• Skip to main content

DistilGovHealth

DistilNFO GovHealth Advisory

  • Publications
    • Home
    • DistilINFO HealthPlan
    • DistilINFO HospitalIT
    • DistilINFO IT
    • DistilINFO Retail
    • DistilINFO POPHealth
    • DistilINFO Ageing
    • DistilINFO Life Sciences
    • DistilINFO GovHealth
    • DistilINFO EHS
    • DistilINFO HealthIndia
    • Subscribe
    • Submit Article
    • Advertise
    • Newsletters

CMS’ coverage determination for CAR-T still delayed after a month, and nobody knows why

Share:

June 26, 2019

A legal expert said such delays from CMS are unusual. The agency said May 17 that it would delay its long-awaited national coverage determination for CAR-Ts, but since then even drugmakers haven’t been given a reason or timeline.

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has not provided drugmakers with any clues as to its reasons for delaying its eagerly awaited national coverage determination for CAR-T cell therapies, nor has it given them a timeline for when the NCD will be issued, MedCity News has learned.

Nearly a month ago, on May 17, when CMS was to issue the NCD, the agency instead released a one-sentence press statement reading, “CMS will not be issuing a final National Coverage Determination on CAR T-cell therapy for cancer today, but a decision is forthcoming.”

A CMS spokesperson referred to the May 17 statement in response to a request for comment.

Want to publish your own articles on DistilINFO Publications?

Send us an email, we will get in touch with you.

An NCD is a determination of whether Medicare will pay for a product or service. Technically, Medicare is already covering the two Food and Drug Administration-approved CAR-T therapies, namely Novartis’ Kymriah (tisagenlecleucel) and Gilead Sciences’ Yescarta (axicabtagene ciloleucel), both of which are approved for adults with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. However, an NCD would provide consistency in coverage across the country, improve patient access and ensure appropriate evidence generation, CMS said in February.

In an emailed statement, the Alliance for Regenerative Medicine said it hoped CMS would provide transparency and clarity around its decision making and issue the NCD without further delay. “The continued lack of an NCD from CMS delays answers to concerns regarding patient access to CAR-T therapies – specifically, not limiting access to hospitals, enabling coverage to earlier-stage patients without relapsed or refractory cancers, and certifying the establishment of a patient registry,” said ARM director for U.S. policy and advocacy Rob Falb. “In ARM’s original comments submitted in March, we urged CMS to strongly consider the impact the details of their decision would have on patient access, and to act quickly by the statutory deadline of May 17.”

Beth Roberts, a partner at the Washington law firm Hogan Lovells, noted that such delays from CMS are rare, previously occurring in cases like when comment periods are extended. So it is unusual for the statutory deadline to be missed, she said in a phone interview.

Other CAR-T therapies in late-stage clinical development include Celgene subsidiary Juno Therapeutics’ lisocabtagene maraleucel, also for DLBCL, and bb2121, a CAR-T for multiple myeloma under development by Celgene and bluebird bio. Johnson & Johnson’s Janssen subsidiary is also developing a CAR-T for multiple myeloma, LCAR-B38M, which it licensed from Nanjing, China-based Legend Biotech.

Some of the provisions of the proposed NCD have nevertheless attracted criticism, like the requirement that CAR-Ts be administered in a hospital setting and only to patients with relapsed or refractory disease. For example, the hospital requirement would limit or cut off access for patients who do not live within the vicinity of a large medical center, said Dr. Jeff Sharman, a community oncologist in Eugene, Oregon, who has participated in CAR-T cell trials. “In Oregon, that would by definition restrict access to a small number of hospitals in the Portland marketplace,” he said in a phone interview. “You can drive nine hours and still be in the state of Oregon, making [CAR-T] inaccessible to many patients who can potentially benefit, in part because those patients who receive it have to remain within a 30-minute vicinity a month after therapy.”

The high cost of CAR-T therapies comes mainly from two sources: the list price for the therapy itself and also the cost of supportive care for dealing with potentially dangerous side effects. Kymriah and Yescarta carry list prices of $373,000 for DLBCL, while Kymriah costs $475,000 for an additional indication, acute lymphoblastic leukemia in children and young adults. On top of that, the supportive care costs – for dealing with side effects like cytokine release syndrome and neurological toxicity – can easily equal or exceed the list price itself, adding a significant level of complexity to how the therapies can be covered.

Date: June 26, 2019

Source: MedCityNews

Coffee with DistilINFO's Morning Updates...

Sign up for DistilINFO e-Newsletters.

Just a little bit more about you...
PROCEED
Choose Lists
BACK

Related Stories

  • Major Payers Find HHS Finalized Nondiscrimination Rule Too NarrowMajor Payers Find HHS Finalized Nondiscrimination Rule Too Narrow
  • New Clinically Validated Sleepcheck App LaunchesNew Clinically Validated Sleepcheck App Launches
  • Apple Still has a Lot of Room to Grow in the $3.5 Trillion Health Care SectorApple Still has a Lot of Room to Grow in the $3.5 Trillion Health Care Sector
  • Google Moves Further Into Healthcare: a Timeline of the Last YearGoogle Moves Further Into Healthcare: a Timeline of the Last Year
  • Superb Healthcare At Ultra-Low Prices? How Singapore Does ItSuperb Healthcare At Ultra-Low Prices? How Singapore Does It
  • AI, Machine Learning, and Blockchain are Key for Healthcare InnovationAI, Machine Learning, and Blockchain are Key for Healthcare Innovation

Trending This Week

Sorry. No data so far.

About Us

DistilINFO is media company that publishes Industry news, views and Interviews. We distil the information for you – saving time and keeping you up to date on your interest areas.

More About Us

Follow Us


Useful Links

  • Subscribe
  • Contact
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Feedback

All Publications

  • DistilINFO HealthPlan Advisory
  • DistilINFO HospitalIT Advisory
  • DistilINFO IT Advisory
  • DistilINFO Retail Advisory
  • DistilINFO POPHealth Advisory
  • DistilINFO Ageing Advisory
  • DistilINFO Life Sciences Advisory
  • DistilINFO GovHealth Advisory
  • DistilINFO EHS Advisory
  • DistilINFO HealthIndia Advisory

© DistilINFO Publications