uptake by Medicaid programs is central to Novartis' goal of
making Adakveo a $1 billion drug, since a high percentage of sickle
cell patients rely on the state-run health programs. Analysts at
Cowen & Co forecast peak annual U.S. Oxbryta sales reaching $1.7
billion.
GBT spokesman Steven Immergut said some health plans, including
private insurers as well as government-run Medicaid and Medicare,
have started to cover Oxbryta on a case-by-case basis. The company
said it has received positive feedback from payers in early
discussions.
Depending on the state, Medicaid can take as long as 12-to-18 months
to approve new medications, particularly expensive ones that put a
strain on state budgets. GBT has said it expects most Medicaid
programs to take at least three-to-six months to approve its drugs.
The majority of the nearly 100,000 people in the United States with
sickle cell anemia are African American. Around 85 percent of sickle
cell patients live in 17 U.S. states, including Florida and Alabama,
and more than half are insured either by Medicare or Medicaid,
according to Novartis and GBT.
'HISTORIC TIME FOR THE SICKLE CELL COMMUNITY' Adakveo is a biologic
drug injected into patients several times each month to prevent the
pain crises often associated with sickle cell disease.
Oxbryta is a once daily pill that treats the disease's underlying
cause by raising hemoglobin levels and preventing the breakdown of
red blood cells into a sickle - or crescent moon - shape.
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Their different impacts on the disease has raised the prospect that
both drugs would be prescribed simultaneously, creating a greater
cost burden to the U.S. healthcare systems.
Florida approved the Novartis drug with a requirement that patients
receive prior authorization from their physician, Mallik said,
meaning that the state would review any prescriptions to make sure
that patients meet certain criteria. Alabama approved it without
restrictions, he added.
Although state Medicaid programs cannot simply refuse to cover
FDA-approved drugs, they can attempt to save money by moving slowly
to place the drug on reimbursement formularies or by requiring
patients to go through extra steps to obtain reimbursement. A
Novartis cancer therapy, Kymriah, which costs as much as $475,000,
is still not covered by Medicaid in every state despite having been
approved two years ago, Mallik said.
Both Novartis and GBT began meeting with state Medicaid officials
ahead of the FDA approvals to discuss the treatment and have
advocated for its inclusion on formularies, or official
reimbursement lists, both companies told Reuters.
"We have been meeting with both government and commercial payers for
several months – initially educating about sickle hemoglobin
polymerization and, more recently, about Oxbryta," Immergut said.
Patient advocacy groups, such as the state-level chapters of the
Sickle Cell Disease Association of America (SCDAA), also are meeting
with policymakers to encourage them to make the drug accessible to
patients, said Biree Andemariam, the group's chief medical officer.
"This is a really historic time for the sickle cell community," she
said. "Patients are ready to take advantage of these new
treatments."
(Reporting by Carl O'Donnell in New York and Tamara Matthias in
Bengaluru; Editing by Michele Gershberg and Bill Berkrot)
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