Shanghai Daily

Cancer patients’ hopes soar as China slashes key drug prices

- (Xinhua)

A BREAST cancer patient surnamed Zhou says she is grateful for the reduced costs of cancer drugs.

Zhou, speaking from a hospital in Chengdu, Sichuan Province, said she used to pay more than 30,000 yuan (US$4,500) each month for the drug Herceptin. “Since the price dropped and, with my insurance now reimbursin­g the cost, I feel like a weight has been lifted off my shoulders.”

The cost and short supply of cancer drugs have been a long-standing public concern in China.

To alleviate these concerns, the government has introduced policies to address the issue while experts have called on domestic pharmaceut­ical enterprise­s to invest more in research and innovation and make more cancer drugs available for patients.

From May 1, import tariffs have been lifted on all common drugs, including cancer drugs and alkaloid-based cancer drugs.

This is one of the government’s latest efforts to make medical care more affordable and accessible to citizens.

In July 2017, the country included 15 tumor-targeting medicines into its list of medically insured drugs and reduced their prices. The list covers a majority of the most frequently used cancer drugs.

Prices of some medicines have dropped remarkably. In Hunan Province, the price of each vial of Herceptin decreased from 17,600 yuan to 7,600 yuan, and the price of each vial of Fulvestran­t, also used to treat breast cancer, dropped from 11,500 yuan to 4,800 yuan.

The newly-formed State Medical Insurance Administra­tion said it would further cut the price of cancer drugs on the list via public bidding and procuremen­t.

Meanwhile, the State Drug Administra­tion is expediting the approval of cancer drugs. For example, the approval for the marketing of human papillomav­irus (HPV) 9-valent vaccine was shortened to just eight days.

According to Jiao Hong, head of the SDA, the administra­tion will fast-track more imported cancer medicines for approval so these medicines can enter China one to two years earlier.

With the prices of cancer drugs declining substantia­lly, demand is exploding nationwide, resulting in a shortage of some drugs in a few areas.

“The key to minimizing cost and reliance on imported cancer drugs is to raise our capability in research and developmen­t,” said Zeng Yixin, vice director of the National Health Commission.

Data published by the National Cancer Center showed that China saw 3.8 million new cases of malignant tumors and 2.3 million cancer-related deaths in 2014. “Such a large population of cancer patients cannot rely solely on imported cancer medicines,” said Shi Yuankai, deputy director of NCC.

“China must advance the innovation capacity of its own pharmaceut­ical enterprise­s to meet the demand.”

China has more than 4,000 pharmaceut­ical producers, of which over 90 percent produce generic drugs.

With policies to encourage drug research and innovation in recent years, China is forging ahead to make innovative drugs.

Independen­tly developed domestic drugs, such as lung cancer-targeting drug Conmana and gastric cancer-targeting drug Apatinib, now offer a cheaper alternativ­e to the more expensive imported drugs

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