Generic Competition Pushing Down HIV Drug Prices, But Patents Keep Newer Drugs Unaffordable
MSF Pricing Analysis Also Extends to HIV Diagnostic and Monitoring Tools
A patient collects her medication from the pharmacy at an MSF clinic
in Yangon, where MSF treats HIV/AIDS and TB.
LUMPUR/NEW YORK, JULY 2, 2013 - The price of first- and second-line antiretrovirals (ARVs) to treat HIV are
falling because of increased competition among generic producers, but newer ARVs continue to be priced astronomically high,
according to the annual report Untangling the Web of ARV Price Reductions ,
released today by the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) at
the International AIDS Society conference in Kuala Lumpur.
"It's good news that the price of key HIV drugs continues to fall as more generic companies compete for the market, but the newer
medicines are still priced far too high," said Dr. Jennifer Cohn, medical director at MSF's Access Campaign. "MSF and other care
providers need the newer treatments for people that have exhausted all other options, but patents keep them priced beyond
reach. We also need to watch carefully as newer, better medicines reach the market in coming years, as these are the
drugs that we'll quickly be needing to use. The price question is far from resolved."
The "best possible" price of a WHO-recommended one-pill-a-day first-line combination has fallen 19 percent since last year (from
$172 to $139 per person per year), with some countries able to achieve even lower prices in large volume orders. Likewise, as new
generic competitors have emerged, the prices of two key medicines used in second-line treatment have each fallen by 28 percent
over the last year, with the most affordable second-line combination now priced at $303 per year. This represents
a 75 percent drop in the price of second-line treatment since 2006. However, today's lowest second-line price
is still more than double the cost of first-line treatment.
But for newer HIV medicines, including critical new classes of ARVs such as integrase inhibitors, generic competition is mostly
blocked because of patents. As a result, these are much more expensive. The best possible price of a possible salvage regimen for
people who have failed second-line treatment is $2,006 per year in the poorest countries-nearly 15 times the price of
first-line treatment. Countries that do not have access to these lowest available prices are paying many times
more. For example, Thailand and Jamaica pay $4,760 and $6,570 respectively for the new drug darunavir
alone; Paraguay pays $7,782 just for etravirine; and Armenia pays $13,213 just for raltegravir-just
one of the three or four drugs that are needed for a full regimen.
Securing the affordability of future medicines is also a priority. HIV experts highlight that new potent and well-tolerated drugs
such as the integrase inhibitor dolutegravir could in the future be used in improved first- or second-line, making affordable
access to these newer drugs even more urgent.
"Scaling up HIV treatment and sustaining people on treatment for life will depend on bringing the price of newer drugs down,"
said Arax Bozadjian, HIV pharmacist at MSF's Access Campaign. "Today, there are no quality-assured generic options for
the large majority of the newer HIV drugs. Prices in middle-income countries are also a major concern. The terms of
existing voluntary licence agreements aren't good enough, most of them don't have terms that are public
health-oriented, and most middle-income countries are excluded, which limits these countries access to much-needed regimens."
It was thanks to "patent oppositions" in generics-producing India that the price of first- and second-line combinations were able
to fall, as additional generic producers entered the market. With newer HIV medicines increasingly being patented in countries with
significant generic production capacity, like India, it will be critical for solutions to be identified to bring prices down.
Patent applications should be opposed when they do not meet a country's patentability requirements, as reaffirmed by the
Indian Supreme Court's decision against Novartis in April 2013. When patents prevent access, compulsory licences-which
allow countries to override a company's patents-should be issued in the interest of public health. India issued its
first compulsory licence in 2012 for a cancer drug that was deemed unaffordable, and similar moves should be
taken to overcome unaffordable HIV drug prices.
"In our clinic in Mumbai, more and more patients need the newest expensive HIV drugs, but we can't afford these prices long-term,
nor can the government," said Leena Menghaney, manager of MSF's Access Campaign in India. "Countries need to tackle the problem of
high drug prices head on, by making sure unwarranted patents are not granted, and by issuing compulsory licences when drugs are
priced out of reach so that more affordable generic versions can be made."
A second report released today by MSF at the IAS conference, Putting HIV Treatment to the Test , looks
at the price of HIV viral load tests. Viral load testing is the gold standard for HIV treatment monitoring in developed countries, as
compared with either clinical or immunological (CD4) monitoring, it can more accurately and quickly detect when people are having
problems adhering to their treatment and need additional counseling, or in fact are failing their treatment. WHO's new
treatment recommendations strongly recommend the use of regular viral load monitoring in developing countries.
But price and complexity so far have hindered the roll out of these technologies in developing countries.
"The goal of all HIV treatment programs should be for ARVs to suppress the virus so people have 'undetectable' levels of virus in their
blood," said Dr. Cohn. "Viral load testing is the best way to keep people on their more affordable first-line combination of HIV drugs
for as long as possible, and to switch only those people to newer drugs who really need it. With the price of second-line treatment
coming down, it's really time to start testing people's viral load and making sure people are on treatment that works for them,
instead of waiting until it's too late and they get sick again or die."
MSF currently provides antiretroviral therapy to 285,000 people in 21 countries.
With support from UNITAID, MSF is seeking to compare and demonstrate the feasibility of decentralized, routine viral load monitoring,
and point-of-care CD4 testing for antiretroviral therapy initiation through comparative operational research in seven countries in
sub-Saharan Africa.
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Related:
Source:Doctors Without Borders
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