Leading Experts Call for Making Cancer Drugs More Affordable

A group of 118 of the nation’s leading cancer experts have drafted a prescription for reducing the high cost of cancer drugs and voiced support for a patient-based grassroots movement demanding action on the issue. Their recommendations and support are outlined in a commentary, co-authored by the group, in the journal Mayo Clinic Proceedings.

“High cancer drug prices are affecting the care of patients with cancer and our healthcare system,” said lead author Ayalew Tefferi, MD, a hematologist at Mayo Clinic. “The average gross household income in the U.S. is about $52,000 per year. For an insured patient with cancer who needs a drug that costs $120,000 per year, the out-of-pocket expenses could be as much as $25,000 to $30,000-more than half their average household income.”

The group cites a 2015 study published in the Journal of Economic Perspectives, which found that cancer drug prices have risen by an average of $8,500 per year over the past 15 years.

“When you consider that cancer will affect one in three individuals over their lifetime, and [with] recent trends in insurance coverage [that] put a heavy financial burden on patients with out-of-pocket expenses, you quickly see that the situation is not sustainable,” Tefferi said. “It’s time for patients and their physicians to call for change.”

The group says the following actions would improve the situation and allow market forces to work better:

The group also supports the patient-based, grassroots movement on change.org that advocates against high cancer drug prices with the goal of drawing the attention of pharmaceutical companies and elected representatives to this issue. The authors write, “With proper support of these grassroots efforts and proper use of that support downstream, it should be possible to focus the attention of pharmaceutical companies on this problem and to encourage our elected representatives to more effectively advocate for the interests of their most important constituents among the stakeholders in cancer-American cancer patients.”

This article was adapted from information provided by Mayo Clinic.

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