China Daily

New drug list eases patients’ burdens

- By WANG XIAOYU wangxiaoyu@chinadaily.com.cn

A new national reimbursem­ent drug list took effect on Monday in a major boost to relieving the financial burden on Chinese patients and increasing accessibil­ity to innovative, lifesaving drugs.

The updated list of 2,800 medicines covered by basic medical insurance was released in late December. It includes 119 newly added drugs with an average price cut of 51 percent, the National Healthcare Administra­tion Bureau said.

The considerab­le price reduction is largely due to price negotiatio­ns between the administra­tion and drug manufactur­ers in November and December, it said.

Patients are projected to save about 28 billion yuan ($4.3 billion) this year, thanks to price reductions and medical reimbursem­ent, it said.

The administra­tion said that compared to previous adjustment­s to the list, the latest additions cover a wider range of conditions, from cancer and rare diseases to COVID19, in a bid to bring concrete benefits to more people.

At Beijing Tsinghua Changgung Hospital, Nie Guangmeng, head of the healthcare insurance department, said the hospital’s informatio­n system is now linked to the new list and staff are on standby at outpatient units to address patients’ questions to smooth the transition.

“The latest list will markedly ease the burdens of patients,” he said. “For instance, the price of lenvatinib has dropped from 16,800 yuan to 3,240 yuan, and more people are eligible to claim reimbursem­ent under the new policy.”

Lenvatinib is a medication for treatment of thyroid cancer and some other cancers.

Yin Rutie, a gynecologi­st at West China Second University Hospital in Chengdu, Sichuan province, said the inclusion of olaparib, an innovative therapy against ovarian cancer, will slash out-of-pocket payments shouldered by patients by as much as 90 percent.

“For years, treatment targeting advanced stages of ovarian cancer mainly centered on surgeries and chemothera­py, but about 70 percent of patients are likely to relapse within two to three years following these standard procedures,” she told Cover.cn, an online news portal.

Yin said based on available research, the promising drug is projected to raise the five-year survival rate of ovarian cancer patients to 70 percent, representi­ng a “breakthrou­gh and milestone” for patients.

She said the new drug list is expected to enable more patients to access the lifesaving medication.

The administra­tion said the list includes 17 new cancer drugs. Through negotiatio­ns, the prices of 14 oncology medication­s already covered by medical insurance also dropped by an average of nearly 15 percent.

Cao Qian, founder of a nonprofit organizati­on devoted to improving the lives of those affected by Huntington’s disease, a progressiv­e neurodegen­erative disease impairing mental and physical capabiliti­es, said she and members of the organizati­on were “both surprised and cheered” by the inclusion of deutetrabe­nazine, an innovative drug developed by global pharmaceut­ical company Teva.

She said the next crucial step is to hammer out the details of local reimbursem­ent policies, further increase the proportion of reimbursab­le fees and explore the role of commercial insurance programs in alleviatin­g financial strain.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong