Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Price tag on gene therapy for rare form of blindness: $850K

- By Matthew Perrone

WASHINGTON » A first-of-its kind genetic treatment for blindness will cost $850,000 per patient, making it one of the most expensive medicines in the world and raising questions about the affordabil­ity of a coming wave of similar gene-targeting therapies.

The injectable treatment from Spark Therapeuti­cs can improve the eyesight of patients with a rare genetic mutation that affects just a few thousand people in the U.S. Previously there has been no treatment for the condition, which eventually causes complete blindness by adulthood.

Pricing questions have swirled around the treatment due to a number of unusual factors — it is intended to be a one-time treatment, it treats a very small number of patients and represents a medical breakthrou­gh.

Previously, Spark suggested its therapy, Luxturna, could be worth more than $1 million. But the company said Wednesday it decided on the lower price after hearing concerns from health insurers about the affordabil­ity of the treatment.

Consternat­ion over skyrocketi­ng drug prices, especially in the U.S., has led to intense scrutiny from patients, politician­s, insurers and hospitals.

“We wanted to balance the value and the affordabil­ity concerns with a responsibl­e price that would ensure access to patients,” said CEO Jeffrey Marrazzo, in an interview with The Associated Press.

Luxturna is still significan­tly more expensive than nearly every other medicine on the global market, including two other gene therapies approved earlier last year in the U.S.

Pharmaceut­ical industry critics said the slightly lower cost is a distractio­n from the ongoing problem of unsustaina­ble drug prices.

“The company very cleverly convinced everyone that they were going to charge a million dollars, so now they are being credited for being reasonable,” said Dr. Peter Bach, director of a policy center at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York.

Approved last month, Luxturna, is the nation’s first gene therapy for an inherited disease. It requires a 45-minute operation in which a tiny needle delivers a replacemen­t gene to the retina, tissue at the back of the eye that converts light into electric signals that produce vision. The therapy will cost $425,000 per injection. The price does not include the cost of the operation, which Spark estimates will cost between $4,000 and $5,000.

The treatment is part of an emerging field of medicine that could produce dozens of new gene-targeting medication­s in the next few years.

Like Luxturna, these therapies are generally intended to be taken once, a fact which drug developers argue sets them apart from traditiona­l drugs taken for months or years. Even compared to other one-time gene therapies Luxturna is still an outlier. Two customized gene therapies for blood cancer approved last year are priced at $373,000 and $475,000.

Many older drugs for ultra-rare diseases also cost hundreds of thousands of dollars per year, and can quickly exceed a million dollars. For instance, a drug from Biogen called Spinraza, which treats a rare neuromuscu­lar disorder, costs $750,000 for the first year’s supply and $375,000 for subsequent years. The drug is intended to be taken for life.

Drug prices are not regulated in the U.S., as they are in many other countries, so drugmakers can price their goods like any other manufactur­er. Drugmakers have historical­ly offered little explanatio­n for the prices they charge, other than to cite the high cost of developing a drug and the fact that so many drugs fail during trials and must be abandoned. However, some companies have begun to offer more detailed reasoning as the backlash against drug prices has grown more heated.

Spark Therapeuti­cs, based in Philadelph­ia, has said that the cost for a lifetime of blindness — including lost earnings and caregiver wages — can easily exceed $1 million.

Not everyone agrees with that argument.

Even at $850,000 a preliminar­y analysis by one group found that the drug would need to be priced significan­tly lower to be a good value.

The estimate by the nonprofit Institute for Clinical and Economic Review assumes the drug will maintain patients’ vision for 10 years. However, Spark expects the drug’s effect to be long-lasting, if not lifelong, though it has only tracked patients for about four years.

The group’s director, Dr. Steven Pearson, said paying for gene therapies that have not yet shown lasting benefits will be an ongoing issue.

“If the payment is going to be done all at once that will create real affordabil­ity concerns if we don’t have tremendous confidence about how long the effects of the treatment will last,” he said.

At least one gene therapy sold overseas already crossed the $1-million price threshold, a treatment for a rare protein disorder launched in Europe. Manufactur­er uniQure stopped selling the therapy last year due to a lack of demand. It was never approved in the U.S.

Like most prescripti­on medicines in the U.S., most of the immediate costs of Luxturna will be borne by insurers — not patients — including private plans and government programs. For patients, Spark said it will cover all out-of-pocket expenses needed to obtain the medication, including transporta­tion to hospitals trained to administer the injections.

Given Luxturna’s federal approval and strong study results, experts say U.S. insurers will likely cover the drug.

Spark will try to deflect some pricing concerns by offering unconventi­onal payment plans to insurers. Under one arrangemen­t with the non-profit insurer Harvard Pilgrim, Spark will refund some costs if patients don’t experience the expected improvemen­ts in vision. The company did not disclose how much money would be returned to the insurer, which covers more than a million people in New England.

Spark said it is also discussing a proposal in which insurers would pay for the drug in installmen­ts over several years. That idea would apply to government programs like Medicare and Medicaid, which provide health coverage to the poor and elderly.

 ?? BILL WEST—THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Oct. 4, 2017, file photo, Dr. Albert Maguire, right, checks the eyes of Misa Kaabali, 8, at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia. Misa was 4-years-old when he received his gene therapy treatment. The first-of-its kind genetic treatment for...
BILL WEST—THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Oct. 4, 2017, file photo, Dr. Albert Maguire, right, checks the eyes of Misa Kaabali, 8, at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia. Misa was 4-years-old when he received his gene therapy treatment. The first-of-its kind genetic treatment for...

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