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Orphan Drug status Is it sustainable? 20 février 2014 1 Disclaimer This is an independent study performed by students from Faculté des Sciences Pharmaceutiques de Lille. The opinions expressed are our own. 2 Orphan drug prices :Hot topic in the press Million-dollar therapy will test payers' tolerance of orphan drug prices Fierce BiotechJanuary 2013 Drug Makers See Profit in Rare Diseases Wall Street Journal January 30, 2013 NPS Pharma: Controversy Over Super-Expensive Orphan Drug Prices TheStreet.com January 2013 Tiger in the Fiscal Room: Beware the Increasing Cost And Number of Orphan Drugs Managed Care Magazine March 2013 Inside The Pricing Of A $300,000-A-Year Drug 3 Inside the pricing of A $300,000-A-Year Drug: GATTEX Approved in 2012 and indicated to treat the Short Bowel Syndrome. Short Bowel Syndrome: Malabsorption disorder caused by surgical resection of small intestine (lenght < 2m), resulting from: Crohn’s disease,Tumors, Necrotizing entorocolitis, Injury or Trauma… Leads to malabsoprtion of proteins, nutrients, fluids and electrolytes. 4 Inside the pricing of A $300,000-A-Year Drug: GATTEX Symptoms: • Fluid imbalance • Weight loss • Anemia • Malnutrition 5 Inside the pricing of A $300,000-A-Year Drug: GATTEX • Intestinal adaptation: Remaining portion of the small intestine may increase its absorptive capacity. Normal Nutrient layer mobility Adapted Villi Blood flow 6 Inside the pricing of A $300,000-A-Year Drug: GATTEX Treatments: Depending on severity, malabsorption can be overcome by: increasing oral uptake… But…If this treatment fails, patients become dependant on PN/IV Nutrition. Inherent risks Catheter infection=100% Diarrhea=50% Ostomy leak= 38% Impact : Change ostomy bag 3-4X a day 2-3L watery diarrhea a day On PN/IV 10 hrs up to 7 days a week Sleep is disrupted Can’t work 7 Inside the pricing of A $300,000-A-Year Drug : GATTEX GLP2 Like Peptide 2 recombinant analogue, delivered daily by subcutaneous inj. • Suppresing gastric acid secretion and gastric motility • Stimulating intestinal nutrient transport • Intestinal blood flow and crypt cell proliferation • Increases villus height Gattex enables to reduce PN/IV dependence 8 Clinical trials • STEPS STUDY • Primary Endpoint: PN/IV Volume reduction≥20% 9 Clinical trials • Secondary endpoint: Additional day off gained n=21 n=9 n=8 n=3 10 How do they justify the price? Small population At first…15000 eligible patients (expected to charge $100000/year) based on 3 prevalence studies But…the results looked very different, roughly 1000 patients. 11 How do How dothey theyjustify justifythe theprice? price? Costs direct & indirect PN/IV $185,000-$578,000 a year including: Gattex $295,000 -Fluid and supplies: $75000-$122,000 - Home services: $100,000-$250,000 - Hospitalization costs: $10000196,000 -Fluid and supplies: $130,000 Example: Primary endpoint: 30% reduction in fluid volume of PN Gattex: 295,000$ + Fluids and supplies: $91000 + Home services: $100,000-$250,000 + Hospitalization costs: $10000-$196000 ------------------------------------------------------$386,000 + ($110,000 – $444,000) 12 How do How dothey theyjustify justifythe theprice? price? 13 How do they justify the price? How do they justify the price? Perceveid level of unmet medical need 85% of patients are covered Coverage and co-pay assistance program established by NPS Payers are willing to pay: burden of illness, clinical value, small number of14 patients… Pricing issues? Pricing issues? • Elelyso: Gaucher’s disease $355,800 •Kalydeco: Cystic fibrosis $311,500 •Juxtapid: Homozygous familial hyperchol. $ 295,000 15 Historic overview 16 History KefauverHarris Amendement 1962 Drug coalition NORD Orphan Drug Act 70’s 1983 US 1993 Orphan Drug Act in Japan 2000 Orphan Drug Act in Europe Others • In Europe and US: 55 million people suffering from rare disease. • 5000-7000 rare diseases exist in the World. • 250 new diseases described every year. 17 Procedure of Designation EMA COMP European Commission • The submission is free of charge • Designation as an orphan medicinal product does not indicate that the product has already satisfied the efficacy safety criteria necessary for the granting of a marketing authorization. • Information for the submission Rare disease description Active Substance description Discussion on the rationality of using this molecule in that rare disease. Almost 70% of positive response for designations. 