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Biotech / Medical : PFE (Pfizer) How high will it go? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Ibexx who wrote (5089)8/21/1998 8:00:00 PM
From: Anthony Wong  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9523
 
Insurers Should Pay for Viagra, Regulators Told Drugs: But managed care advocates argue that cost is a valid concern.
By JULIE MARQUIS, Times Staff Writer

Friday, August 21, 1998


nsurers should not be allowed to deprive patients of
innovative drug therapies such as Viagra on the grounds of
cost, patient advocates and drug manufacturers argued at a state
hearing Thursday.

But managed care representatives countered that
cost-effectiveness is a legitimate concern, and strongly opposed any
form of mandated pharmaceutical coverage.

The all-day hearing in Los Angeles was called by the state
Department of Corporations, which regulates managed care in
California, to explore the growing controversy surrounding
coverage of new drugs.

The debate flared in June after Kaiser Foundation Health Plan
decided not to cover Viagra, the enormously popular
anti-impotence drug, except in rare instances; the HMO feared that
a patient stampede would drive up its costs as much as $100 million
a year.

The department is investigating whether that decision violates a
state law that requires companies to cover medical necessities. A
number of state legislators urged department Commissioner Dale E.
Bonner earlier this month to "take whatever action is necessary to
prevent denial of care to HMO members based solely on their
ability to pay."

In sometimes emotional testimony Thursday, patient advocates
argued that the decision by Kaiser, the nation's largest HMO, sets a
dangerous precedent in that money may come to figure improperly
in medical decisions.

"Do we want to have a two-tiered medical system, where those
with money get the care and those without it don't?" asked Cycy
Lambert, mother of a 26-year-old quadriplegic and an advocate for
patients with spinal cord injuries.

Lambert quoted from a statement from her son, Robbie, who
said that his disabled friends do not even discuss Viagra among
themselves for fear of causing rifts between those who have
coverage for it and those who don't.

Attorney Steven Cooper, whose firm filed the first lawsuits
against managed care companies that denied coverage of Viagra,
told the panel: "Cost should not play a role [in coverage decisions];
medicine should play the only role."

Yet HMO representatives argued Thursday and at a hearing in
San Francisco on Tuesday that cost cannot realistically be excluded
from consideration.

"There is no greater threat to affordability, and therefore no
greater threat to access, than the rapidly escalating costs of
pharmaceuticals," said Dr. Sharon Levine of Kaiser at the San
Francisco hearing.

"Unless we develop a broad societal consensus about how to
find a balance . . . between the benefit derived and the cost incurred
. . . we risk undermining the very concept of an insured pharmacy
benefit."

Similarly, a medical director from PacifiCare of California said
Thursday that although the company reviews drugs based primarily
on their safety and efficacy, cost-effectiveness is a factor. Dr.
Cheryl Tanigawa said legislative mandates for coverage could lead
purchasers to "reduce or eliminate pharmacy benefits due to cost
considerations."

Cooper discounted such arguments as "the parade of horribles"
that the industry pulls out to counter every argument for greater
oversight. "It's all . . . nonsense," he said.

Yet, as panel members pointed out, plans are not legally
required to provide pharmacy benefits.

Some speakers argued that the state could help matters by
coming up with a legal definition of "medical necessity" instead of
leaving the term open to interpretation. Bonner acknowledged that
views of medical necessity may vary widely, and cited Viagra as a
good example.

"One of the ironies . . . with Viagra is that when you ask the
layperson on the street, in many minds it does not meet the
definition of medical necessity," he said.

Pfizer Inc., Viagra's manufacturer, made every effort to rebut
that view.

"There has been the suggestion that Viagra is a 'recreational'
drug," said Dr. Michael Magee, senior medical advisor for Pfizer.
"When I was a urologist in private practice, my patients . . . weren't
looking for an enhanced sexual performance; they were hoping to
restore the ability to have an intimate relationship with a loved one. .

. . It is clear that Viagra is providing very real benefits to men and
their partners."

He said the drug is an effective treatment for male impotence
resulting from such conditions as diabetes, prostate cancer, heart
disease and hypertension.

Yet he did not shy away from the cost issue. In fact, he insisted
that Viagra meets that test as well because it is "one-third the cost
of existing FDA-approved therapies."

A Kaiser representative fired back during a break in the
proceedings that even if one accepts Magee's estimates, Viagra still
would cost Kaiser a minimum of $76 million annually.

Copyright 1998 Los Angeles Times. All Rights Reserved

latimes.com