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		<title>$93,000 drug sparks debate</title>
		<link>https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2010/9/93000-drug-sparks-debate.htm</link>
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			<title>Original Blog Entry: $93,000 drug sparks debate</title>
			<link>https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2010/9/93000-drug-sparks-debate.htm</link>
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			<pubDate>Tue, 28 Sep 2010 00:16:35 GMT</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>truesee</dc:creator>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>Monday, September 27, 2010<br /><br />$93,000 drug sparks debate<br /><br />The treatment adds 4 months&#x27; survival, on average, for men who have incurable prostate tumors.<br /><br />MARILYNN MARCHIONE<br /><br />THE ASSOCIATED PRESS<br /><br />Photo by: Elise Amendola Bob Svensson, 80, is hooked up to a blood infusion machine under the care of nurse Nancy Grant at the American Red Cross in Dedham, Mass., as he undergoes a $93,000 prostate cancer treatment. Svensson is honest about why he got it insurance paid. I would not spend that money, because the benefit doesn&#x27;t seem worth it.<br /><br />BOSTON -- Cancer patients, brace yourselves. Many new drug treatments cost nearly $100,000 per year, sparking fresh debate about how much a few months more of life are worth.<br /><br />The latest is Provenge, a first-of-a-kind therapy approved in April. It costs $93,000 per year and adds four months&#x27; survival, on average, for men with incurable prostate tumors.<br /><br />Bob Svensson is honest about why he got it -- insurance paid.<br /><br />I would not spend that money, because the benefit doesn&#x27;t seem worth it, says Svensson, 80, a former corporate finance officer from Bedford, Mass.<br /><br />His supplemental Medicare plan is paying while the government decides whether basic Medicare will cover Provenge and for whom. The tab for taxpayers could be huge -- prostate is the most common cancer in American men. Most of those who have it will be eligible for Medicare, and Provenge will be an option for many late-stage cases. A meeting to consider Medicare coverage is set for Nov. 17.<br /><br />For the past decade, new cancer-fighting drugs have been topping $5,000 per month. Only a few of these keep cancer in remission so long that they are,<br /><br />need help?<br /><br />Even as new cancer treatments offer hope for some, their cost is out of reach for many.<br /><br />Here is a list of places from which to seek help:<br /><br />* Genentech: www.Genentech AccessSolutions.com<br /><br />* Novartis: http://www. patientassistancenow.com<br /><br />* Patient Advocate Foundation, 800-532-5274 www.patientadvocate.org<br /><br />* CancerCare, 866-552-6729 www.cancercarecopay.org<br /><br />* Chronic Disease Fund, 877-968-7233 www.cdfund.org<br /><br />* Healthwell Foundation, 800-675-8416 www.healthwellfoundation.org<br /><br />* Leukemia Lymphoma Society, 877-557-2672 www.LLS.org/copay<br /><br />* National Organization for Rare Disorders 800-999-6673 www.rarediseases.org<br /><br />* Patient Access Network Foundation, 866-316-7263 www.panfoundation.org<br /><br />* Patient Advocate Foundation, 866-512-3861 www.copays.org<br /><br />* Patient Services Inc., 800-366-7741 www. patientservicesinc.org<br /><br />in effect, cures. For most people, the drugs may buy a few months or years. Insurers usually pay if Medicare pays. But some people have lifetime caps and more people are uninsured because of job layoffs in the recession.<br /><br />Unlike drugs that people can try for a month or two and keep using only if they keep responding, Provenge is an all-or-nothing $93,000 gamble. It&#x27;s a one-time treatment to train the immune system to fight prostate tumors, the first so-called cancer vaccine. Part of why it costs so much is that it&#x27;s not a pill cranked out in a lab, but a treatment that is individually prepared, using each patient&#x27;s cells and a protein found on most prostate cancer cells.<br /><br />When is a drug considered cost-effective?<br /><br />The most widely quoted figure is $50,000 for a year of life, though it has been that for decades -- never really adjusted -- and not written in stone, said Dr. Harlan Krumholz, a Yale University expert on health care costs.<br /><br />Many cancer drugs are way over that mark. Estimates of the cost of a year of life gained for lung cancer patients on Erbitux range from $300,000 to as much as $800,000, said Dr. Len Lichtenfeld, the American Cancer Society&#x27;s deputy chief medical officer.<br /><br />Higher costs seem to be more accepted for cancer treatment than for other illnesses, but there&#x27;s no rule on how much is too much, he said.<br /><br />... &#x5b;&#xa0;<a href="https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2010/9/93000-drug-sparks-debate.htm">More</a>&#xa0;&#x5d;</p>]]></description>
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