The sneaky way Big Pharma is ripping off cancer patients to the tune of $3 billion per year
Imagine
this scenario. There is only one tire store in your city. You go to the
tire store to get some new tires put on your car. The man behind the
counter tells you that new tires only come in packs of five. So you have
to buy five tires when you may only need four, or two. And there’s one
more thing. You can’t keep the extra tires you paid for. They have to
throw them away.
WASHINGTON
— The U.S. federal Medicare program and private health insurers waste
nearly $3 billion every year buying cancer medicines that are thrown out
because many drug makers distribute the drugs only in vials that hold
too much for most patients.
The
expensive drugs are usually injected by nurses working in doctors’
offices and hospitals who carefully measure the amount needed for a
particular patient and then, because of safety concerns, discard the
rest.
If
drug makers distributed vials containing smaller quantities, nurses
could pick the right volume for a patient and minimize waste. (That
makes way too much sense) Instead, many drug makers exclusively sell
one-size-fits-all vials, ensuring that many smaller patients pay
thousands of dollars for medicine they are never given. This is
according to researchers at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, who published a study on Tuesday in BMJ.
Some
of these medicines are distributed in smaller vial sizes in Europe,
where governments play a more active role than the United States does in
drug pricing and distribution.
“Drug companies are quietly making billions forcing little old ladies to buy enough medicine to treat football players, and regulators have completely missed it,”
said
Dr. Peter B. Bach, director of the Center for Health Policy and
Outcomes at Memorial Sloan Kettering and a co-author of the study. “If
we’re ever going to start saving money in health care, this is an
obvious place to cut.”
The
researchers analyzed the waste generated by the top 20 selling cancer
medicines and concluded that insurers paid drug makers $1.8 billion
annually on discarded quantities and then spent about $1 billion on
markups added by doctors and hospitals.
One
example from the study is Velcade, a multiple myeloma and lymphoma drug
that only comes in 3.5-milligram vials that sell for $1,034. This dose
is enough to treat a person who is 6’6″ and weighs 250lbs. If a patient
is smaller, then a quantity of the precious powder is thrown away.
Lena
Haddad, 53, of Germantown, MD., who has been living with multiple
myeloma for four years, now gets a weekly dose of 1.8 milligrams of
Velcade. On a recent day at Ms. Haddad’s doctor’s office in Bethesda,
Md., a nurse, Patricia Traylor, took a vial of Velcade from a large drug
cabinet. She injected a syringeful of saline into the vial and shook
it, pushed a needle into the vial and withdrew about half the contents.
Then she threw out the vial with the remaining medicine.
Safety
standards permit nurses to use drug leftovers in other patients only if
used within six hours and only in specialized pharmacies.
Told that she was using only about half of the drug that was purchased, Ms. Haddad said she was shocked.
“No wonder my premiums keep going up,” she said.
Medicare
and many private insurers charge patients drug co-payments of as much
as 20%, which can add up to tens of thousands of dollars annually for
the latest drugs; much is spent on cancer medicines that patients never
receive.
Dr.
Dixie-Lee Esseltine, vice president for oncology clinical research at
Takeda, wrote in an email that the pharmaceutical firm “worked closely
with the F.D.A. to establish the Velcade vial size of 3.5 mg to ensure
that one vial of Velcade would provide an adequate amount of the drug
for a patient of almost any size.”
Takeda is expected to earn $309 million this year on supplies of Velcade that are discarded,
an amount that represents 30 percent of the drug’s overall sales in the
United States, the cancer researchers estimated. If Takeda provided an
additional vial size of 0.25 milligram, waste would be slashed by 84
percent, also reducing Velcade’s sales in the United States by $261
million annually, the researchers calculated.
“You
have these incredibly expensive drugs, and you can only buy them in
bulk,” said Dr. Leonard Saltz, who leads the pharmacy and therapeutics
committee at Memorial Sloan Kettering and was a co-author of the study.
“What’s really interesting is they’re selling these drugs in smaller
vials in Europe, where regulators are clearly paying attention to this
issue.”
Velcade is sold in Britain in both 1-milligram and 3.5-milligram vials.
Christopher
Kelly, a spokesman for the FDA, said the agency objected to companies’
proposed vial sizes only if it believed that an excessively large volume
of medicine “could lead to medication errors or safety issues due to
inappropriate multiple dosing.”
In
other words, as long as nurses are not tempted to do anything but
discard additional quantities, the drug agency is fine with extra-large,
one-size-fits-all packaging. Congress has not given the drug agency the
authority to consider cost in its decisions. (Because the
pharmaceutical industry owns congress and the FDA)
“(Drug) companies propose the vial sizes that they would like to market,” Mr. Kelly said.
