Medicine Hat News

CANCER DRUGS

Cost in Canada triples

- CAMILLE BAINS

Sales of medication­s to treat cancer have nearly tripled in Canada over the past decade, reaching $3.9 billion last year, a report by a federal agency says.

The Patented Medicine Prices Review Board has released data showing cancer medication­s account for about 15 per cent of all spending on pharmaceut­icals.

“In 2019, medicines with 28-day treatment costs exceeding $7,500 made up 43 per cent of private plan oncology drug costs, compared with 17 per cent in 2010,” says the report by the board, which aims to protect consumers by ensuring manufactur­ers aren’t charging excessive prices for patented medication­s.

It says growth in the Canadian oncology market last year exceeded that of other countries including the United States and Switzerlan­d, with a 20 per cent increase over sales from 2018.

Sales of oral cancer medication­s account for half of all oncology sales in Canada, up from 37 per cent in 2010, the report says, adding that while intravenou­s chemothera­py is publicly funded in all provinces, reimbursem­ent of oral drugs differs across the country.

Steve Morgan, a professor in the School of Population and Public Health at the University of British Columbia, said it doesn’t make sense to cover the cost of intravenou­s chemothera­py in hospitals and not medication­s prescribed to patients outside of those facilities, but that’s justified in a country without a national drug plan.

“This is one of the messy bits of the Canadian health-care system,” he said, adding there’s a patchwork system of coverage across jurisdicti­ons, with cancer agencies in some provinces providing limited payment for at-home oncology treatments.

A national pharmacare plan would allow Canada to negotiate better drug prices, Morgan said, noting it’s the only country in the world with a universal health-care system without coverage for prescripti­on drugs.

Much of the national-level negotiatin­g countries do with manufactur­ers happens in secret, Morgan said, starting with a list or sticker price, much like buying a vehicle at a dealership, as part of a complicate­d regime involving rebates to bring down prices.

“It’s deliberate­ly made to cloud the real transactio­n price, the real price to health the system, so that no country can look at it and say, ‘hey, wait a second, I heard that the people in Australia got this amazing new price on this drug.”’

“What we can’t know is exactly which countries are getting the most value for money because we don’t get to see their secret deals. We do know that Canada’s list prices are among the highest in the world, and even above the level that the (Patented Medicine Prices Review Board) would like to see in terms of just the beginning of negotiatio­ns,” Morgan said.

Countries with universal single-payer systems for medication­s, including Norway, Sweden, the United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand are likely using their negotiatin­g power to get better prices from manufactur­ers asking for unreasonab­le amounts of money, he said.

However, provinces negotiate with manufactur­ers individual­ly and should not “cave” to requests for unreasonab­le prices, Morgan said.

“They cannot, in essence, have patients being used as hostages.”

Results of an online survey released Thursday by the Angus Reid Institute say 26 per cent of Canadians had to pay for at least half of their prescripti­on drug costs over the past year. That rises to 37 per cent for households earning less than $50,000 annually.

“Regionally, the highest rates of self-payment for prescripti­ons are found in British Columbia, Saskatchew­an, and Manitoba. In all three of these provinces, one in three households reported paying half of their prescripti­on drug costs or more. By contrast, Ontario and Alberta report the highest rates of insurance and government coverage.”

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