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View Full Version : Preemie birth preventive spikes from $10 to $1,500.



Ponce
10th March 2011, 02:38 PM
One way to bring less kids in this world because no many fathers will be able to pay for this.
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Preemie birth preventive spikes from $10 to $1,500.

ATLANTA – The price of preventing preterm labor is about to go through the roof.

A drug for high-risk pregnant women has cost about $10 to $20 per injection. Next week, the price shoots up to $1,500 a dose, meaning the total cost during a pregnancy could be as much as $30,000.

That's because the drug, a form of progesterone given as a weekly shot, has been made cheaply for years, mixed in special pharmacies that custom-compound treatments that are not federally approved.

But recently, KV Pharmaceutical of suburban St.Louis won government approval to exclusively sell the drug, known as Makena (Mah-KEE'-Nah). The March of Dimes and many obstetricians supported that because it means quality will be more consistent and it will be easier to get.

None of them anticipated the dramatic price hike, though — especially since most of the cost for development and research was shouldered by others in the past.

"That's a huge increase for something that can't be costing them that much to make. For crying out loud, this is about making money," said Dr. Roger Snow, deputy medical director for Massachusetts' Medicaid program.

"I've never seen anything as outrageous as this," said Dr. Arnold Cohen, an obstetrician at Albert Einstein Medical Center in Philadelphia.

"I'm breathless," said Dr. Joanne Armstrong, the head of women's health for Aetna, the Hartford-based national health insurer.

Doctors say the price hike may deter low-income women from getting the drug, leading to more premature births. And it will certainly be a huge financial burden for health insurance companies and government programs that have been paying for it.

The cost is justified to avoid the mental and physical disabilities that can come with very premature births, said KV Pharmaceutical chief executive Gregory J. Divis Jr. The cost of care for a preemie is estimated at $51,000 in the first year alone.

"Makena can help offset some of those costs," Divis told The Associated Press. "These moms deserve the opportunity to have the benefits of an FDA-approved Makena."

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is not involved in setting the price for the drugs it approves.

A KV subsidiary, Ther-Rx Corp., will market the drug. On Tuesday, it announced a patient assistance program designed to help uninsured and low-income women get the drug at little or no cost.

But Snow and others said someone is going to have to pay the higher price. Some of the burden will fall on health insurance companies, which will have to raise premiums or other costs to their other customers. And some will fall on cash-strapped state Medicaid programs, which may be forced to stop paying for the drug or enroll fewer people.

"There's no question they can't afford this," said Matt Salo, executive director of the National Association of Medicaid Directors.

Salo and Snow said they do not know how many state Medicaid programs currently pay for Makena, which as a generic was recommended by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.

Aetna will continue to pay for the drug, Armstrong said, but it will be an expensive pill to swallow. Aetna currently covers it for about 1,000 women a year, so the new federal endorsement is likely to cost an estimated $30 million more annually.

Makena is a synthetic form of the hormone progesterone that first came on the market more than 50 years ago to treat other problems. Hormone drugs came under fire in the 1970s, following reports they might damage fetuses in early pregnancy. In the 1990s, the early incarnation of Makena was withdrawn from the market.

But the drug got a new life in 2003, with publication of a study that reported it helped prevent early births to women who had a history of spontaneous preterm deliveries.

These very early births produce children who — if they survive — need months of intensive care and often suffer disabilities. The cause of sudden preterm delivery is not understood, but it occurs in black mothers at much higher rates than whites or Hispanics.

The study of women at risk for this condition found that only about 36 percent of those given the progesterone drug had preterm births, compared with 55 percent among those not on the drug.

It's believed the treatment calms the muscles of the uterus, experts said.

There is no good alternative in most cases and in the years following the study, more obstetricians, Medicaid programs and others began prescribing it. By some estimates, about 130,000 women a year might benefit from the drug. Only a fraction of them get it, but the number has been growing steadily.

One success story is Beatrice Diaz, 33, of Chapel Hill, N.C.

During her first pregnancy nine years ago, Diaz unexpectedly went into labor at about 24 weeks. She delivered a son, Garrison, who was so fragile she was not allowed to hold him for a month. Today he is in a wheelchair and has the mental capacity of a 9-month-old.

It was a shock, said Diaz, who at the time was a legal assistant in a prosecutor's office.

"Honestly I thought the only people who had 1-pound babies were crackheads," she said.

When she became pregnant again, her doctor prescribed the progesterone drug, a weekly injection that starts as early as the 16th week and may be given for as much as 20 weeks. She has since had two healthy, full-term baby girls, Hailyn and Alexa.

Diaz said she's not planning to have any more children — and that's a good thing.

"That's an insane amount of money. I don't know what I would do to get the money to afford it," she said.

The Ther-Rx patient assistance program promises free injections or much reduced prices based on income. Uninsured households making less than $100,000 are eligible for a copay of $20 or less.

Ther-Rx and its parent company became involved about three years ago and acquired rights to the drug from a Massachusetts company named Hologic Inc., said Divis, who is also Ther-Rx's president.

To get FDA approval, the company is spending hundreds of millions of dollars in additional research, including an international study involving 1,700 women, Divis said. The FDA last month signed off and gave Makena orphan drug status. That designation ensures Ther-Rx will be the sole source of the drug for seven years.

