The Gold Coast Bulletin

Subsidy widened for new breast cancer treatment

- Nathan Schmidt

The one-in-eight Australian­s at high risk of their breast cancer returning will soon have affordable access to a medicine that could stop that happening.

The federal government will fund Verzenio through the Pharmaceut­ical Benefits Scheme from May 1 for the estimated 1800 patients affected.

Previously, it was only available through the PBS to eligible patients with advanced metastatic cancer that had spread from the breast.

Mater Hospital Oncologist Fran Boyle (pictured, left) said the new drug would help the one third of early breast cancer patients whose cancer comes back.

“Patients with high risk factors are three times more likely to have their cancer return than those with low-risk characteri­stics,” she said. “One in eight patients with early breast cancer is classified as high risk and the more we can do early in the disease course, the better.

“We’re now able to intensify treatment during the window of opportunit­y after surgery when patients are treated with curative intent.”

The drug, also known as abemacicli­b, will be made available to patients with a high risk of cancer reoccurren­ce through the PBS from May 1.

Used in combinatio­n with hormone therapy, Verzenio is a non-chemothera­py oral medicine which block specific proteins in cancer cells.

Previously, the drug cost $100,000 for a two-year course, a price too steep for many sufferers.

But from Wednesday, eligible patients will pay $7.70 (concession) or $31.60 (general patients) each month for Verzenio.

Elizabeth Nguyen was diagnosed with breast cancer at 42, but after a full course of Verzenio from July 2021, she was now cancer-free.

“It was important for me to have access to Verzenio. I knew it was the best treatment to reduce the risk of recurrence,” she said.

Ms Nguyen said her diagnosis “turned her life upside down”, but the drug had helped her get through it.

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