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Glybera introductie

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bilbo3
1
nieuw draadje om de introductie van Glybera te volgen.
In Duitsland verkrijgbaar vanaf 1 november 2014:

Uit de Deutsche apothekers Zeitung

DAZ 44 / 30.10.2014

Kurz gemeldet

Erste Gentherapie wird eingeführt | Neue Wirkstoffe zur Zulassung empfohlen

______________________

Erste Gentherapie wird eingeführt

Zur Therapie der familiären Lipoproteinlipase-Defizienz (LPLD) wird zum 1. November 2014 mit Alipogentiparvovec (Glybera®) erstmals ein Gentherapeutikum eingeführt. Eine LPLD führt dazu, dass die Aktivität des Enzyms LPL nicht ausreicht, um große Lipidpartikel aufzuspalten, die nach jeder fetthaltigen Mahlzeit im Blut zirkulieren. Sammeln sich diese Chylomikronen an, so können Blutgefäße verstopfen, und es kommt zu schweren Entzündungen des Pankreas. Das Orphan Drug Alipogentiparvovec enthält die humane Lipoproteinlipase (LPL)-Genvariante LPLS447X in einem viralen Vektor. Nach der intramuskulären Applikation gelangt der mit der korrekten Version der humanen LPL-Genvariante beladene Vektor in die Muskelzellen, sodass dort die Expression des LPL-Proteins erfolgen kann. Die Bestandteile des Vektors wurden so gewählt, dass die Expression des LPL–Gens und die Produktion des transgenen LPL-Proteins durch die Expressionsmaschinerie der Myozyten erfolgt, ohne dass der virale Vektor dabei in der Lage ist, sich selbst zu vermehren.

En:
DAZ 44 / 30.10.2014

Arzneimittel-Info

Neuer Wirkstoff

Glybera

Injektionslösung
Chiesi GmbH

ab 1. November 2014;

Gentherapeutikum; bei familiärer Lipoproteinlipase- Defizienz mit multiplen Pankreatitis-Schüben trotz fettarmer Ernährung;
Wirkstoff: 1 Durchstechflasche Alipogentiparvovec enthält 1 ml extrahierbare Lösung mit 3 × 1012 Genomkopien des Vektors (gc)

Eindelijk kan verkoop beginnen

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Goed gevonden Bilbo!
Heb je iets kunnen zien over de prijs?
Wordt het vergoed?
Ik heb nog niets kunnen vinden over vergoeding....
bilbo3
1
Zo,
dan bereken ik even: per 3 kg lichaamsgewcht van de patient een flacon. dat zijn al snel 20-25 flacons.
Per flacon 54.000 euro, dan praat je dus inderdaad toch over gemiddeld 1,25 miljoen euro per patient.
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Ik weet niet of deze prijs ook reimbursed wordt door het systeem, want dat kan ik hier niet zien. Dus slag om de arm, maar als dat het geval is dan is toch echt een heel mooi resultaat. History in the making. uniQure moet het allemaal als eerste doen: gentherapie registreren en vergoed krijgen. Als het vergoed wordt dan kunnen wij het duitse gezondheidssysteem alleen maar prijzen dat zij de 1e in de wereld durven te zijn.
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Daar lijkt het wel op. Ik denk dat uniQure op Chiesi wacht en Chiese is wrschl niet zo gebrand als uniqure op publiciteit!?
Ik geloog dat Chiesi privebezit is.
Over vergoeding gesproken: ik geloof dat Orphan Drugs in Duitsland sowieso vergoed worden, maar dat er wel een correctie kan plaatsvinden na 1 jaar, als de prijs niet goed genoeg onderbouwd kan worden.
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belangrijker dan de prijs is de werking en veiligheid. Dat zal ook een FDA goedkeuring mbt Glybera ondersteunen (nog meer data).