Rising
drug prices have been a concern for many years, and high initial prices
and subsequent increases are an industrywide phenomenon.
The last 10 cancer drugs approved before July 2015 have an average annual price of $190,217, and major drug makers routinely increase the prices of big sellers by 10% or more each year, far above the rate of inflation.
The industry explains that high prices are needed to fund research, but companies such as Pfizer and Merck spend just 17% of their revenues finding new drugs, according to their financial statements. Far more goes to marketing and profits.
For
decades, cancer doctors largely ignored the issue of pricing, but as
their patients became impoverished, some began to speak up. In 2012, Dr.
Bach and Dr. Saltz wrote an Op-Ed article in The New York Times announcing
that their hospital would not purchase a new cancer drug that was twice
as expensive as but no more effective than an existing medicine. The
maker of the drug slashed its price.
Dr.
Bach and Dr. Saltz say they have since become concerned that prices of
new cancer medicines have almost no connection with their lifesaving
potential. Dr. Bach recently unveiled a complex calculator of drug value.
But
there was nothing complex about measuring the value of a drug that was
thrown away, Dr. Saltz said, since the value to the patient was zero.
The
two doctors have proposed that the government either mandate that drug
makers provide medicines in enough vial sizes to minimize waste, or
mandate that drug makers refund the government for wasted quantities.
Dr.
Saltz first noticed the problem of waste when he was considering adding
Keytruda, a new immunotherapy drug for metastatic lung
cancer and melanoma, to the hospital’s list of drugs to be used on
patients. Although a 150-pound patient would need 136 milligrams of the
drug, Dr. Saltz noticed that Merck, its manufacturer, sold the medicine
only in 50-milligram vials — ensuring waste.
“I thought that was really cynical,” Dr. Saltz said in an interview. “And then it got worse.”
In February 2015, Merck introduced 100-milligram vials and stopped selling Keytruda in 50-milligram vials, ensuring far larger amounts of waste. The company still sells 50-milligram vials of the drug in Europe.
Pamela
L. Eisele, a Merck spokeswoman, said the company hoped to persuade the
F.D.A. to approve a fixed dose of 200 milligrams of Keytruda for all
patients, higher than the dose presently given to nearly all patients.
In studies given to the drug agency, there was no evidence that the
higher dose was more effective, Ms. Eisele said, but the fixed dose
“will eliminate wastage.”
Since
the extra medicine does nothing to help patients, Dr. Bach said that
the company was advocating that waste be injected into patients rather
than thrown away. (This is insane)
Under its present dosing, Merck would earn $2.4 billion over the next five years from discarded quantities of Keytruda, half of which would result from switching to 100-milligram vials, the researchers estimated.
Some
cancer drugs have little waste. Treanda, which is used to treat
leukemia and non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma and is manufactured by Teva
Pharmaceuticals, is packaged in four separate dosages so only 1 percent
of the drug is wasted, on average.
But
18 of the top 20 cancer medicines are sold in just one or two vial
sizes, so on average 10% of the volume of cancer drugs purchased by
doctors and hospitals is discarded, the researchers say.
Article Source New York Times
So here is another giant government flop. FDA has a budget big enough to catch this issue and deal with it. The regulators have a budget large enough to deal with it.
ReplyDeleteBig pharma regulates itself with the lobby forces at the center of it all.
POLITICIANS would be to blame here too.
Health care isn't for the care of people it's for the profit for the corporations who provide it.
It is for insurance companies to fleece the people who have a line item on their pay stub that only goes up every year.
Average increase is 9% to some a whole pay week goes away with the lobby efforts to fleece us.
Thanks to Obama care we will all see the increases year after year.
Unless you work for the TMLWP and you keep the same plan unchanged.
I think the TRUMP for president train can pick up many riders with this issue alone or it already has.
It is my belief Dave that you hit the nail right on the head. Big corporations that are tied to our government just like Fascism seem to be able to do what ever they want to the farm animals with big profits being made all along the way. Public schools turn out obedient workers who do not question authority even when it is a matter of life and death these habit were instilled in our society before any of us were born. A quick read of The Underground History of American Education by John Taylor Gatto over at Templeton Times is a good place to start learning about your obedient worker roots. The irony of this whole article is that chemo-therapy as used currently has been somewhat of a failure when it comes to curing cancer. The book Cancer Step Outside of the Box by Ty Bollinger shows us that their are other answers to cancer if one is willing to look.
ReplyDelete“No wonder my premiums keep going up
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ReplyDelete