Since 2016, 5 targeted treatments have received accelerated approval from the FDA for use in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), and the total spend for just 3 of them is $3.1 billion.
Stay tuned for tomorrow’s Q&A on these findings with senior author Benjamin N. Rome, MD, MPH, primary care physician and health policy researched at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School.
Five genetically targeted treatments for Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) have received accelerated approval from the FDA since 2016—eteplirsen (Exondys 51; Sarepta Therapeutics), golodirsen (Vyondys 53; Sarepta Therapeutics), casimersen (Amondys; Sarepta Therapeutics), viltolarsen (Viltepso, NS Pharma), and delandistrogene moxeparvovec-rokl (Elevidys, Sarepta Therapeutics)—with the government agency basing its decisions about each on results they believe “reasonably likely to predict clinical benefit.” Total annual net spend since 2016 for eteplirsen, golodirsen, and casimersen alone is an estimated $3.1 billion, ballooning from $7 million in 2016 to $879 million in 2022.
Experts from the Division of Pharmacoepidemiology and Pharmacoeconomics, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, in Boston, publishing their findings in JAMA, highlight that this exorbitant total is despite a lack of confirmatory trials, in spite of scant evidence of efficacy, and even though not all patients who have DMD are eligible. For example:
Skyrocketing prices for genetically targeted DMD treatments have experts calling for many reforms | Image Credit: tang90246 - stock.adobe.com
Their present analysis of estimated public and private spending—comprising rebates and statutory Medicaid/340B discounts—focused only on eteplirsen, golodirsen, and casimersen due to the lack of clarity on viltolarsen’s efficacy and that delandistrogene moxeparvovec-rokl’s was approved outside of their study period.
“We estimated net Medicaid spending by applying the statutory minimum rebate of 23.1% and net Medicare spending by subtracting non-Medicaid rebate estimates from SSR Health, which ranged from 3% to 15%,” the investigators noted. They also gathered data from SSR Health on manufacturer-reported annual US net sales, and projected 2022 spend “assuming that these programs accounted for a similar share of US sales as in 2017 to 2021.”
From 2017 to 2022 alone, there was a 92% jump in estimated US net sales Medicaid and Medicare spend for eteplirsen, golodirsen, and casimersen—$25 million to $327 million—which equates to $1.2 billion. The Medicaid spend far outpaced Medicare: $1.1 billion (34%) compared with $104 million (3%). Eighty-two percent of the total US spend was for eteplirsen ($2.6 billion), followed by 10% for casimersen ($301 million) and 8% for golodirsen ($263 million).
These authors underscore how their findings bring attention to the incongruous processes involved in bringing these multimillion-dollar treatments for DMD to market. They highlight that the main controversies in the spend space center on a lack of extensively proven efficacy and delayed confirmatory trials, even with these genetically targeted treatments all having novel mechanisms of action.
They are calling for policy reforms that spur timely trial completion and minimize financial risk when treatments are ultimately deemed nonbeneficial, capping reimbursements to Medicare and Medicaid in instances of accelerated approvals, and alternative payment models for cell and gene therapies.
Reference
Bendicksen L, Kesselheim AS, Rome BN. Spending on targeted therapies for Duchenne muscular dystrophy. JAMA. Published online March 11, 2024. doi:10.1001/jama.2024.2776
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