Boston Herald

Why a new Alzheimer’s drug is having a slow debut

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The first drug to show that it slows Alzheimer’s is on sale, but treatment for most patients is still several months away.

Two big factors behind the slow debut, experts say, are scant insurance coverage and a long setup time needed by many health systems.

Patients who surmount those challenges will step to the head of the line for a drug that delivers an uncertain benefit.

The situation

The U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion approved Leqembi, from Japanese drugmaker Eisai, in early January. It’s for patients with mild or early cases of dementia tied to Alzheimer’s disease.

Regulators used the FDA’s accelerate­d pathway, which allows drugs to launch before they’re confirmed to benefit patients. In studies, Leqembi modestly slowed the fatal disease, but doctors aren’t sure yet how that translates into things like greater independen­ce for patients.

Eisai spokeswoma­n Libby Holman said prescripti­ons for the drug have been written, and they expect patients to start receiving it “very soon.”

Cost and coverage

A year’s treatment will run about $26,500. Patients who can afford that without insurance will be able to start the treatment if they are deemed a candidate for Leqembi and they find a doctor and health care system prepared to help them.

There are currently few options outside self-pay. Most of the patients who may be candidates for this drug are on Medicare, and the federal program’s coverage is narrow so far. It has said it will cover treatments like Leqembi only for patients enrolled in certain research trials designed to test the drug, but there aren’t any accepting new patients right now.

Medicare made that coverage decision last year when another Alzheimer’s drug, Biogen’s Aduhelm, hit the market.

Health insurers, which run Medicare Advantage coverage, have been sticking to that decision, said a spokesman for the trade group America’s Health Insurance Plans.

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which oversees Medicare, said after Leqembi’s approval that it may reconsider its coverage stance, something the Alzheimer’s Associatio­n has urged it to do.

Coverage also is likely to change if the drug receives full approval from the FDA.

Diagnosing

It can take anywhere from several months to more than a year for doctors to diagnose a patient and then figure out if that person is a candidate for Leqembi, according to Dr. Sarah Kremen, a neurologis­t with the Cedars-Sinai health system in Los Angeles.

That can depend on where a patient lives and the physician’s expertise.

First, a doctor must determine whether a patient has mild dementia.

Then the doctor has to decide what caused the condition. It could stem from Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s disease, a stroke or a brain injury.

If it’s related to Alzheimer’s disease, doctors must determine whether the patient’s brain has an amyloid protein. The new drug aims to slow the progressio­n of Alzheimer’s by removing that protein.

 ?? COURTESY — EISAI VIA AP ?? Leqembi, the first drug to show that it slows Alzheimer’s disease, was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion in early January, but treatment for most patients is still several months away.
COURTESY — EISAI VIA AP Leqembi, the first drug to show that it slows Alzheimer’s disease, was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion in early January, but treatment for most patients is still several months away.

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