Austin American-Statesman

Paxlovid isn’t reaching some who need it

Price is one reason the medicine is avoided

- Arthur Allen KFF Health News and PolitiFact.com

Evangelica­l minister Eddie Hyatt believes in the healing power of prayer but “also the medical approach.” So on a February evening a week before scheduled prostate surgery, he had his sore throat checked out at an emergency room near his home in Grapevine.

A doctor confirmed that Hyatt had COVID-19 and sent him to CVS with a prescripti­on for the antiviral drug Paxlovid, the generally recommende­d medicine to fight COVID-19. Hyatt handed the pharmacist the script, but then, he said, “She kept avoiding me.”

She finally looked up from her computer and said, “It’s $1,600.”

The generally healthy 76-year-old went out to the car to consult his wife about their credit card limits. “I don’t think I’ve ever spent more than $20 on a prescripti­on,” the astonished Hyatt recalled.

That kind of sticker shock has stunned thousands of sick Americans since late December, as Pfizer shifted to commercial sales of Paxlovid. Before then, the federal government covered the cost of the drug.

The price is one reason Paxlovid is not reaching those who need it most. And patients who qualify for free doses, which Pfizer offers under an agreement with the federal government, often don’t realize it or know how to get them.

“If you want to create a barrier to people getting a treatment, making it cost a lot is the way to do it,” said William Schaffner, a professor at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine and spokespers­on for the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases.

Public and medical awareness of Paxlovid’s benefits is low, and putting people through an applicatio­n process to get the drug when they’re sick is a nonstarter, Schaffner said. Pfizer says it takes only five minutes online.

It’s not an easy drug to use. Doctors are wary about prescribin­g it because of dangerous interactio­ns with common drugs that treat cholestero­l, blood clots and other conditions. It must be taken within five days of the first symptoms. It leaves a foul taste in the mouth. In one study, 1 in 5 patients reported “rebound” COVID-19 symptoms a few days after finishing the medicine – though rebound can also occur without Paxlovid.

A recent JAMA Network study found that sick people 85 and older were less likely than younger Medicare patients to get COVID-19 therapies such as Paxlovid. The drug might have prevented up to 27,000 deaths in 2022 if it had been allocated based on which patients were at highest risk from COVID-19. Nursing home patients, who account for about 1 in 6 U.S. COVID-19 deaths, were about two-thirds as likely as other older adults to get the drug.

Shrunken confidence in government health programs is one reason the drug isn’t reaching those who need it. In senior living facilities, “a lack of clear informatio­n and misinforma­tion” are “causing residents and their families to be reluctant to take the necessary steps to reduce COVID risks,” said David Gifford, chief medical officer for an associatio­n representi­ng 14,000 health care providers, many in senior care.

The anti-vaxxers spreading falsehoods about vaccines have targeted Paxlovid as well. Some call themselves anti-paxxers.

“Proactive and health-literate people get the drug. Those who are receiving informatio­n more passively have no idea whether it’s important or harmful,” said Michael Barnett, a primary care physician at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and an associate professor at Harvard, who led the JAMA Network study.

In fact, the drug is still free for those who are uninsured or enrolled in Medicare, Medicaid or other federal health programs, including those for veterans.

That’s what rescued Hyatt, whose Department of Veterans Affairs health plan doesn’t normally cover outpatient drugs. While he searched on his phone for a solution, the pharmacist’s assistant suddenly appeared from the store. “It won’t cost you anything!” she said.

As Hyatt’s case suggests, it helps to know to ask for free Paxlovid, although federal officials say they’ve educated clinicians and pharmacist­s – like the one who helped Hyatt – about the program.

“There is still a heaven!” Hyatt replied. After he had been on Paxlovid for a few days his symptoms were gone and his surgery was reschedule­d.

Pfizer sold the U.S. government 23.7 million five-day courses of Paxlovid, produced under an FDA emergency authorizat­ion, in 2021 and 2022, at a price of around $530 each.

Under the new agreement, Pfizer commits to provide the drug for the beneficiaries of the government insurance programs. Meanwhile, Pfizer bills insurers for some portion of the $1,390 list price. Some patients say pharmacies have quoted them prices of $1,600 or more.

How exactly Pfizer arrived at that price isn’t clear. Pfizer won’t say. A Harvard

University study last year estimated the cost of producing generic Paxlovid at about $15 per treatment course, including manufactur­ing expenses, a 10% profit markup, and 27% in taxes.

Pfizer reported $12.5 billion in Paxlovid and COVID-19 vaccine sales in 2023, after a $57 billion peak in 2022.

The other problem is getting the drug where it is needed. “We negotiated really hard with Pfizer to make sure that Paxlovid would be available to Americans the way they were accustomed to,” Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra told reporters in February. “If you have private insurance, it should not cost you much money, certainly not more than $100.”

Yet in nursing homes, getting Paxlovid is particular­ly cumbersome, said Chad Worz, CEO of the American Society of Consultant Pharmacist­s, specialist­s who provide medicines to care homes.

If someone in long-term care tests positive for COVID-19, the nurse tells the physician, who orders the drug from a pharmacist, who may report back that the patient is on several drugs that interact with Paxlovid, Worz said. Figuring out which drugs to stop temporaril­y requires further consultati­ons while the time for efficacious use of Paxlovid dwindles, he said.

Current COVID-19 strains appear less virulent than those that circulated earlier in the pandemic, and years of vaccinatio­n and COVID-19 infection have left fewer people at risk of grave outcomes. But risk remains, particular­ly among older seniors, who account for most COVID-19 deaths, which number more than 13,500 so far this year in the U.S.

Steinberg, who sees patients in 15 residences, said he orders Paxlovid even for COVID-19-positive patients without symptoms. None of the 30 to 40 patients whom he prescribed the drug in the past year needed hospitaliz­ation, he said; two stopped taking it because of nausea or the foul taste, a pertinent concern in older people whose appetites already have ebbed.

Steinberg said he knew of two patients who died of COVID-19 in his companies’ facilities this year. Neither was on Paxlovid. He can’t be sure the drug would have made a difference, but he’s not taking any chances. The benefits, he said, outweigh the risks.

KFF Health News reporter Colleen DeGuzman contribute­d to this report.

 ?? FABIAN SOMMER/PICTURE ALLIANCE VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Price worries, bureaucrat­ic obstacles and “I’m-over-COVID-itis” are slowing use of Paxlovid, a drug that’s complicate­d to take but often effective.
FABIAN SOMMER/PICTURE ALLIANCE VIA GETTY IMAGES Price worries, bureaucrat­ic obstacles and “I’m-over-COVID-itis” are slowing use of Paxlovid, a drug that’s complicate­d to take but often effective.

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