STATE PAYING FOR 57 AIDS DRUGS WELFARE PROGRAM ADDS FDA-APPROVED MEDICATION VIRACEPT
Nov 3 1997 9:20PM CST, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
The state Department of Public Welfare has added Viracept, a powerful anti-AIDS drug, to its list of drugs the department will cover under a program to help those with moderate income pay for AIDS medications and treatments.
With the addition of Viracept, department officials said, their Special Pharmaceutical Benefits Program now covers 57 types of HIV or AIDS drugs and treatments. HIV is the virus that causes AIDS.
Viracept belongs to a class of drugs called protease inhibitors. When used in combination with other anti-viral drugs, they have been credited with preventing the progression of HIV virus infection to full-blown AIDS, especially in patients who start taking the medication early.
"Until a cure is found, Pennsylvania will continue to be thoughtful and judicious in its review of drugs to assist people who otherwise might be unable to get the medications they need to survive," said department Secretary Feather O. Houstoun. "We care about helping those living with HIV and AIDS to maintain the best quality of life possible, to remain in their homes and communities and to avoid having to further rely on public assistance if possible."
Some AIDS activist groups, such as ACT UP-Philadelphia, had criticized Houstoun for taking "too long" to accept Viracept for the special pharmaceutical program after the federal Food and Drug Administration approved it in March. ACT UP-Philadelphia charged that the department delayed covering Viracept because the medication, produced by Agouron Pharmaceuticals in Southern California, would compete with another protease inhibitor, Crixivan, manufactured by southeastern Pennsylvania-based Merck.
Department officials dismiss that charge. Spokesman George Yanoshik Jr. said that even when the FDA approves a drug for treatment of HIV and AIDS, it is still subject to a comprehensive review by the state's department before it is covered by the special pharmaceutical program. He said the purpose of the review is to ensure that the cost and demand for the new drugs won't bankrupt the program.
Agouron's Viracept, the brand name for the drug nelfinavir, was approved by the FDA for use not only by adults, but also by children - one of the first protease inhibitors approved for pediatric AIDS cases.
Since the advent of protease inhibitors, there has been a decline in the number of newly diagnosed AIDS cases as well as deaths resulting from the disease. In 1996, there were 56,730 newly diagnosed AIDS cases, said the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or CDC. This was a decline from 1995, when 60,620 new cases were reported.
Last year, 38,780 people died from AIDS. In 1995, 50,140 people died from the disease, the CDC said.
Besides Viracept and Crixivan, the FDA has approved two other protease inhibitors: Invirase and Norvir. But these medications are costly. A month's supply of Crixivan for one person costs about $405, the Welfare Department said. Viracept costs about $501 a month; Invirase costs about $515 a month; while Norvir costs about $601 a month.
The Special Pharmaceutical Benefits program serves about 3,500 people at a cost to the state of $11 million a year. In addition to paying for AIDS drugs, the program pays for clozaril, an anti-psychotic medication that is used to control schizophrenia.
To be eligible for the Special Pharmaceutical Benefits Program, an individual must reside in Pennsylvania but not in an institution, where medications covered by the program are available. He or she must have total income of less than $30,000 a year, with an allowance of $2,480 for each additional family member. To be eligible, one must have a medical need for the drug.
Program applications are available from county welfare offices, AIDS service organizations, hospital social service departments, state health centers, hemophilia and renal dialysis centers, mental health centers and some physicians and pharmacies. More information is available from the Welfare Department's toll-free hot line, at (800) 922-9384.
(Copyright 1997) |