Nu hopen op meer fantasie ih bedrijf dmv meer trials en samenwerkingen.
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quote:

Antoni schreef op 7 november 2014 21:44:

translate.google.nl/translate?hl=nl&a...
met (kromme) tekst:

Gentherapie, 's werelds eerste commercieel is Italiaans
Medicatie corrigeert DNA in zeldzame ongeneeslijke
07 November, 15:02



eerste gentherapie op de markt en 'Italian eerste gentherapie op de markt en 'Italian

Gentherapie is een van de grootste dromen van de wetenschap 'juiste' DNA te genezen momenteel ongeneeslijke ziekten. De onderzoekers bestudeerden 40 jaar, maar nu op de markt komt de eerste drug in de wereld op basis van dit type therapie: de Italiaanse Chiesi realiseren vechten een zeldzame aandoening die minder dan 1000 patiënten heeft in Europa 60-90 in Italië.

Deze ziekte is het gebrek aan lipoproteïne lipase (LPLD) veroorzaakt een ernstige verstoring van vetzuren, beschadiging organen en veroorzaakt acute pancreatitis, die tot de dood in 7-30% van de gevallen. "Tot nu toe geen behandeling - zei Diego Ardigo, hoofd van de geavanceerde therapieën gevraagd -. Als je niet proberen om de vetzuren in de voeding controleren, maar we hebben het hier over mensen die, op een normale limiet van 150, komt naar triglyceriden accumuleren tot waarden 5000, of zelfs 15 duizend. "

Gentherapie tegen LPLD is een speciaal onschadelijk virus worden aangepast en in het laboratorium. Binnen is een gen dat in de cellen van de patiënt eenmaal ingevoerd, kan een eiwit dat bij deze patiënten niet geproduceerd synthetiseren. Therapietrouw corrigeert het genetische defect van de mens, en volgens studies "kan aanvallen van acute pancreatitis met 54%, en aanvallen van buikpijn door pancreatitis met 59% verminderen."

De drug wordt 'alipogen tiparvovec' genaamd, werd ontwikkeld in samenwerking met UniQuire en niet de eerste gentherapie bereikt: Wereld zijn er verschillende onderzoeken in deze richting, en één van de bekendste gevallen is dat van het San Raffaele-ziekenhuis in Milaan, waar dankzij deze therapieën mogelijk is geweest om een ??aantal 'bubble kinderen' te behandelen, die lijden aan een ernstige ziekte die het immuunsysteem in gevaar brengt. Deze therapieën zijn echter altijd experimenteel geweest die van Chiesi daarentegen is het eerste geval in de wereld van gentherapie die een geneesmiddel op de markt wordt.

Dit geneesmiddel is niet bedoeld voor het moment dat bij alle patiënten met LPLD, maar alleen voor degenen die zijn van een zeer ernstig stadium. Geschat wordt dat in Europa kunnen profiteren 200-300 patiënten (ongeveer 30-50% van alle patiënten). De nieuwe drug is reeds goedgekeurd door het Europees Agentschap van het geneesmiddel; is beschikbaar voor een paar dagen in Duitsland, terwijl in Italië heeft al de onderhandelingen voor de marketing begonnen.

E 'werd ook opgericht door de eerste officiële register van patiënten met LPLD, dat elke patiënt zal volgen gedurende ten minste 15 jaar: dit zal toelaten om meer informatie te verzamelen over de ziekte, zo zeldzaam dat er in Italië een nieuw geval om de 2-3 jaar .

en voor de puristen onder ons:

ANSA > Salute e Benessere > Medicina > Terapia Genica, la prima al Mondo e in Commercio Italiana
Terapia Genica, la prima al Mondo e in Commercio Italiana
Farmaco Dna corregge in Malattia rara incurabile
07 novembre, 15:02



Terapia Genica bene in Commercio e 'italiana Terapia Genica bene in Commercio e 'italiana

La Terapia Genica E di tra i pil grandi sogni della scienza 'correggere' il Dna per guarire Malattie attualmente Incurabili. I Ricercatori studiano la da 40 anni, MA solista ora Arriva il Commercio In Primo Al Mondo farmaco basato su this Tipo di Terapia: a realizzarlo l'Azienda Italiana Chiesi, un combattimento tere Una rara Malattia Estremamente Che Conta Meno di 1000 Pazienti in Tutta Europa e circa 60-90 in Italia.

