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16 Aug 2016

New report shows price increases for orphan medications correlated with non-orphan use

Trend could jeopardize the affordability of life-saving orphan drugs for patients with rare diseases and conditions.

Many orphan drugs on the market are used to treat common, non-orphan conditions, and that’s making them more expensive for patients and the healthcare system, according to a new report from America’s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP). The report shows how non-orphan use may be influencing price increases, a trend that could jeopardize the affordability of important, life-saving orphan drug medications for patients with rare diseases and conditions.

The analysis looked at a sample of 46 orphan drugs available from 2012 to 2014 and found only a handful were used exclusively for the rare orphan disease they were developed to treat. As these medications are increasingly prescribed for conditions beyond their original orphan indication, on-label or off-label, their already high prices increased by upwards of 37% on average while generating blockbuster profits for drug companies.

This report looked at only 46 orphan medications. With 500 orphan treatments approved by the FDA, the widespread economic impact of these price hikes pose a serious financial impact on the health system.

“A proper balance has to be struck between ensuring that the incentives remain for those firms focused on developing these very important, and much-needed orphan disease therapies, while not allowing for the [Orphan Drug] Act to be exploited purely for financial gain,” says report author Craig F. Burns, Vice President of Research, The Center for Policy & Research, at AHIP.

Key findings include

  • Orphan drugs account for almost half of all drugs (19 of 41) approved by the FDA in 2015
  • Of the 46 orphan drugs studied, almost half (47%) of their usage was for non-orphan diseases
  • For the overall sample of 46 orphan drugs, Average Wholesale Prices (AWP) increased by an average of 26% over the course of 3 years
  • Drugs prescribed mostly for non-orphan conditions increased their prices three times more than drugs used almost exclusively to treat orphan patients (36.5% versus 12%, respectively).
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