US cancer patients skipping medicines or delaying treatment due to high drug prices

Stat News

15 March 2017 - John Krahne received alarming news from his doctor last December. His brain tumours were stable, but his lung tumors had grown noticeably larger.

The doctor recommended a drug called Alecensa, which sells for more than $159,000 a year. Medicare would charge Krahne a $3,200 copay in December, then another $3,200 in January, as a new year of coverage kicked in.

For the first time since being diagnosed 10 years ago, Krahne, now 65, decided to delay filling his prescription, hoping that his cancer wouldn’t take advantage of the lapse and wreak further havoc on his body.

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Michael Wonder

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Michael Wonder

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Cancer , Medicine , US , Pricing