Medicare Will Limit Coverage of Controversial $28,000/Year Alzheimer’s Drug; One Clinical Trial Patient Has Already Died

By B.N. Frank

In July, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved an Alzheimer’s drug that

Last month, the drug maker cut the price by about half to $28,200/year.  However, Medicare premiums were increased $22/month anyway.  Now Medicare has decided to limit who gets to take it.

From Newser:


Medicare Makes Big Decision on New Alzheimer’s Drug

(Newser) – Medicare said Tuesday it will limit coverage of a $28,000-a-year Alzheimer’s drug whose benefits have been widely questioned, a major development in the nation’s tug-of-war over the fair value of new medicines that offer tantalizing possibilities but come with prohibitive prices. The initial determination from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services means that for Medicare to pay, patients taking Biogen’s Aduhelm medication will have to be part of clinical trials to assess the drug’s effectiveness in slowing the progression of early-stage dementia as well as its safety, the AP reports. Medicare’s national coverage determination would become final by April 11, following a public comment period and further evaluation by the agency.

The requirement for clinical studies applies to the entire class of drugs of which Aduhelm is a pioneer, monoclonal antibodies that work against amyloid, a kind of protein that forms plaques characteristic of Alzheimer’s disease. Biogen sharply disapproved of Medicare’s decision. The company said in a statement that the decision “denies the daily burden of people living with Alzheimer’s disease.” The Alzheimer’s Association called it “shocking discrimination against everyone with Alzheimer’s disease,” but Vermont Independent Sen. Bernie Sanders applauded the decision as “an important step forward” in efforts to curb “outrageous” drug prices.

Biogen’s initial launch price of $56,000 a year for Aduhelm led to an increase of nearly $22 in Medicare’s monthly “Part B” premium for outpatient care, the largest ever in dollar terms but not percentage-wise. Medicare attributed about half of this year’s increase to contingency planning for Aduhelm. Faced with skepticism over its medication, Biogen recently slashed the price to $28,200, but Medicare enrollees were already on the hook for the $170.10 premium. Medicare officials stressed Tuesday that they did not take cost into account in the coverage decision, but rather whether Aduhelm is “reasonable and necessary” for treating Alzheimer’s patients enrolled in the program. Nonetheless, the high price of Aduhelm and the fact that most of the 6 million Americans with Alzheimer’s are old enough to be covered by Medicare stretched the limits. (Read more Aduhelm stories.)


In other Alzheimer’s drug news, also in December, a study revealed that men who took Viagra were 69% less likely to develop the dreaded disease than those who didn’t take it.  (Insert joke here.)

Activist Post reports regularly about Big Pharma, the FDA, and government corruption.  For more information, visit our archives.

Image: Pixabay

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