Abstract

BackgroundCost-benefit analyses are crucial to inform treatment policies, particularly when the cost of patented drugs is very high. The cost of patented drugs is the limiting factor in hepatitis C treatment. However, hepatitis C drug costs are expected to fall following patent expiration, due to generic drug introduction.MethodsAn existing mathematical model by Shih et al was extended to consider lower-cost future generics in health economic models of hepatitis C. The model compared the cost-effectiveness of treating patients now with patented drugs vs postponing treatment until after patent expiration.ResultsFor ledipasvir-sofosbuvir, this study finds that it is almost always more cost effective to treat hepatitis C with high-cost patented drugs immediately rather than waiting for patent expiry. For ledipasvir-sofosbuvir, a generic would need to enter the market at <16.40% of the patented price for delayed treatment to be cost effective. The further that patent expiry is in the future, the more cost effective delayed treatment becomes; however, uncertainty about generic pricing and market entry times are also higher if patent expiry is in the distant future.ConclusionIt is more cost effective to treat hepatitis C sooner rather than later, regardless of the stage of the disease, and despite the high cost of patented drugs. However, patented drugs are being produced globally for prices much lower than those seen in the UK. Therefore, negotiation of patented drug prices with pharmaceutical companies may be a crucial step in cost effective treatment of hepatitis C.

Highlights

  • Generic drugs are chemical compounds which are therapeutically equivalent to their brand name counterparts

  • Cost-effectiveness comparison This study considered the incremental costeffectiveness ratio (ICER) associated with treating an infectious disease with branded drugs before patent expiry, as opposed to treating them after patent expiry using generic drugs

  • The mathematical framework in this study has been applied to hepatitis C as a test case comparing two treatment scenarios: a baseline case where all individuals are treated with patented drugs before switching to generic drugs after patent expiry; a comparator case where no-one is treated until after patent expiry with generic drugs

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Summary

Introduction

Generic drugs are chemical compounds which are therapeutically equivalent to their brand name counterparts. Generic drugs enter a pharmaceutical market when the patent for the brand version expires. Results: For ledipasvir-sofosbuvir, this study finds that it is almost always more cost effective to treat hepatitis C with high-cost patented drugs immediately rather than waiting for patent expiry. For ledipasvir-sofosbuvir, a generic would need to enter the market at

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