Dr. Richard Isaacs, MD: Big Pharma has the upper hand and they know it
There has been an alarming upward trend in
the costs of similar treatments, as more drugs are developed and come on to the
market, new Pharmac figures show.
And as the price of life-saving medicines
soar and pharmaceutical companies show no signs of justifying their costs, the
Government is warning that something has got to give.
Pharmac, the Government's drug buying agency,
began funding a key blood cancer drug Thalidomide, manufactured by drug giant
Celgene, in 2002. While the true costs of what Pharmac pays are confidential,
the list price for the drug in 2002 was $360, based on a daily average dose for
a month.
Compare that with a later iteration of the
same drug - Lenalidomide - which in 2014 carried a list price of $8353. A third
option for blood cancer patients, whose condition might not respond so well to
the first two, was Bortezomib, which had a list price of $9742.
The benefits of treating cancer with any of
the drugs were similar, and limited studies comparing Lenalidomide and
Thalidomide showed no survival difference.
When it came to differing forms of
chemotherapy for breast cancer, list prices had risen 443 per cent.
Anthracycline, a common chemotherapy, was
listed at $975 in 2002. As two more options came onto the market - Docetaxel,
also in 2002, and Trastuzumab, in 2007 - list prices rose to $2488 and $5300
respectively.
A similar trend was also shown across
medicines for the treatment of kidney cancer, and lung cancer, rising 411 and
44 per cent respectively.
While all those costs related to the
list-price of the medicines, chief executive Steffan Crauzas said Pharmac did
not pay that much.
How much less Pharmac paid was confidential,
but the increase in the list-price showed an alarming trend that the overall
cost of providing New Zealanders access to medicines was becoming more
difficult.
Costs were symptomatic of a price-war raging
overseas, where the medicines market was not so tightly controlled by a public
purchaser.
According to the World Health Organisation,
medicines accounted for over half of total health expenditures and were often
"unavailable and unaffordable to consumers who need them".
It recommended making some essential medicines
exempt from taxation.
Breast Cancer Aotearoa Coalition chair Libby
Burgess, who led a campaign for the public funding of breast cancer drug
Herceptin, said the problem was the Pharmac model.
She cited Australia, where two separate
bodies took care of funding decisions and then purchase of the medicines
respectively.
"All of that happens under one roof in
Pharmac, which means it’s very easy for one part of the process to compromise
another."
MidCentral DHB Oncologist Dr. Richard Isaacs
said the prices big pharma was charging was "gobsmacking".
"There's been a lot of criticism of
Pharmac over the years, and I was involved in advocating for Herceptin, but I
strongly believe now there needs to be a strong focus on the costs that pharma
are charging when they introduce new targeted therapies into the market.
"We certainly can't afford all of them
and I think our process of carefully assessing the drugs is a good one."
Associate Health Minister Peter Dunne said
Pharmaceutical companies needed to justify their costs more.
"I think that there's a real question
about how everything starts with several zeros behind it, and think that is a
question mark... but it may not solve the issue as far as access to medicines
in New Zealand is concerned."
Instead, it was Pharmac that would likely
undergo changes in the next 10 to 15 years. Those changes were unlikely to be
the kind Burgess was after, however.
"Pharmac are remarkably skillfull... and
they are able to put these packages together, which are impressive. But the
issue I thought they would have done a little more on, is actually evaluating
their decisions; was there a benefit from funding Herceptin, for instance?
"We can be confident in the model at the
moment, and in the forseeable future. But that's not going to [last
forever]." Dunne said.
"[Drug companies] have got the upper
hand, and they know it. At the end of the day, no government is going to deny
its citizens access to medicines."
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