This e Il Malattia deficit di lipoproteina lipasi (Carenza): provoca delle Nazioni Unite tomba squilibrio degli ACIDI Grassi, danneggiando e Gli organizzato provocando pancreatiti acute, Che portano a morte Nel 7-30% Dei Casi. "Finora non esistevano cure - spiega Diego Ardigò, Responsabile Terapie Avanzate della Chiesi - se non il Tentativo di controllare Gli ACIDI Grassi con la Dieta Ma di PERSONE Che Parliamo, su ONU limite di normale 150 Arrivano ad accumulare trigliceridi fino a Bon Voyage values ??of. 5mila, o addirittura 15mila ".

La Terapia Genica Contro la carenza Consiste nell'usare Uno speciale dei virus inoffensivo e MODIFICATO in laboratorio. Al Suo interno E ONU Che gene Inserito, Una Volta entrato Nelle cellule del Paziente, E in Grado di gran lunga sintetizzare proteína Una Che in questi malati Prodotta non Vienne. Con la Terapia SI corregge il Difetto genetico della persona e Secondo Gli studi "E in Grado di ridurre Gli Attacchi di pancreatite acuta del 54%, e Gli Attacchi di dolore addominale Causati da pancreatite del 59%".

Il farmaco SI chiama 'Alipogene tiparvovec' has been sviluppato in collaborazione con uniqure e Non è la prima Terapia Genica realizzata: nel Mondo ci Sono stato diverse Ricerche in this Senso, e Uno dei Più noti Casi E Quello del San Raffaele di Milano, Sordi proprio grazie una terapia quest opera has been possibile curaro alcuni 'bambini in bolla "colpiti da Una tomba Malattia Che il Loro Sistema compromette immunitario. Queste lavoro di terapia, però, Sono stato Semper Sperimentali: Quello della Chiesi, invece, E Il Primo Caso al mondo di Terapia Genica Che ONU Messo Diventa farmaco in Commercio.

This medicato non SI rivolge a Il Momento di Tutti i Carenza con Malati, Ma che Sono solo un Quelli una tomba Uno stadio Molto. Si Stima Che in Europa Potrebbero beneficiarne 200-300 Pazienti (circa il 30-50% il di Tutti i malati). Il nuovo farmaco has been Già Approvato dall'Agenzia Europea del farmacoeconomia; E da alcuni giorni disponible in Germania, MENTRE in Italia has been Già avviata la fase di negoziazione per la Messa di Commercio di.

E 'Stato Il Primo InOLTRE Istituito dall'azienda Registro Ufficiale dei Carenza con Malati, Che seguirà ciascun Paziente per at least 15 anni: permettera of this collect Maggiori Informazioni sulla patologia, rara Così il Che in Italia SI ONU Nuovo verificatore OGNI Caso 2-3 Anni .
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Allen,
volg deze link voor verdere info over vergoeding Glybera Duitsland.
De vergoeding is inderdaad net aangevraagd maar nog niet toegekend.
De aanvraag is 1 nov ingediend en een eerste reactie wordt verwacht in Februari 2015 en defintief besluit in April 2015. Tot die tijd moeten we dus geduld hebben.....

www.g-ba.de/informationen/nutzenbewer...

Nutzenbewertungsverfahren zum Wirkstoff Alipogentiparvovec

Steckbrief
Wirkstoff: Alipogentiparvovec
Handelsname: Glybera®
Therapeutisches Gebiet: Hyperlipoproteinämie Typ I (Stoffwechselkrankheiten)
Pharmazeutischer Unternehmer: Chiesi GmbH
Orphan Drug: ja

Fristen
Beginn des Verfahrens: 01.11.2014
Veröffentlichung der Nutzenbewertung und Beginn des schriftlichen Stellungnahmeverfahrens: 02.02.2015
Fristende zur Abgabe einer schriftlichen Stellungnahme: 23.02.2015
Beschlussfassung: Mitte April 2015
Verfahrensstatus: Verfahren nach § 35a SGB V begonnen

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Mooi.
Ook duideijk dat vergoedingsdossier is ingediend in NL, DE en UK.
Eerste reactie Duitsland eind Feb 2015.....
Hopen dat Nederland zijn nek eens uit durft te steken voor een nationaal vlaggeschip!
UK is lastig in te schatten.
flosz
0
Ter aanvulling( by Lud. Burger en Ben Hirschler):

Now Chiesi has filed a pricing dossier with Germany's Federal Joint Committee, or G-BA, which will issue an assessment of the drug’s benefits by the end of April 2015. The company is seeking a retail price of 53,000 euros per vial, or 43,870 euros ex-factory.

That equates to 1.11 million euros for an typical LPLD patient, averaging 62.5 kg in clinical trials, who will need 42 injections from 21 vials. This price will be subject to a standard 7 percent discount under Germany's drug pricing system.

Under German rules, the launch price for a new drug is valid for the first 12 months.

A Chiesi spokeswoman confirmed the launch price, in response to inquiries from Reuters, prompted by information from health insurance sources. She added that a final figure would be set after the G-BA gives its verdict and negotiations are held with statutory health insurance funds.

"First commercial treatments are expected in the first half 2015," she said.

UniQure, which will get a net royalty of between 23 and 30 percent on sales, said EU pricing was a matter for its Italian partner, although the Dutch firm does plan to discuss Glybera pricing during an investor meeting in New York on Dec. 1.

Btw:chapeau @bilbo3 & Antoni!
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Sluit ik me bij aan. Trots dat ons forum het al eerder had gespot...
En ook de assumptie dat je gewoon mag launchen in Duitsland was goed.
Nu maandag hemophilie B er nog bij op de investor day en dan hoop ik dat de demand eindelijk goed op gang komt en op gang blijft. Als er veel vraag is en de meest shares zitten bij grote partijen kan de koers wel eens snel oplopen. Kijk de grote jongens stappen echt niet uit voordat de koers 50 plus is, zo schat ik in.
flosz
0
FD:

Gentherapie Uniqure kost €1,11 mln

Van onze redacteur
woensdag 26 november 2014, 21:25
update: donderdag 27 november 2014, 09:16
De eerste gentherapie die in Europa is toegelaten, Glybera, krijgt in Duitsland een prijskaartje van €1,11 mln. Dat meldt persbureau Reuters. Glybera is ontwikkeld door het Amsterdamse biotechbedrijf Uniqure en wordt op de markt gebracht door de Italiaanse farmaceut Chiesi.

De gentherapie is geschikt voor mensen met LPLD, een zeldzame ziekte waarbij vet uit voedsel niet in het bloed wordt afgebroken. Dit lijdt tot zeer ernstige buikpijn en alvleesklierontsteking en kan dodelijk zijn. Bij gentherapie wordt er een synthetisch nagemaakt gen ingebracht in het erfelijk materiaal, met als doel om een erfelijke ziekte op te heffen. In Europa en de Verenigde Staten komt de ziekte bij ongeveer 2500 tot 5000 mensen voor.

Glybera is in 2012 goedgekeurd door de Europese geneesmiddelenwaakhond EMA. Het was erop of eronder: de eerste aanvraag bij de Europese geneesmiddelenautoriteit EMA dateert uit 2009. Duitsland is het eerste land waar de therapie wordt gelanceerd. In april 2015 komt de Duitse overheidsinstantie GBA met een oordeel over de meerwaarde van het nieuwe medicijn.

Onderhandelingen

Chiesi streeft naar een prijs van €53.000 per medicijnflesje, zo blijkt uit het dossier dat bij GBA is ingediend. Een gemiddelde patiënt met LPLD heeft ongeveer 42 injecties nodig, oftewel 21 flacons. Hierdoor komt de prijs op ruim €1,11 mln uit. Een woordvoerder van Chiesi heeft deze prijs aan Reuters bevestigd. De definitieve prijs wordt vastgesteld na het oordeel van GBA en de onderhandelingen met de zorgverzekeraars. Het bedrijf verwacht dat de eerste patiënten in de eerste helft van 2015 worden behandeld.

Voor elk medicijn dat Chiesi verkoopt, krijgt Uniqure een royalty van 23 tot 30%. In mei zei Jörn Aldag, directeur van Uniqure, dat er sinds de oprichting van het bedrijf in 1997 €150 mln besteed is aan de ontwikkeling van het medicijn. 'Als je dat voor €100 gaat verkopen, dan gaat het niet werken.'

Tot 200 patiënten

Volgens Reuters zijn er in Europa 150 tot 200 patiënten die in aanmerking komen voor Glybera. Aldag rekende eerder op 2500 tot 5000 patiënten met LPLD in Europa en de Verenigde Staten (VS). Uniqure, dat ook werkt aan gentherapieën voor de behandeling van hemofilie B, een aangeboren afwijking in de bloedstolling, en de ziekte van Parkinson, neemt de toelating en marketing in de VS wel voor eigen rekening. Het bedrijf hoopt dat de eerste therapieën in 2017 kunnen worden verkocht. Eind dit jaar opent het bedrijf een eigen productiefaciliteit in het Amerikaanse Lexington, waar de gentherapie wordt gemaakt.

Uniqure is in februari dit jaar naar Nasdaq gegaan. Enkele maanden later volgde de Amerikaanse concurrent Bluebird Bio. Met een introductiekoers van $?17 (€?12,40) haalde het Uniqure - het vroegere AMT - uiteindelijk $?85,4 mln (€?62,7 mln) op. De koers steeg woensdag met ruim 18,64% naar $14,83. fd.nl/ondernemen/906639/gentherapie-u...

www.theguardian.com/society/2014/nov/...
seekingalpha.com/news/2150035-uniqure...
www.cityam.com/1417083092/introducing...
www.theglobeandmail.com/life/health-a...
www.frontlinedesk.com/201411929-milli...
nvonews.com/first-gene-therapy-drug-p...
www.iol.co.za/scitech/science/news/fi...
tradearabia.com/touch/article/HEAL/27...
www.techanalyst.co/first-gene-therapy...
yourhealth.asiaone.com/content/first-...
www.bayoubuzz.com/us-news/item/789103...
www.dailyfinance.com/2014/11/26/weste...
www.theglobeandmail.com/life/health-a...
www.businessinsider.com/r-exclusive-f...
www.businessinsider.com.au/r-exclusiv...

flosz
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Molecular Therapy (2015); 23 2, 217–218. doi:10.1038/mt.2014.248

Glybera’s Second Act: The Curtain Rises on the High Cost of Therapy

Seppo Ylä-Herttuala
Editor-in-Chief

The premise of gene therapy is simple: a single treatment to cure an otherwise lifelong serious disease. However, while this powerful concept is being validated in human clinical trials, a new challenge has now arrived at center stage: what will such therapy cost, and how much are health-care providers and insurance companies willing and able to pay?

This question comes under the spotlight following approval of Glybera—adeno-associated virus type 1 (AAV1)-based gene medicine for the treatment of lipoprotein lipase deficiency—for clinical use in the European Union in November 2012.1 A Dutch company, UniQure, and its Italian marketing partner, Chiesi, have filed a pricing dossier with the German Federal Joint Committee that recommends a retail price of 53,000 per vial, bringing the total cost of 21 vials needed for the treatment of one patient to 1.1 million ($US1.4 million), setting a new record for a medicine to treat a rare disease. With only 150–200 patients eligible for Glybera treatment across Europe, and similar numbers in the United States, the impact on overall health-care budgets will be small. However, the pricing of Glybera will set a precedent for subsequent gene therapies for rare diseases that are currently under development and is therefore of great importance to the field, health-care providers and regulators, and companies developing gene therapy products.

High price tags for specific treatments are not new to health-care providers. The previous record for an orphan drug was held by Soliris (eculizumab), with a price of ~$540,000. A liver transplant can cost $250,000–300,000; if complications occur, it can be much higher. Enzyme-replacement therapies (ERTs) for rare diseases can easily cost $50,000/year, and a full treatment schedule with the new hepatitis C drug Sovaldi costs ~$85,000. Clotting-factor treatment of hemophilia can cost up to $100,000/year, depending on the frequency and severity of the bleeding episodes. UniQure claims that the $1.4 million cost of a single treatment is justified because it provides a long-term sustainable cure that generates significant lifetime savings for health-care providers.

For ERTs, revenues come from long-term repeated administration of the drug, and the same is true for many new monoclonal antibody therapies. However, a price tag higher than $1 million will probably spark vigorous debate among health-care providers and the public given that in many cases the R&D costs have already been covered in large part by public research funds. It will also be too easy to ask the question “Do you want to spend over $1 million on improving the condition of one patient with Glybera versus 10–20 women with advanced breast cancer or 200 patients who require a hip replacement?” Indeed, it is likely that some government agencies will step in and demand a compromise. On the other hand, the biotech and pharmaceutical industries require significant investment toward R&D of new products and thus require an income stream sufficient to continue their operations and provide returns to their investors.

A single payment at the time of treatment would be the simplest solution for a company producing the therapy. However, alternative funding models have been suggested whereby the annual payments could be made over a defined period of time based on evidence that the treatment is effective.2 This approach might provide a more stable, albeit much slower, revenue stream to companies focusing on developing novel treatments for rare diseases. However, such an approach could create complications, for example, if a patient’s insurance coverage or health-care provider changes following initiation of the treatment.

A rational approach to pricing would be to determine the cost-effectiveness of the therapy. Although cost is an issue, much emphasis has recently been placed on the improvement of quality of life as well, which is difficult to measure in monetary terms. Therefore, the case of Glybera’s pricing and the policy for reimbursement is of great importance and will clearly become a watershed in the long road of bringing gene therapy to the clinics.3 German authorities are expected to rule on Glybera’s pricing in April 2015, and further negotiations are likely to follow. UniQure will seek approval for Glybera in the United States, but it will probably be two to three years before a decision is made. Therefore, thoughtful discussion among all stakeholders will be required to bring this issue to a fruitful outcome so as to facilitate bringing novel treatments to patients with rare diseases while maintaining the ability of researchers and biotech companies to develop new treatments and making the pricing justifiable to health-care providers and society at large.

References
Ylä-Herttuala, S (2012). Endgame: Glybera finally recommended for approval as the first gene therapy drug in the European Union. Mol Ther 20:1831–1832. | Article | PubMed | ISI | CAS |
Brennan, TA and Wilson, JM (2014). The special case of gene therapy pricing. Nat Biotechnol 32: 874–876. | Article | PubMed | ISI | CAS |
Abou-El-Enein, M, Bauer, G and Reinke, P (2014). The business case for cell and gene therapies. Nat Biotechnol 32: 1192–1193. | Article | PubMed | ISI |
www.nature.com/mt/journal/v23/n2/pdf/...
flosz
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$1-million price tag set for Glybera gene therapy

03 Mar 2015 | 00:32 GMT | Posted by Bioentrepreneur | Category: News

Gene therapy programs are generating much excitement, but there is little agreement about pricing and how payers will foot the bill. (Jim Dowdalls/Science Source)
The first gene therapy approved in the Western world is set to go on sale in Germany at a cost close to $1 million per treatment. The record-breaking price tag came to light in November 2014, when Amsterdam-based Uniqure and its marketing partner Chiesi, of Parma, Italy, filed a pricing dossier with German authorities to launch Glybera. A few weeks later, the focus on gene therapies sharpened further when Cambridge, Massachusetts–based Bluebird Bio presented striking early clinical data from four beta-thalassemia patients treated with its Lentiglobin BB305 gene therapy, at the American Society of Hematology meeting in San Francisco. Within three months, these patients had begun producing sufficient hemoglobin to reduce or eliminate the need for blood transfusions. Big pharma is taking notice; the most recent gene therapy deal signed in February, between Sanofi’s Genzyme unit and Third Rock Ventures’ Voyager Therapeutics, both in Cambridge, Massachusetts, is worth up to $845 million. But as gene therapies start to provide solutions for highly penetrant genetic diseases that had been intractable, the hand-wringing over their value and how government and private insurers around the globe will pay for them will likely begin.

“The pricing of specialty medicines has now caught everyone’s attention,” says Troyen Brennan, chief medical officer for the pharmacy benefit manager CVS Caremark, based in Woonsocket, Rhode Island. The pricing debate, sparked by Gilead Science’s hepatitis C virus drug regimen Sovaldi (sofosbuvir; Nat. Biotechnol. 32, 501–502, 2014), is set to intensify with the advent of these potentially curative—and very expensive—therapies for certain rare genetic diseases.

As the first and only approved gene therapy in Europe or the US, Glybera (alipogen tiparvovec) will likely become a bench-mark product. Glybera was recommended for approval by the European Medicines Agency in 2012 (Nat. Biotechnol. 30, 1153, 2012), and Chiesi plans to launch the product in Europe in early 2015, though it has yet to receive a nod from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Glybera is used to treat adults with lipoprotein lipase (LPL) deficiency, an orphan disease which results in abnormally large particles of fat in the blood and causes inflammation of the pancreas. The therapy consists of LPL, encoded by an adeno-associated virus vector, administered through a series of intra-muscular injections. In addition to Germany, the company expects UK pricing March 1. So far, pricing discussions for gene therapy has remained “under the radar” for many payers in the US, says Brennan. “I’ve not seen the national health insurers talking much about this, but they will be sooner or later.” Glybera’s price depends on a patient’s weight, explained Uniqure CEO Jörn Aldag, at an investor meeting in early December. An average patient would need 19 vials of Glybera, he said, at a cost of nearly €44,000 (about $50,000) per vial. “Higher value to patients… should actually command a higher price,” Aldag noted. Uniqure has six-year follow-up data showing a 50% reduction in pancreatitis in Glybera-treated patients, he said, and dividing that up-front price by six years “you get to a [per-year] price that’s actually lower than [typical] orphan drug pricing,” he said.

Pricing gene therapies might follow one of three general schemes. A classic up-front, one-time payment, such that Chiesi and Uniqure are seeking for Glybera in Europe; an annuity model that spreads that payment over a number of years to lessen the cost-density burden on payers; and a pay-for-performance, risk-sharing model that tracks patient outcomes and rewards manufacturers for maintaining patients’ health over a period of time. Each of these schemes is likely to be used, depending on the specific attributes of any one therapy and specific negotiations between drug manufacturers and payers.

Rapid progress in the clinic may speed up such decisions. Bluebird’s therapy, was granted FDA’s breakthrough therapy designation on Februar y 2, and since the company’s December presentation at the hematology meeting, eight patients have been treated with the drug across two phase 1/2 clinical studies. Together, the two trials will enroll up to 22 patients with either beta-thalassemia major or severe sickle cell disease. BB305 treats those diseases by using a lentiviral vector to transfect a patient’s own hematopoietic stem cells ex vivo with a functional human beta-globin gene, then returning those cells to the patient.

“Ultimately, where industry needs to go is true pay for performance,” says Bluebird COO Jeff Walsh. But for such a model to work, the product would have to have “transformative data” and endpoints that can both be measured and have a direct correlation with disease. Bluebird’s BB305 may be among the first products that meet those criteria. The impact of the company’s gene therapy on beta-thalassemia patients who would otherwise require chronic blood transfusions is “measurable, with the ability to track on a patient-by-patient basis their level of hemoglobin, which has a direct correlation to whether they’re anemic,” says Walsh. “These are incredibly trackable outcomes and might be a perfect case study” for a pay-for-perfor- mance model, he says.
flosz
0
Vervolg.

Spreading out the cost of therapy is likely to be important to insurance providers, especially private payers in the US who may have a patient for only a few years.“If I was working for a carrier right now, I’d be very eager to be pushing for some solutions that are not going to entail bearing the entire cost, just because I have a particular patient’s beta thalassemia this year,” says CVS’s Brennan. Now that insurers can’t reject patients based on pre-existing conditions, or limit lifetime benefits, and may be required to offer gene therapies that become standards of care as parts of minimum essential benefits packages (all of which came into law as part of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act in 2010), the environment for annuity-style payments for gene therapies is in place, he says (Nat. Biotechnol. 32, 874–876, 2014).

And for diseases with very clear cost off-sets—in beta-thalassemia, for example, the cost of chronic blood transfusions and disease complications—payers will be more likely to see gene therapies as being cost effective, says Roger Longman, CEO of Real Endpoints, a New York–based information and analytics company focused on pharmaceutical reimbursement. And at the same time, “companies can make a bunch of money without gouging the system,” he says.

Bluebird’s Walsh agrees that the efficacy and safety of a gene therapy and the cost savings for the overall healthcare system are the most important elements of pricing drugs in this space. In addition, he says, “quality of life is another major component of value,” in particular when you think about how a one-time treatment can replace a lifetime of medical interventions. And lastly, he says, “if a patient is having challenges maintaining an education or a job, and a curative therapy alters that equation, there’s societal value” to the therapy as well. The onus is on the drug developer to paint that picture on behalf of its therapy, says Walsh. “If we went to [payers] with a product that had incremental value, we wouldn’t be having the same dialogue,” says Walsh. “They realize there is a lot of value here for this patient population, one that has significant unmet medical need. That opens the door, and we’re starting to have really interesting discussions about their challenges, our challenges, and [finding] common ground,” he says.

Investors are clearly excited about the potential for multibillion-dollar gene therapy products. As of early February the small biotech Bluebird was valued at more than $3 billion. Voyager is only a year old but its deal with Genzyme brought in a $100 million upfront payment to advance its adeno-associated virus gene therapy programs in Parkinson’s disease, Friedreich’s ataxia and Huntington’s disease, among other central nervous system disorders. In exchange for that upfront payment and future milestones and royalties, Genzyme will have the option to license multiple Voyager programs at the proof-of-concept stage. Voyager retains US rights to some programs and global rights to its amyotrophic lateral sclerosis program. Another player in the space, Philadelphia-based Spark Therapeutics, went public on January 29 raising more than $130 million. Spark is developing gene therapies for hemophilia, inherited retinal dystrophies and neurodegenerative disorders, based on technologies developed at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. The company’s lead product, RPE65, delivered by means of adeno-associated virus for inherited retinal dystrophies, received a breakthrough therapy designation in November 2014. The therapy is in a fully enrolled 28-patient phase 3 trial, and the company expects to announce results later in 2015. Spark doubled in value on its first day of trading, to more than $1 billion.

All gene therapies are unlikely to be deemed equal in the eyes of payers—and Walsh’s four-part value equation hints at measuring what is, in some cases, unmeasurable. But curative products that are safe and have meaningful cost offsets, particularly in rare diseases, are likely to command record prices in the not-too-distant future.

Chris Morrison Yardley, Pennsylvania

blogs.nature.com/tradesecrets/2015/03...
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