Size matters

The pharmaceutical industry needs to rethink its approach to packaging cancer drugs into a one-size vial to avoid drug wastage and save over $1.7 billion (bn) in 2016, a new paper authored by researchers at the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and the University of Chicago suggests.

The problem arises, the authors explain, from single-dose vials of a specific size for expensive cancer medications. The dose to be administered to a patient varies by body size, and most often than not, providers are left with excess drug in the vial, which is usually discarded because of safety concerns. The authors list the following directives from federal agencies on the proper use of drugs available as single-dose vials.Drug waste vial size

The results projected that the total US revenue from these drugs would be about $18 bn in 2016, 10% ($1.8 bn) of which will be from discarded drug. Specifically, the study estimated that,

  • 7% of $3.9 bn in rituximab sales will be from discarded drug, totaling $254 million (m)
  • 33% of $697 m in carfilzomib sales will be discarded, totaling nearly as much, $231m

The study goes on to suggest that if every patient received the highest dose approved by the FDA, revenue from discarded drugs would fall to $1.4 bn, and if every cancer patients weighed 10% less than the survey participants, the estimate would rise to $2 bn.

“This is all due to decisions about how much drug companies decide to put in each single dose vial. They almost certainly realize how these decisions translate into revenue,” said lead author Peter B. Bach, MD, director, Center for Health Policy and Outcomes, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. “Vial contents can be selected to minimize rather than maximize waste, saving the U.S. health care system and patients billions of dollars. This is a rare opportunity to lower costs for patients and our healthcare system in a manner that cannot adversely affect health outcomes.”

The authors propose several policy options to overcome this waste and save costs, including multiple vial sizes and asking drug manufacturers to refund discarded-drug cost to health plans and CMS. A consensus among authorities at the FDA, CMS, and CDC on vial contents and vial sharing could also provide bigger savings to our healthcare system without compromising on outcomes, the authors write.

Bach PB, Conti RM, Muller RJ, Schnorr GC, Saltz LB. Overspending driven by oversized single dose vials of cancer drugs. BMJ. 2016;352:i788 http://www.bmj.com/content/352/bmj.i788
Though the main cost is associated with the purchase of these hugely expensive pharmaceuticals, much of which is destined to be wasted, the additional heavy cost of disposal of cytotoxic drug waste must not be overlooked.

 

 

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