AIDS,
cancer drug Daraprim hiked... (Image source: Bobby Rhymes on Twitter)
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The medical community is
outraged by a 5,500 percent price hike for Daraprim, after a big NY-based
pharmaceutical company purchased the patent for it. The drug has been on the
market for over 60 years, and can be essential to certain AIDS and cancer
treatments. The
New York-based Turing Pharmaceuticals raised the price of Daraprim from US$13.50
to US$750 per pill in just over a month after buying the rights for the drug
from Impax Laboratories.
The
drug is used to treat toxoplasmosis, the second most common food-borne disease
that affects patients suffering from AIDS and cancer. It has been produced
since 1953 and is on the WHO List of Essential Medicines. But now medical
associations are beating their drums about the sudden price hike and potential
affordability of Daraprim as a treatment.
RT report continues:
In
an open letter to Turing, the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) and
HIV Medicine Association (HIVMA), have asked the company to reconsider the new
price.
“This
cost is unjustifiable for the medically vulnerable patient population in need
of this medication and unsustainable for the health care system,” IDSA and
HIVMA said.
Both
NGOs say that treating toxoplasmosis, which can affect the brain, potentially
leading to blindness and brain damage, is simply not cost effective.
“Under
the current pricing structure, it is estimated that the annual cost of
treatment for toxoplasmosis, for the pyrimethamine component alone, will be US$336,000
for patients who weigh less than 60kg and US$634,500 for patients who weigh
more than 60kg,” the NGOs wrote.
About
60 million people in the United States may carry toxoplasmosis, a life
threatening disease transmitted by eating under-cooked meat, drinking unclean
water, and being in contact with infected cat feces. But not all patients in
the US have medical insurance that can compensate for the cost of the drug,
especially young mothers who can pass on the decease to their child.
“What
we’re seeing is that this is going to disproportionately impact individuals who
may not have insurance … [and] may be more likely to have other barriers to
health care, including transportation, poverty and stigma,” Wendy S. Armstrong,
vice chair of HIVMA, told Infectious Disease News.
People
whose insurance plans require a 20 percent co-payment of the cost would be
required to cough up US$150 a pill.
Explaining
the price rise to USA Today, Martin Shkreli, the founder and chief executive of
Turing, said the company needed to raise tariffs in order to fund its research
work on toxoplasmosis, along with new education programs about the disease.
“This
isn't the greedy drug company trying to gouge patients, it is us trying to stay
in business,” Shkreli said, adding that many patients use the drug for less
than a year. “This is still one of the smallest pharmaceutical products in the
world,” he said.
Shkreli
also said that Daraprim will have little impact on the US health care system as
it is so rarely used. “It really doesn't make sense to get any criticism for this,”
he stressed.
However,
according to IDSA and HIVMA, there is an apparent shortage in supplies of the
drug.
“The
supply issues have been very significant for us,” Armstrong said. “We’ve been,
frankly, unable to get the drug for a significant period of time.”
In
response to the letter from IDSA and HIVMA, Eliseo Salinas, R&D president
at Turing Pharmaceuticals said that Daraprim can always be purchased from
Turing’s exclusive distributor.
“We
fully understand your concerns about the cost to hospital pharmacies,” Salinas
wrote in the letter obtained from IDSA/HIVMA. “The pharmaceutical pricing model
is extraordinarily complex, but I believe your estimate of treatment costs
cannot be generalized.”
As far as the pricing goes,
Craig Rothenberg, chief communication officer of Turing Pharmaceuticals, told
Infectious Disease News, that the company has devised a scheme to aid
toxoplasmosis patients in financial need. The company claims to have launched a
co-pay assistance program and the “extension of a system that provides the
treatment to uninsured patients in financial need.”
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