March 10, 2014

Prices of new hepatitis C drugs are tough to swallow for insurers

Peovided by The L.A. Times

Hepatitis C drugs Sovaldi and Olysio offer much better cure rates than other therapies, but they can cost up to $1,000 a pill, a potentially staggering cost to taxpayers and health plans.

la-blm-gilead-milligan-jpg-20140309

Gilead Sciences says its new hepatitis C therapy, Sovaldi, helps avoid the long-term medical expenses related to liver failure, cancer and transplants. But some pills can cost up to $1,000 each. (Victor J. Blue, Bloomberg / February 11, 2014)

By Chad Terhune and Eryn Brown
March 9, 2014, 5:50 p.m.

A pair of new drugs to treat hepatitis C offer a cure for millions of Americans afflicted with the disease — but at a potentially staggering cost to taxpayers and health plans.

Until now, therapies for hepatitis C helped only about half of patients and posed numerous side effects, such as flu-like symptoms, anemia or depression. In comparison, clinical trials of Sovaldi and Olysio have shown cure rates of 80% to 90% with far fewer complications.

That progress, though, comes at a price.

A 12-week course of Sovaldi can cost $84,000, or about $1,000 a pill, and some patients may require two courses. Treatment with Olysio runs more than $66,000. Using either one, many patients wouldn't require significant treatment again.

"It could be the right thing to do clinically, but at this price, can we afford it?" said Steven Pearson, president of the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review, a nonprofit group in Boston that analyzes the effectiveness and cost of new treatments. "It's a tough ethical and financial quandary."

In a new report, the institute estimates it would cost $6.3 billion to provide the two drugs to Californians with more advanced liver disease from hepatitis C. The annual cost could top $18 billion if half of all California patients with hepatitis C received the medications.

Drugs for some types of cancer, multiple sclerosis and rare illnesses can carry similar price tags. But few of those drugs would be prescribed so widely. And the increased costs for new drugs are often passed along to consumers in the form of higher health insurance premiums.

Left unchecked, some hepatitis C infections result in liver damage, liver cancer or death. Chronic hepatitis C infection affects about 3 million people in the U.S., and it's the leading cause of liver transplants in the nation.

On Monday, a panel of medical experts will meet in San Francisco to examine the use of Sovaldi and Olysio, which federal regulators approved late last year, and to recommend treatment guidelines.

The discussion will revolve around which patients are the best candidates for these medications and whether doctors should advise other patients to wait until their disease worsens, given the high prices.

Those types of restrictions trouble some patient advocates who favor full access. Of the two drugs, Sovaldi is viewed as a potential blockbuster along the lines of the cholesterol-fighting Lipitor.

Employers and health insurers warn that Sovaldi and Olysio are just the beginning of other expensive specialty drugs coming to market. They say that their rapid growth could undermine efforts to rein in medical spending.

The pharmaceutical companies behind the hepatitis C drugs defended their pricing by noting that the medicines represent a major advancement compared with current treatments. Gilead Sciences Inc. in Foster City, Calif., sells Sovaldi, and Olysio comes from Janssen Therapeutics, a unit of healthcare giant Johnson & Johnson.

Both companies said discounts and other financial assistance are available to government health programs and low-income patients.

Gilead said the new therapies also help avoid the long-term medical expenses related to liver failure, cancer and transplants. A liver transplant, for instance, can cost more than $500,000, not including a lifetime of follow-up care.

"Sovaldi is a short-term treatment that results in very high cure rates that can avoid future costs related to disease progression or treatment failure," said Gregg Alton, an executive vice president at Gilead.

Craig Stoltz, a spokesman for Janssen, said the price of Olysio "reflects its value."

Medi-Cal officials said they don't know yet how many patients may need the new drugs. More than 1,500 Medi-Cal patients are prescribed drugs for hepatitis C now.

"These new drugs are expensive," said Medi-Cal spokesman Norman Williams. "Medi-Cal is currently negotiating with the drug manufacturers for a state supplemental rebate."

California said no decision has been made on requests from Medi-Cal managed-care plans to carve out these drugs from already negotiated rates and reimburse insurers separately for them.

Molina Healthcare Inc., a major Medicaid managed-care plan in California and 10 other states, has asked health officials across the country for guidance on how to proceed with patients.

"I'm scratching my head why the American taxpayer is being asked to pay such an enormous price for this drug," said J. Mario Molina, the company's chief executive.

WellPoint Inc., the nation's second-largest health insurer, said it costs nearly 50% more, on average, to treat hepatitis C patients on its state Medicaid plans since the newer drugs were introduced.

"While new drug treatments for hepatitis C have shown to be highly effective, these drugs could have a serious impact on premiums," said Charles Bacchi, executive vice president at the California Assn. of Health Plans, an industry trade group.

As with many new drugs, Medi-Cal is requiring prior authorization before patients can receive them. Some health insurers may require patients to try older, less expensive treatments first.

The potential pool of hepatitis C patients is expected to grow as more screening occurs. Federal officials have recommended that all baby boomers be tested for hepatitis C because researchers have found a higher prevalence of the disease among that group.

Hepatitis C can go undetected for years and many people show no symptoms. The transmission of the disease is often associated with intravenous drug use. But people have contracted it in the past through blood transfusions, transplants or, in some cases, sexual contact.

Thus far, existing patients have been able to receive the new treatments.

Uninsured low-income patients treated in Los Angeles County facilities have been receiving the drugs free under the manufacturers' assistance programs, said Dr. Mitchell Katz, director of the county Department of Health Services.

Project Inform, an HIV and hepatitis advocacy organization in San Francisco, said that callers to its help line have not reported trouble getting the new medicines.

But David Evans, director of research advocacy at Project Inform, said he's concerned that could change if insurers or public programs begin "rationing" therapy for only the sickest patients.

"We should be pushing all of the payers to give access," Evans said. "Don't punish the patients because they have hepatitis."

For many years, the standard treatment for hepatitis C patients was a combination of interferon and a drug called ribavirin. Starting in 2011, doctors added new antiviral drugs to the mix.

Like those medications, Olysio is approved for use with interferon and ribavirin.

But the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved Sovaldi for use without interferon and ribavirin in certain cases. That has opened up the possibility of treating many patients who couldn't tolerate the side effects of interferon, said Dr. Rena Fox, a professor of medicine at UC San Francisco.

Sovaldi, Fox said, is the "true game changer."

Source

No comments:

Post a Comment