获得无证药品,如果不免费提供,谁应该支付费用?

Medicine access @ point of care Pub Date : 2021-09-06 eCollection Date: 2021-01-01 DOI:10.1177/23992026211040047
Kieron David Lewis
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在世界各国,临床开发、许可证提交、商业产品发布和附属管理的成本不断上升,再加上确保符合条件的患者获得新疗法的道德义务,导致一些制药和生物制药公司审查其获得药物的方法。传统的做法是先在美国上市,然后得到欧盟(eu)的批准,然后是一个战略上市流程,最终可以确保进入医疗体系发达的关键市场。对许多其他国家来说,通过现有立法为无证药品供应提供获取途径可以为增加获取途径提供解决方案。在没有临床试验或商业产品供应的情况下,可以考虑在更多国家扩大更多合格患者的可及性,在这些国家,无证供应可能是唯一的选择。本文将特别关注未获许可药品的关键财务和报销问题,以及一些公司如何采用“收费”的早期使用模式,从他们的角度来看,这种模式是可持续的,而且是负担得起的。同样重要的是要考虑收费项目对患者和相关付款人的可持续性,因为他们可能期望免费提供未经许可的治疗。然而,如果赞助商或制造商根本负担不起免费供应计划,患者将面临更严重的问题,即根本无法获得,无论是收费还是免费。本文的目的是从不同的角度提高感兴趣的利益相关者(包括患者)的意识。无证药品通常仅在严重或危及生命的需求未得到满足时才开处方,如果获得治疗取决于支付能力,则对公司、医生、患者和付款人的影响应是明确的。
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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Access to unlicensed medicines, who should pay when they are not provided for free?

The rising cost of clinical development, license submissions, commercial product launches, and affiliate management in all countries around the world, coupled with the ethical obligation to ensure that eligible patients have access to new treatments, has led some pharmaceutical and biopharmaceutical companies to review their approach to access to medicine. The traditional US first launch, followed by European Union approval and then a strategic launch process, can eventually ensure access in the key markets with developed healthcare systems. For many other countries, providing access via the current legislation available for unlicensed medicine supply can provide a solution for increasing access. This option can be considered for broadening access to a greater number of eligible patients in more countries where unlicensed supply may be the only option, for example, if no clinical trials or commercial product supplies are available. This article looks specifically at the key financial and reimbursement considerations for unlicensed medicines and how some companies are adopting a "charged for" early access model that can be sustainable and affordable from their perspective. It is also important to consider how sustainable a charged program would be for the patient and the relevant payer, as they may expect an unlicensed treatment is provided free of charge. However, if the sponsor or manufacturer simply cannot afford to run a free supply program, the patient is faced with a more serious problem, that of no access at all, either charged or free. The objective of this article is to raise awareness amongst interested stakeholders from different perspectives, including the patients. Unlicensed medicines are usually only prescribed when there is a serious or life-threatening unmet need, and the implications for the company, physician, patient, and payer should be clear if access to treatment depends on the ability to pay.

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