BFF-10 Australians wait 18 months for life-saving cancer medications

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AUSTRALIA-CANCER-MEDICATION

Australians wait 18 months for life-saving cancer medications

CANBERRA, Aug 17, 2018(BSS/Xinhua) — Australian cancer patients are being
forced to wait up to 18 months for affordable life-saving medication, local
media reported Friday.

In a submission to the Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee (PBAC),
pharmaceutical giant Bristol Myers Squibb (BMS) said that it takes 18 months
on average for a cancer treatment to be listed on the Pharmaceutical Benefits
Scheme (PBS) after being registered by the Therapeutic Goods Administration
(TGA).

The PBS is a government scheme whereby prescription drugs considered
“lifesaving” are subsidized for Australian residents and certain foreign
visitors.

According to BMS cancer treatments face the longest wait to be listed on
the PBS than treatments for any other disease area.

Greg Hunt, Australia’s health minister, convened a special meeting of the
PBAC on Friday to explore options for new processes to grant faster access to
subsidised cancer treatments.

Jonathan Anderson, medical director of BMS Australia, said that the delay
was because the system could not keep up with advances in immune-oncology
treatments.

He said he would appear before the special meeting to recommend a pilot
program that he said would reduce the waiting period by three months.

“The science is moving so fast but the system has not caught up with the
pace of change in the -science,” Anderson told News Corp Australia on Friday.

In its submission to the PBAC, BMS said it had made 15 submissions to the
body over the past four years for just one drug.

“We want to avoid groundhog day, as if we have never put a -submission in
for that drug before,” Anderson said.

“It is a waste of resources for everyone concerned and for -patients who
are waiting. It is delays that are unnecessary.”

BSS/Xinhua/MRI/0845 hrs