18 Criteria for designations EUROPE US STATES UNITED Prevalence < 5 / 10 000 Prevalence <200 000 in the US Or Insufficient return on investment Or Insufficient return on investment And No satisfactory method Or Significant benefit 19 Incentives EUROPE UNITED STATES Protocol assistance Protocol assistance Access to the centralized authorization procedure Tax credits of up to 50% of R&D costs EMA fee reductions FDA fee waivers Additional incentives for Small &Medium entreprises Research grants 10 years of market exclusivity 7 years of market exclusivity 20 Orphan Drug Regulatory Process in EU Fee Reduction Submission for designation Designation Centralized Procedure Submission for Marketing Authorization MA 10 years of market exclusivity Protocole assistance Clinical development Drug Discovery Molecule Identification Pre-clinical test Phase 4 Phase 1 Phase 2 Phase 3 21 Designations : US, EU, JAPAN In 2007 : FDA&EMA adopt common Orphan Drug designation Application form 22 Source : EvaluatePharma® Designations and Approbations in Europe 120 100 80 60 Designations 40 For 10 years : - 829 designations - 63 Marketing Authorizations Marketing authorizations 20 0 180 Year Number of positive opinion Number of orphan designations and marketing authorizations 140 161 160 140 120 100 78 80 60 35 40 24 8 20 0 0-1 1-2 2-3 3-4 Prevalence (per 10,000) 4-5 Nature reviews : European regulation on orphan medicinal products : 10 years of experience and future perspectives 23 Top 15 companies 14 WW Orphan prescription sales ($bn) 12 10 8 6 2012 2018 4 2 0 24 Source : EvaluatePharma® Orphans marketing authorization by therapeutic area in Europe Oncology Alimentary tract and metabolism 1% 1% 8% 4% Haematology 11% 44% Respiratory and cardiovascular 11% Nervous system 20% Immunology Hormonal Distribution of orphan drug marketing authorizations by therapeutic area Other 25 Nature reviews : European regulation on orphan medicinal products : 10 years of experience and future perspectives An other distribution of orphan drugs Rare diseases treatment can be regrouped in 4 categories in Europe: • Orphan Oncology drugs – 44% of ODs approved • Orphan non Oncology drugs – Repurposed Drugs : 10% of ODs approved – Second to market rare disease :16% of ODs approved – First to market rare disease : 30% of ODs approved 26 Eventually a mistaken view Eventually a mistaken view Comparison of the top 5 european countries’ mean treatments for ODs and mean price treatments for a sample of non-rare disease hospital drugs. €250,000 Top 5 EU countries Mean Price €200,000 €200,000 €150,000 €100,000 €50,000 €24,019 €16,000 €31,159 €24,716 €13,000 €0 1st to market ( non 2nd to market (non Repurposed drugs ( oncology) oncology) non oncology) 30% 16% 10% Oncology Rheumatoid Arthritis Other Non orphans ( Cancers…) 44% Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases 2013: Sustainable rare diseases business and drug access: no time for misconceptions 27 Misconceptions Comparison of the performance of specialized orphan drug companies with other companies Average % 100 90 Specialized orphan drugs companies 80 Large pharmaceutical companies 70 Medium-sized pharmaceutical companies Small pharmaceutical companies 60 Biotechnology companies 50 40 30 20 10 0 Gross margin R&D as percentage of sales EBITDA margin ROE ( accounting) ROE (market capitalization) Pure orphan players have not been performing as strongly as perceived. Nature: Are orphan drug companies the pick of the pharmaceutical industry? 28 2000-2020: Sales Growth in Europe Growth forecast 29 Orphanet journal of rare disease : estimating budget impact of orphan medicines in Europe : 2000-2020 Outside the framework 30 Trisenox® by CellTherapeutics • Arsenic Trioxide • Injectable formulation • Approved in 2000 by the FDA, Cell Therapeutics, Seattle • Treatment of an orphan disease : acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) : • 2nd intention : Patients with refractory to, or have relapsed from retinoid and anthracycline chemotherapy 31 Trisenox® by Cell Therapeutics • APL : • About 2000 patients in the USA • Treatment : • Trans retinoic acid • Antracycline based chemotherapy • 2nd line : arsenic trioxide • Bone marrow transplant • Clinical trials of Trisenox : • The drug was shown to be effective with 87% of the patients achieving complete remission • At a mediane of 57 days of treatment • SMR : Important 32 Trisenox by Cell Therapeutics • 22,000 $ for a year of treatment • Concerns about 400 patients in the USA • Designated Orphan Drug : • Financial breaks by the federal government • Market exclusivity for 7 years • In the USA : • Marketing off label prohibited • BUT drug’s reach not limited to its approved use 33 From 502,000 $ to… $ 502,000 4th quarter 2000 : 1st quarter on the market •Trisenox has a potential whole host of blood cell-related cancers : multiple myeloma : 15 000 new cases a year • Medicare agreed to reimburse for off-label prescriptions in 16 states $ 6,635,280 4th quarter 2001 Source: U.S. Department of Justice 34 …to $ 27,635,280… • Wining the doctors : • Conferences and dinners greeted by CTI sales and marketing personnel to present informations about Trisenox® • In 2003, only 10% of the prescriptions for the indication of APL Source: Cell Therapeutics $ 27,635,280 2nd quarter 2003 35 …to $ 81,335,280 Summer 2005 : CTI sold Trisenox to Cephalon $ 81,335,280 4th quarter 2005 36 Cell Therapeutics fortunes turned… • Lawsuit against the company accusing it of illegally promoting Trisenox off-label • The federal government joined the suit • CTI accept to pay$ 10,5 million to resolve the allegations • To this day, Trisenox has not been licensed for anything but the rare disease that first put it on the market. 