By PAUL ELIAS, AP Biotechnology Writer
964 words
23 May 2003, 23:00
Associated Press Newswires
English
Copyright 2003. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.
Steve Holland jokes that he and his wife avoid Las Vegas because of the bad
genetic luck they've had with their three young children, who are afflicted
with an extremely rare and deadly disease.
But the River Oaks, Texas, couple could really use a windfall now that federal
regulators last month approved the drug Aldurazyme, which has dramatically improved
and prolonged their children's lives.
To keep Spencer, Madison and Laynie on the drug, which they had received for
free during trials run by biotechnology companies, will now cost a combined
$450,000 a year.
The Holland family's predicament underscores a growing debate among drug makers,
federal regulators, insurance companies and patients over who should pay for
expensive drugs developed for a few very sick people.
Advances in biotechnology and a pivotal federal law are fueling an explosion
of specialty drug development. Companies that once wrote off such drugs as unprofitable
are now attacking obscure diseases with gusto.
As a result, once-overlooked sick people are getting treated. But the cost
of their new drugs has contributed to the skyrocketing cost of filling prescriptions,
the pharmacy benefits management firm Medco Health Solutions Inc. concluded
in a study released Wednesday.
"Given their rapidly escalating costs, it is not surprising that these
drugs are appearing with increasing frequency on plans' radar screens,"
the report said.
In the last five years, specialty drug prices rose 40 percent per year while
non-specialty drug costs rose 15 percent annually.
"I hate the prices they charge," said Dianne Dorman of the National
Organization of Rare Disorders in Washington, D.C. "But I don't want anything
to discourage the companies from developing these drugs."
The Holland kids suffer from Hurler Schie Syndrome, which damages organs and
joints. The bodies of the afflicted are simply unable to dispose of dead cells.
The three children, ages 13, 11 and 9, have been receiving Aldurazyme for free
while serving as subjects in experiments run by the biotechnology companies
developing the drug.
Thanks to Aldurazyme, the Holland kids lead fairly typical lives. They're able,
for example, to visit the zoo without wheelchairs.
It took years and millions of research dollars to develop Aldurazyme, which
will be used by only about 1,000 Americans.
Its makers say the only way to profit from so few patients is to charge some
of the highest rates ever for a single drug - more than $2,800 for each weekly
injection.
"We have to make a profit to make this drug," said Dr. David Meeker
of Genzyme General, which is co-marketing Aldurazyme with BioMarin Pharmaceutical
Inc. "It's not enough just to recoup our costs."
Congress passed the Orphan Drug Act in 1983 to prompt drug makers
to address rare diseases they would otherwise ignore. The law guarantees tax
breaks, funding help and a seven-year monopoly to companies developing drugs
for diseases that afflict fewer than 200,000 people.
The FDA has approved 240 orphan drugs since.
Manufacturing orphan drugs has proven to be a profitable niche for Genzyme.
Its best-selling medicine is Cerezyme, which treats Gaucher's disease - a potentially
deadly genetic disorder that causes anemia and enlarged organs. Only 3,500 take
Genzyme's Cerezyme, but the drug still generated $619 million for the company
in 2002, costing about $170,000 per patient per year.
Some federal officials, though, believe the government has been overcharged
for some of these medicines.
In January, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services slashed what it
pays hospitals and doctors for most of the orphan drugs used to treat Medicare
patients. The Biotechnology Industry Organization and patient groups are protesting,
saying the cuts will scare away drug makers from tackling more rare diseases.
Medicare now reimburses only four orphan drugs at "reasonable cost,"
including Genzyme's Gaucher drug. All others are lumped in with most outpatient
drug treatments, which are paid at 95 percent of wholesale cost.
Medicare administrator Tom Scully said in an interview that many of the orphan
drugs now serve much larger patient populations than originally envisioned.
The drug commonly referred to as EPO, for instance, is the world's best-selling
orphan medicine, ringing up $8 billion in worldwide sales. That's because the
drug has been found to work on many more patients other than the drug's original
target - anemia in kidney patients.
Scully said Medicare classifies such multi-use orphan drugs like common treatments
to keep costs down, but will pay in full for orphan drugs that treat just one
rare disease.
He said the agency will soon announce that it will reimburse a dozen more orphan
drugs at higher rates because their makers proved the medications weren't multi-use.
Holland said he's just now started thinking about how to pay for the injections
his children get every week. The Hollands are talking with their insurer. They
also hope to enroll at least one of the kids in continuing trials the drug companies
are required to conduct.
The companies, too, say they routinely provide drugs for free to patients who
have no way of paying.
While financing the drugs is a worry, Holland says he's more concerned about
his children's health.
"The difference from what they were like before the treatment and what
they are like now is unbelievable," Holland said. "They didn't walk
very far without a wheelchair or a stroller. Now they play sports. It's not
a cure. But it's big step in the right direction."