Breast cancer drug costing tens of thousands of pounds more than other treatments 'unaffordable' for NHS

Cancer Drugs Fund

A breast cancer treatment that can cost more than £90,000 per patient is not effective enough to justify the price the NHS is being asked to pay.

NICE is currently appraising trastuzumab emtansine (Kadcyla, manufactured by Roche) as a treatment option for people with HER2-positive breast cancer that has spread to other parts of the body, cannot be surgically removed and has stopped responding to initial treatment.

Draft guidance, published for consultation, says that despite some evidence of clinical efficacy, trastuzumab emtansine does not work well enough to justify its high cost and it therefore should not be recommended for routine NHS use.

Sir Andrew Dillon, NICE Chief Executive, said: â€œWe had hoped that Roche would have recognised the challenge the NHS faces in managing the adoption of expensive new treatments by reducing the cost of Kadcyla to the NHS.

“This drug is already being funded through the special Cancer Drugs Fund. Our job is to recommend whether it should transfer into the NHS budget. We are very aware of the importance that people place on life-extending cancer drugs and a decision not to recommend a cancer treatment for routine NHS funding is never taken lightly. We apply as much flexibility as we can in approving new treatments, but the reality is that given its price and what it offers to patients, it will displace more health benefit which the NHS could achieve in other ways, than it will offer to patients with breast cancer.”

For more details, go to: 
http://www.nice.org.uk/newsroom/pressreleases/NICEBreastCancerDrugCostingTensOfThousandsOfPoundsMore...

Michael Wonder

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Michael Wonder

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