Deadly wait for cancer drugs
CANCER patients are waiting up to five years to access lifesaving medicines as spending on the Pharmaceutical Benefit Subsidy scheme plummets.
There are now more than 30 new medicines for cancer and other conditions reimbursed in most other developed countries that are not yet subsidised in Australia.
And the Cancer Council Australia says many patients are facing an “unacceptable delay” accessing important new drugs and wants changes to speed up access to medicines.
It takes on average over a year for bureaucrats to approve new medicines for subsidy in Australia, four times longer than world leader Japan where it takes just 89 days.
For cancer medicines the delay is even longer, averaging 610 days but one cancer medicine took 1801 days to get approval, according to a Medicines Australia report comparing Australia’s performance with the rest of the world.
The Cancer Council blames drug companies for the delays.
“Unfortunately, the main reason for the delay is the exorbitant prices set by the drug companies,” said Cancer Council CEO Professor Sanchia Aranda.
Medicines can only be subsidies in Australia when an independent expert committee decides they are cost effective and the high price of new medicines makes these negotiations difficult.
The expert committee will this month consider whether to fund 16 new treatments for cancer, 12 of them have already been rejected for subsidy at least once before.
Cancer groups fear the new medicines for prostate, non small cell lung cancer, acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, multiple myeloma and breast cancer face an uphill battle gaining a subsidy.
Pharmaceutical lobby group Medicines Australia says Budget projections show
UNFORTUNATELY, THE MAIN REASON FOR THE DELAY IS THE EXORBITANT PRICES SET BY THE DRUG COMPANIES
funding for the PBS will fall from $11.139 billion in 2013-14 to $11.050 billion in 2021-22.
The scheme will have to cover 4.5 million extra people with 20 per cent less money as the population grows and ages and more high cost medicines fight for subsidies.
“Spending has increased by $1 billion over 14 years which is negligible and if you add in inflation it’s been in decline,” says Medicines Australia CEO Elizabeth de Somer.
The top 10 countries around the world reimburse new medicines within an average 181 days, Germany takes 117 days and Great Britain 128. This compares with the average 462 days in Australia.