The March of Dimes, which gets hundreds of thousands of dollars in funding from Ther-Rx, celebrated the approval in a press release, saying if all women eligible for the shots receive them, nearly 10,000 spontaneous premature births could be prevented each year.

"For the first time, we have an FDA-approved treatment to offer women who have delivered a baby too soon, giving them hope that their next child will have a better chance at a healthy start in life," said Dr. Alan Fleischman, the organization's medical director.

As for the cost, he said the drug maker's financial assistance program will ensure no eligible woman is denied the drug due to inability to pay.

Some doctors said they were happy getting the cheaper version from compounding pharmacies, and Aetna's Armstrong said she was unaware of any quality concerns.

Still, doctors will use the Ther-Rx brand, in part because of legal worries.

Not that they have a choice: Last month, KV sent cease-and-desist letters to compounding pharmacies, telling them they could face FDA enforcement actions if they kept making the drug.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110310/ap_on_he_me/us_med_premature_birth_drug

Neuro
10th March 2011, 03:41 PM
So they got a government monopoly and raised the price by 15000%. Free market economy is really a wonderful thing. Government monopoly is an extortion racket!

Ponce
10th March 2011, 06:02 PM
Well Neuro, is like the insurance for your car......they tell you that YOU WILL have isurance but then they let the insurance company charge you what ever they can get away with.....

lapis
10th March 2011, 07:00 PM
Very important: please if you know anyone who is pregnant , kindly inform them to do their own due diligence
on the subject of RED RASPBERRY LEAF TEA during pregnancy.

I have fond memories of drinking this tea during my pregnancy! It tastes soooo good.

cthulu
11th March 2011, 09:06 AM
And be sure to take a bradley class. The exercises, the films on delivery, the emphasis on proper diet, and the social network you form is all worth it.

lapis
11th March 2011, 10:26 AM
Me too. Yummy. .......and I bet you had a FULL-TERM healthy pregnancy too.

Yes, I did in fact. I had a great pregnancy.

LuckyStrike
11th March 2011, 04:59 PM
Stories like this are positive all the way around IMO. Kinda like the story where they don't want guys with rebel flag tattoos in the military, at first I thought "wow discrimination" but then I realize "good maybe some good White men won't go turn into jewish bullet sponges"

As has been pointed out, now we have clear examples of a racket with government involvement and hear I though barry was going to lower healthcare costs? And the other positive is that maybe less women will poison their children with this man made BS.

osoab
2nd April 2011, 01:46 PM
See what good guys they are. They cut the price in half.

Drug maker lowers price of Makena pregnancy drug to $690 per dose (http://www.chicagotribune.com/business/la-pn-makena-price-cut-fda-20110401,0,735818.story)


Reporting from Washington—
The St. Louis drug company lambasted for increasing the price of a pregnancy drug from $20 to $1,500 per dose announced Friday that it's cutting the price by more than half.

The sharp reduction to $690 per dose came two days after the Food and Drug Administration publicly invited competition by announcing that it would continue to allow so-called compounding pharmacies to make and sell a version of the drug.

The drug, a synthetic form of progesterone commonly called 17P and marketed under the trade name Makena, is recommended for women at high risk of delivering prematurely. The drug is administered via injection weekly for about 20 weeks.

Friday's announcement by K-V Pharmaceutical Co. of a 55% price reduction puts the list cost of a full course of treatment at $13,800, effective immediately. That's down from $30,000 under K-V's old price, but still a sharp jump from the $400 a woman could expect to spend if she had the drug made at a compounding pharmacy.

The rest at the link

lapis
2nd April 2011, 02:28 PM
See what good guys they are. They cut the price in half.

Thanks for posting that; I totally missed in the OP that this was a synthetic Progesterone drug. Why use that at all when natural progesterone is much, much, much cheaper, and works just as well? I had a friend who used it in order to carry her daughter to term (she's had about 5 miscarriages). However, do note that it may be because of her thyroid condition.

I think thyroid problems are the main cause of a lot of symptoms, including miscarriages. And perhaps there's no proof of conspiracy (yet), but it's awful strange how the test numbers that doctors go by in order to diagnose thyroid conditions are far lower than what cutting edge anti-aging doctors use.

But unless you're wealthy and can pay between 2 and $500 out-of-pocket per visit to see these specialists, you're basically on your own and have to get an Internet Ph.D in order to treat yourself, because regular HMO doctors are just useless when it comes to thyroid conditions and treating them properly.

Twisted Titan
2nd April 2011, 04:00 PM
The St. Louis drug company lambasted for increasing the price of a pregnancy drug from $20 to $1,500 per dose announced Friday that it's cutting the price by more than half.


Two steps forward.......one step back

Awoke
2nd April 2011, 04:02 PM
lol
all because people can't be responsible enough to practice safe sex...

gunDriller
2nd April 2011, 06:59 PM
"I've never seen anything as outrageous as this," said Dr. Arnold Cohen, an obstetrician at Albert Einstein Medical Center in Philadelphia.

listen to them wring their hands while the Talmud-worshippers find yet another way to profit from Disaster Capitalism.
The Talmud-worshippers at KV Pharmaceutical deserve a visit from the Ghost of Christmas Past.


>> But recently, KV Pharmaceutical of suburban St.Louis won government approval to exclusively sell the drug, known as Makena (Mah-KEE'-Nah). The March of Dimes and many obstetricians supported that because it means quality will be more consistent and it will be easier to get.

wonder who runs the March of Dimes ?