Megan Olsen, MPH, principal at Avalere, provides a comprehensive overlook into the many ways that the COVID-19 pandemic has impacted the cell and gene therapy space.
Megan Olsen, MPH, principal at Avalere, provides a comprehensive overlook into the many ways that the COVID-19 pandemic has impacted the cell and gene therapy space.
Transcript
How has the COVID-19 pandemic impacted the development and utilization of gene and cell therapies?
Olsen: So, the COVID-19 pandemic has had several implications on the health care system more broadly, as well as the cell and gene therapy space, specifically. A few that I would highlight here, certainly, with the pandemic early on, we saw a lot of economic impacts. A lot of people unfortunately lost their jobs and a lot of people who have insurance today get insurance through their jobs. So, as people lost insurance, in many cases, they also unfortunately lost employer-based health insurance. As a result, people may have found themselves uninsured and were not able to secure an additional coverage option or alternative coverage option. In other cases, others might have moved into the Medicaid market if they found themselves eligible for Medicaid in their state, or may have found coverage affordable on the exchanges in their state. So, there are different ways in which patients might have obtained insurance or otherwise remained uninsured after losing the job. And certainly that has implications for cost sharing and benefit design, and for access as well. So, some disruptions there.
And then in the access to care and utilization space, we also saw a lot of declines in care visits in early diagnoses, for instance, with patients not visiting their providers as often, or maybe delaying care and delaying treatment. That could have some long-term implications, particularly as we think about the oncology space if some of those early diagnoses were missed or delayed. So, certainly some utilization effects fall across the system.
Then as we think about the pipeline, there are a lot of cell and gene therapies currently in development. Some of those trials are companies investing in this space felt disruption due to the pandemic as well, whether it was disruptions to ongoing trials and recruitment efforts, or just an inability to invest as much as they might have otherwise given some broader company priorities. I think another aspect to note is the FDA. The FDA is playing a large role in the cell and gene therapy space, but, of course, had to refocus some of its priorities on the pandemic in the near term as well. So, I think it has had many implications, and we'll probably see these continue to play out for some time.
IgE Mediation in Pediatric Atopic Dermatitis, Concurrent Immune Disorders: Amy Paller, MD
August 4th 2025Amy Paller, MD, pediatric dermatologist and clinical researcher at Northwestern Medicine's Feinberg School of Medicine, discussed the potential impact of reducing immunoglobulin E (IgE) levels in pediatric patients with atopic dermatitis.
Read More
It Take a Village in Cancer Care: A Q&A With David Nguyen, MD
July 23rd 2025David Nguyen, MD, medical oncologist with Tufts Medicine and Lowell General Hospital, discusses the evolving landscape of advanced cancer treatments like chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy and bispecific antibodies
Read More
Best of Managed Care Cast: Top 5 Episodes From the First Half of 2025
July 18th 2025These interviews are the top episodes, by listens, from among the 21 podcast episodes The American Journal of Managed Care® produced over the first half of 2025. Give them all another listen, and perhaps learn something new.
Read More