"Congress has to know how bad this will be for patients," said John
Dwyer, president of Global Alzheimer's Platform Foundation (GAP)
advocacy group.
In a preliminary decision
https://www.reuters.com/business/
healthcare-pharmaceuticals/future-biogens-aduhelm-hinges-us-medicare-alzheimers-coverage-2022-01-11
last week, the U.S. Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services
(CMS), which runs the government health plan for people age 65 and
older, said it would cover Biogen Inc's already approved Aduhelm,
and similar Alzheimer's disease treatments in development, only for
patients enrolled in approved clinical trials.
That plan would severely limit the number of patients receiving the
treatment, undercutting the Food and Drug Administration's
accelerated approval of Aduhelm for patients in the early stages of
the memory-robbing condition.
The public disagreement over the drug's use is unusual for the
agencies, both part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services.
Alzheimer's Association Chief Executive Harry Johns said Medicare's
plan "usurps FDA's role in drug approvals," calling it "an
unprecedented and terrible draft decision."
His group, as well as UsAgainstAlzheimer's and GAP - three of the
biggest Alzheimer patient organizations - said they plan to fight
the decision by appealing to lawmakers, the Biden administration and
the U.S. Health Secretary.
The Alzheimer's Association said it is using "all avenues of
communication" to make its case.
Biogen is also fighting the decision and in a statement said it is
"supportive of the community in raising their voices on this
important issue of access."
The Medicare agency could alter its plan before it is finalized in
April, but it is unclear what new evidence or facts would cause it
to soften its stance.
"There are only two clinical studies ... There isn't any real-world
experience to convince CMS," said James Chambers, a researcher at
the Center for the Evaluation of Value and Risk in Health at Tufts
Medical Center in Boston. "They will receive a lot of outrage as
opposed to new information."
Medicare has opened a 30-day comment period with a final decision
due by April 11.
"If the (CMS) decision changes, it will be because of political
pressure," said Leerink analyst Chris Meekins.
[to top of second column] |
CONTROVERSIAL DECISION
The FDA's June decision
https://www.reuters.com/article/
biogen-alzheimers-fda-idCNL2N2NP12J was the
first approval of an Alzheimer's drug in nearly
two decades, but was a controversial one not
supported by the agency's outside advisers. It
relied on evidence that the drug can reduce
amyloid brain plaques, a likely contributor to
Alzheimer's, rather than proof that it slows
progression of the disease.
Only one of Biogen's two large-scale trials
showed that Aduhelm had an impact on cognition.
The three Alzheimer's patient groups said
Medicare's plan unfairly penalizes people with the disease -
probably because there are so many of them and the cost could be
enormous.
Aduhelm's price - cut recently to $28,200 from $56,000 per year -
sparked concerns about Medicare's budget since Alzheimer's is an
age-related disease and around 85% of people eligible for the drug
are in the government plan.
The number of Americans with Alzheimer's is expected to rise to 13
million by 2050 from more than 6 million currently. Biogen has
estimated that around 1 million would currently be eligible for
Aduhelm.
Other companies, including Biogen partner Eisai Co Ltd and Eli Lilly
and Co, also are pursuing accelerated approval from the FDA for
similar medications.
"This decision was not about Aduhelm alone. This was a decision
about drugs still in trials," said UsAgainstAlzheimer's chairman
George Vradenburg. "It is stunning preemption."
Medicare typically pays for FDA-authorized medications, but by law
is required to cover only products and services deemed "reasonable
and necessary" for diagnosis or treatment.
Vradenburg said his organization is "communicating with Congress and
the Biden Administration" about its dismay.
(Reporting by Deena Beasley in Los Angeles; Editing by Caroline
Humer and Bill Berkrot)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |