Thread Rating:
  • 1 Vote(s) - 5 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Study: Waste in Cancer Drugs Costs $3 Billion a Year
#1
[Image: 01cancer-web1-master675.jpg]

A nurse prepared a vial of Velcade at Maryland Oncology Hematology office in Rockville, Md., last week. Only 1.3 milligrams of the drug in the 3.5-milligram container was used to treat the patient. The rest was thrown away.



Pretty bad when our government cannot be relied on to regulate drug companies
The people continue to get screwed, all the while paying out the azz for some meds

In the U.S., the drug companies purposely put an expensive cancer drug in a vial that the dosage is enough for a 6' ft 6 - 250 pound football player, yet a little old lady that uses half the bottle, pays the same price even tho the bottle gets thrown out with the remaining unused med


Quote:WASHINGTON — The federal Medicare program and private health insurers waste nearly $3 billion every year buying cancer medicines that are thrown out because many drug makers distribute the drugs only in vials that hold too much for most patients, a group of cancer researchers has found.

The expensive drugs are usually injected by nurses working in doctors’ offices and hospitals who carefully measure the amount needed for a particular patient and then, because of safety concerns, discard the rest.

If drug makers distributed vials containing smaller quantities, nurses could pick the right volume for a patient and minimize waste. Instead, many drug makers exclusively sell one-size-fits-all vials, ensuring that many smaller patients pay thousands of dollars for medicine they are never given, according to researchers at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, who published a study on Tuesday in BMJ, formerly known as the British Medical Journal.

Some of these medicines are distributed in smaller vial sizes in Europe, where governments play a more active role than the United States does in drug pricing and distribution.


SOURCE


Now how hard would it be for our government to step in and say "hey, how about sending some smaller vials our way while you are at it".
Probably because the lobbyists pay them to not care - to look the other way
Sad and pathetic


Quote:“Drug companies are quietly making billions forcing little old ladies to buy enough medicine to treat football players, and regulators have completely missed it,” said Dr. Peter B. Bach, director of the Center for Health Policy and Outcomes at Memorial Sloan Kettering and a co-author of the study. “If we’re ever going to start saving money in health care, this is an obvious place to cut.”

The researchers analyzed the waste generated by the top 20 selling cancer medicines and concluded that insurers paid drug makers $1.8 billion annually on discarded quantities and then spent about $1 billion on markups to doctors and hospitals.


There are some non-cancer drugs that are done the same way, wasted and thrown in the garbage, but they were not part of this study.


Quote:Some non-cancer drugs also generate considerable waste, including Remicade, an arthritis drug sold by Johnson & Johnson for which an estimated $500 million of the drug’s $4.3 billion in annual sales comes from quantities that are thrown away, researchers found. But such non-cancer drugs were not included in the study’s estimates of total waste.


What a rip off! 
But not surprising really


Quote:In one example, the study said that in the United States Takeda Pharmaceuticals sells Velcade, a drug for the treatment of multiple myeloma and lymphoma, only in 3.5-milligram vials that sell for $1,034 and hold enough medicine to treat a person who is 6 feet 6 inches tall and who weighs 250 pounds. If a patient is smaller, then a quantity of the precious powder is thrown away.


G.T.M.
"Get The Money"

That is all these pharmaceutical companies care about and 'we the people' - American citizens- cannot even count on our government to oversee and regulate them, to protect people from paying too much

Corporate greed makes the world go 'round


Quote:Velcade is sold in Britain in both 1-milligram and 3.5-milligram vials.

Takeda is expected to earn $309 million this year on supplies of Velcade that are discarded, an amount that represents 30 percent of the drug’s overall sales in the United States, the cancer researchers estimated. If Takeda provided an additional vial size of 0.25 milligram, waste would be slashed by 84 percent, also reducing Velcade’s sales in the United States by $261 million annually, the researchers calculated.

“You have these incredibly expensive drugs, and you can only buy them in bulk,” said Dr. Leonard Saltz, who leads the pharmacy and therapeutics committee at Memorial Sloan Kettering and was a co-author of the study. “What’s really interesting is they’re selling these drugs in smaller vials in Europe, where regulators are clearly paying attention to this issue.”

a.k.a. 'snarky412'
 
        



Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)