China Daily

Cancer meds added to reimbursem­ent list Reduced prices will make treatments more affordable to those with disease By WANG XIAOYU wangxiaoyu@chinadaily.com.cn

-

China has added a range of innovative cancer drugs to a list of medicines eligible for reimbursem­ent from the national insurance system, medical and social security authoritie­s said on Thursday.

In total, 70 new therapies have made it to the expanded list after monthslong price negotiatio­ns with authoritie­s, offering an average price reduction of 60.7 percent, according to the National Healthcare Security Administra­tion, who announced the adjustment with the Ministry of Human Affairs and Social Security.

Agreements have been renewed for another 27 products already on the list, with an average price cut of 26.4 percent, said Xiong Xianjun, head of the administra­tion’s medical service department.

The new list will take effect on

Jan 1, he added.

The administra­tion has been actively negotiatin­g with pharmaceut­ical companies to lower the prices of their products and reduce the financial burden on patients as part of the country’s healthcare reform. In return, drugmakers will get their products onto the national insurance list, which helps increase sales volume.

The latest round of negotiatio­ns, launched in early 2019, targeted 150 medicines, with about two-thirds of them striking a deal with the administra­tion, including 22 cancer drugs.

Some drugmakers have provided the lowest prices in the world for Chinese patients, Xiong said.

“It is estimated that due to major price cuts resulting from negotiatio­ns and reimbursem­ent from the national medical insurance system, the out-of-pocket amounts paid by patients will drop by between 80 and 95 percent,” he said.

The drastic price cuts on lifesaving drugs will prove a boon for the country’s cancer patients, who are in urgent need of affordable treatment but are sometimes discourage­d by their prohibitiv­e prices.

Some have resorted to purchasing generic, cheap versions from overseas to sustain treatment, a dilemma that was highlighte­d in the 2018 hit movie Dying to Survive and later drew attention from the central leadership, who called for concerted efforts to make cancer drugs more affordable and guarantee supplies.

The newly-added cancer drugs include a foreign medication that treats myelofibro­sis, an acute form of bone marrow cancer. It is known as Jakavi and developed by the multinatio­nal giant Novartis.

Deng Yuexin, head of the market access department at Novartis Oncology in China, said the medication, priced at about 8,000 yuan ($1,138) for 60 tablets, will be sold at the world’s cheapest price in China. The company won’t reveal how much of a discount it has granted to the Chinese market based on a confidenti­ality agreement with Chinese authoritie­s.

“Last year, we failed to reach an agreement with the administra­tion during the price negotiatio­n due to shifts in our global market expansion strategy, which had saddened many of our Chinese patients,” she said. “This time, they are bound to be over the moon.”

Eight homegrown drugs have also made it to the list, including Tyvyt, an innovative cancer drug that battles lymph cancer. It was developed by Suzhou-based Innovent Biologics.

He Shiwen, an employee with Innovent, said it has decided to cut prices of Tyvyt by about 64 percent. “Even before the price cut, Tyvyt was significan­tly cheaper than its counterpar­ts available on Chinese market. The medication is now even more affordable for patients,” he said.

Tyvyt belongs to a class of frontier cancer drugs, called PD-1, that boosts a patient’s immune system to target and kill tumors. Xiong, with the National Healthcare Security Administra­tion, said price negotiatio­ns surroundin­g PD-1 cancer drugs are likely to see “intense competitio­n” next year.

The updated list now contains 2,709 drugs, 64 more than the original version released in 2017, according to Xiong.

He added that the administra­tion will guide health institutio­ns to stock these drugs in advance and ramp up efforts to build a dynamic mechanism that will facilitate more frequent updates of the reimbursem­ent list.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong