Ensuring the affordable becomes accessible-lessons from ketamine, a new treatment for severe depression.

IF 4 2区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry Pub Date : 2024-02-01 Epub Date: 2023-10-13 DOI:10.1177/00048674231203898
Anthony Rodgers, Dilara Bahceci, Christopher G Davey, Mary Lou Chatterton, Nick Glozier, Malcolm Hopwood, Colleen Loo
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Abstract

In this paper, the case study of ketamine as a new treatment for severe depression is used to outline the challenges of repurposing established medicines and we suggest potential solutions. The antidepressant effects of generic racemic ketamine were identified over 20 years ago, but there were insufficient incentives for commercial entities to pursue its registration, or support for non-commercial entities to fill this gap. As a result, the evaluation of generic ketamine was delayed, piecemeal, uncoordinated, and insufficient to gain approval. Meanwhile, substantial commercial investment enabled the widespread registration of a patented, intranasal s-enantiomeric ketamine formulation (Spravato®) for depression. However, Spravato is priced at $600-$900/dose compared to ~$5/dose for generic ketamine, and the ~AUD$100 million annual government investment requested in Australia (to cover drug costs alone) has been rejected twice, leaving this treatment largely inaccessible for Australian patients 2 years after Therapeutic Goods Administration approval. Moreover, emerging evidence indicates that generic racemic ketamine is at least as effective as Spravato, but no comparative trials were required for regulatory approval and have not been conducted. Without action, this story will repeat regularly in the next decade with a new wave of psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy treatments, for which the original off-patent molecules could be available at low-cost and reduce the overall cost of treatment. Several systemic reforms are required to ensure that affordable, effective options become accessible; these include commercial incentives, public and public-private funding schemes, reduced regulatory barriers and more coordinated international public funding schemes to support translational research.

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氯胺酮是一种治疗严重抑郁症的新方法,确保负担得起的药物成为可获得的经验教训。
在本文中,氯胺酮作为一种新的严重抑郁症治疗方法的案例研究概述了重新利用现有药物的挑战,并提出了潜在的解决方案。通用外消旋氯胺酮的抗抑郁作用已鉴定超过20 几年前,但没有足够的激励措施鼓励商业实体进行注册,也没有足够的支持非商业实体填补这一空白。因此,通用氯胺酮的评估被推迟、零散、不协调,不足以获得批准。与此同时,大量的商业投资使一种用于抑郁症的鼻内对映体氯胺酮专利制剂(Spravato®)得以广泛注册。然而,Spravato的价格为600至900美元/剂,而仿制药氯胺酮的价格约为5美元/剂。澳大利亚政府要求的每年约1亿澳元的投资(仅用于支付药物费用)已两次被拒绝,这使得澳大利亚患者基本上无法获得这种治疗。2 治疗用品管理局批准后数年。此外,新出现的证据表明,非专利外消旋氯胺酮至少与Spravato一样有效,但不需要进行监管批准的比较试验,也没有进行过。如果不采取行动,这个故事将在未来十年随着新一波迷幻辅助心理治疗的浪潮定期重复,对于这些治疗,原始的非专利分子可以以低成本获得,并降低治疗的总体成本。需要进行几项系统性改革,以确保能够获得负担得起的有效选择;其中包括商业激励、公共和公私资助计划、减少监管障碍以及更协调的国际公共资助计划,以支持转化研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.00
自引率
2.20%
发文量
149
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry is the official Journal of The Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists (RANZCP). The Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry is a monthly journal publishing original articles which describe research or report opinions of interest to psychiatrists. These contributions may be presented as original research, reviews, perspectives, commentaries and letters to the editor. The Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry is the leading psychiatry journal of the Asia-Pacific region.
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