37 Others federal alegations for promoting orphan drugs for off-label uses : Other drug makers accused of improperly promoting or marketing orphan drugs licensed for rare diseases : • Aranesp, Amgen : ✔ Anemia in patients with non-myeloid malignancies where anemias due to the effect of concomitantly administered chemotherapy ✘ Not approved : use of treating anemia in cancerous patients who are not undergoing chemotherapy. ➜ $ 762 million to pay • Temodal, Schering-Plough : ✔ Glioblastoma ✘ Otherforms of brain tumors and metastatic cancers ➜ $ 435 million to pay 38 Strategies for repositioning orphan drugs Finding new indications for existing drugs: • Well known safety and pharmacocinetic profils • Shorter development time and lower development costs : • In vitro and in vivo screening • Chemical optimization • Toxicology • Bulk manufacturing 39 Strategies for repositioning orphan drugs Effective against several orphan diseases Different strategies Rare disease in a country can be a common one in an other From a rare disease into a common one From a common disease into a rare one 40 Different strategies (1/4) Strategies for repositioning orphan drugs Drugs effective against multiple rare diseases Imatinib : approved for several orphan indications • Inhibiting on multiple tyrosine kinase : • Chronic myeloid leukemia • Acute lymphoblastic leukemia • Aggressive systemic mastocytosis • Gastro intestinal stromal tumors • Hypereosinophilic syndrome • Increasing of the price : • 2001 : $ 30,000 • 2012 : $ 76,000 In 2012 : sales are $ 4,7 billion 41 Different strategies (2/4) Strategies for repositioning orphan drugs A rare disease in a country can be a common one in an other : Tropical diseases : Orphandrugs in the USA • Antimalarials : Halofantrine and Mefloquine • Leprosy : Thalidomide used for treatment of erythema nodosum • Antitubercular agents : Rifampin 42 Different strategies (3/4) Strategies for repositioning orphan drugs Rare into common disease Bosentan, Actelion Pharmaceuticals : Dual endothelin receptor antagonist • Orphan approval: • Treatment of pulmonary arterial hypertension • Clinical trials in patients with chronic heart failure : • Phase III, ENABLE ⇒ Not statistical significance for the risk reduction in time to death or hospitalization, and clinical status • Clinical trials in patients poorly controlled asthma : • On going 43 Different strategies (4/4) Strategies for repositioning orphan drugs Common into rare disease Sildenafil : • Inhibiting cGMP Phosphodiesterase 5 • 1998 : Firstly approved for erectile dysfunction • 2005 : Approved for the treatment of pulmonary arterial hypertension • Increase 6 fold the price compared to the common posology 44 Reimbursement decision-making Development of the AGNSS in UK: Advisory Group for National Specialised Services. 1/ Rarity implies small patient populations • High prices to recoup R&D • Quality of the evidence • High and uncertain cost-effectiveness 2/ Special status of Orphan drugs • Principe of equity • Opportunity costs • Societal issue 45 Decision methods Other criterion Criteria other than Cost-effectiveness are used for reimbursement. Δ Cost = ICER < Willingness to Pay Δ Effect 46 Decision methods Other criterion Clinical benefit Ethical/moral considerations : • Equitable access • Cost to patient if not reimbursed Severity of the disease, Unmet medical need Availability of other therapies 47 Decision methods Other criterion Patients with rare conditions deserve the same quality, safety and efficacy in medicinal products as other patients…” ( EU regulation). Need for more quality clinical evidence: Regulators and payers could more consistently appraise orphan drugs Risks and Benefits. 48 Conclusion • In 2011 : Only 15 % of Orphan drug among the NME • In 2012 : 38% of NME • In 2013 : 33% of NME. • More data generation before and after the marketing authorization for payers and agencies. • A regular reassessment of the Ods in order to ensure an optimal use. 49 According to us • For public, Orphan drugs seem to be a good way of making money - Only 30% on Orphan Drugs are concerned by high prices. - Moreover, development of that drugs tend to stabilize. • Would orphan drugs brake the development of new drugs for common diseases? • Carry on incentives to promote orphan drug development. 50 Thank you for listening Any questions? 51