Abstract
BackgroundThe pricing mechanism of orphan drugs appears arbitrary and has been referred to as a “black box”. Therefore, the aim of this study is to investigate how drug- and disease-specific variables relate to orphan drug prices. Additionally, we aim to explore if certain country-specific pricing and reimbursement policies affect the price level of orphan drugs.MethodsAnnual treatment costs per indication per patient were calculated for 59 orphan drugs with a publicly available price in Belgium, the Netherlands, Czech Republic, France, Italy and the United Kingdom. A multiple linear regression model was built with 14 drug- and disease-specific variables. A Mann-Whitney U test was used to explore whether there is a correlation between annual treatment costs of orphan drugs across countries with different pricing and reimbursement policies.ResultsRepurposed orphan drugs, orally administered orphan drugs or orphan drugs for which an alternative treatment is available are associated with lower annual treatment costs. Orphan drugs with multiple orphan indications, for chronic treatments or for which an improvement in overall survival or quality-of-life has been demonstrated, are associated with higher annual treatment costs. No association was found between annual treatments cost of orphan drugs across countries and the different pricing and reimbursement systems.ConclusionsThis study has shown that prices of orphan drugs are influenced by factors such as the availability of an alternative drug treatment, repurposing, etc. Current debate about the affordability of orphan drugs highlights the need for more transparency in orphan drug price setting.
Highlights
The pricing mechanism of orphan drugs appears arbitrary and has been referred to as a “black box”
Simple linear regression At significance threshold level 0.05, ten explanatory variables appeared to play a role in the price setting of orphan drugs (Table 4)
Orphan drugs which are available in the US (1), with multiple orphan indications (2), for chronic treatments (3), for which an improvement in QoL (4) or survival (5) has been demonstrated or for ultrarare indications (6) are correlated with higher annual treatment costs
Summary
The pricing mechanism of orphan drugs appears arbitrary and has been referred to as a “black box”. The aim of this study is to investigate how drug- and disease-specific variables relate to orphan drug prices. We aim to explore if certain country-specific pricing and reimbursement policies affect the price level of orphan drugs. The price of some orphan drugs has become an issue of much debate. A few orphan drugs even qualify as blockbusters, as their global annual sales exceed a billion US$ [2]. A Belgian study showed that the impact of orphan drugs is substantial (i.e. amounting to 1.9% of pharmaceutical expenditure in 2008) and likely to rise significantly in the future [3]. An analysis by Schey et al predicted that the expenditure on orphan drugs, as a proportion of total pharmaceutical
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