Cape Argus

TB drug price cut will benefit all.

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‘THE CLINICAL TRIALS HAVE ACHIEVED VERY GOOD OUTCOMES’

THE entire world will benefit from a price cut of a TB wonder drug, following successful negotiatio­ns between South Africa and a pharmaceut­ical company.

This follows an agreement reached over the weekend between Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi and pharmaceut­ical company Johnson & Johnson that the price of bedaquilin­e would be cut from $900 (R12000) to $400 for six months’ treatment.

Johnson & Johnson chief scientific officer Dr Paul Stoffels confirmed yesterday that the new price would be available to other countries, not just South Africa.

“We will also offer this special price to eligible national TB programmes procuring bedaquilin­e through the Stop TB Partnershi­p’s Global Drug Facility,” said Stoffels.

“But Johnson & Johnson will soon be able to drop its price even lower, as more countries will move to bedaquilin­e,” said a jovial Motsoaledi, speaking on the sidelines of the Internatio­nal Aids Conference in Amsterdam.

Stoffels would not commit to a further price cut, saying the company had to cover its research and developmen­t commitment­s.

But the Global TB Community Advisory Board says that research conducted at the University of Liverpool “has estimated that bedaquilin­e could be produced, and sold at a profitable mark-up, for between $48 and $96 for six months”.

South Africa became the first country in the world to move all patients with MDR TB away from the standard six-month injections of kanamycin to bedaquilin­e.

Kanamycin is painful and has many serious side effects, including permanent deafness.

Bedaquilin­e is the first new TB drug to be developed in 40 years, and is far less toxic, with fewer side effects.

“I visited the MDR TB Clinic in Brooklyn in Cape Town and I saw a lot of nurses who had got MDR from their patients. I could see the bitterness in their eyes and decided to do something for them,” said Motsoaledi of the health department’s decision to move away from kanamycin.

At that stage, bedaquilin­e cost $3000 for six months for wealthy countries and $900 for low-income countries. South Africa managed to get it for $750 because it had a large tender.

“Economies of scale,” said Motsoaledi. “If we can guarantee a large volume of patients, the company will make more sales.”

South Africa has undertaken to encourage the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) to change its MDR guidelines to recommend bedaquilin­e.

“There was a meeting with the WHO last week and they are convinced by the data collected in South Africa. The clinical trials have achieved very good outcomes without injectable­s,” said Dr Yogan Pillay, deputy director-general of the health department. – ANA/Health-e News

 ?? PICTURE: AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY (ANA)/HEALTH-E NEWS ?? BREAKTHROU­GH: Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi and Johnson & Johnson chief scientific officer Dr Paul Stoffels.
PICTURE: AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY (ANA)/HEALTH-E NEWS BREAKTHROU­GH: Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi and Johnson & Johnson chief scientific officer Dr Paul Stoffels.

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