Treatment Action Group welcomes price reductions for TB medicines
Countries and donors must do more to ensure all people with TB have access; further price reductions for newer medicines required.
NEW YORK, NY – June 19, 2018 – Treatment Action
Group (TAG) welcomes the announcement from the Stop TB
Partnership’s Global Drug Facility (GDF) that new
agreements have substantially lowered the price of medicines
used to treat tuberculosis (TB) (1). The GDF estimates that USD
31 million will be saved as a result.
These dramatic
cost savings must be put into diagnosing and treating more
patients, as the World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that
only 26% of cases of drug-resistant TB are diagnosed (153,119
out of an estimated 600,000 incident cases in 2016), and only
about 21% are enrolled in treatment (129,869). It is
unacceptable that with the advent of innovations for diagnosing
and treating drug-resistant TB, 79% of patients with
drug-resistant TB go without treatment, and among those who are
treated, only 54% are cured.
TAG urges Ministries of
Health and other providers to capitalize on these savings by
purchasing TB commodities through the GDF, which by contract
offers the lowest price for products. Regardless of whether they
use donor funding or domestic financing, all purchasers can and
should buy through the GDF, to ensure access to quality-assured
products at the lowest price. Countries whose national
procurement policies and practices do not allow for purchasing
through pooled mechanisms such as the GDF should update them,
and donors such as the Global Fund must include support for such
work as part of their co-financing and transition policies.
We
also note that the cost of a WHO-recommended shorter DR-TB
treatment regimen is now as low as $571, closely approaching the
Médecins sans Frontières target price of $500 per
DR-TB regimen. However, this WHO-recommended regimen relies on
toxic drugs rather than safer—and possibly more
effective—newer drugs to treat DR-TB. We reiterate the
call from 31 organizations and 27 TB survivors, community
representatives, providers, and public health experts to WHO to
recommend bedaquiline as part of the preferred regimen for
treating drug-resistant TB (2). South Africa took a bold step in
this direction when it became the first country to recommend an
injection-free, bedaquiline-based regimen for all patients with
tuberculosis resistant to rifampicin (3). Other countries should
follow South Africa’s lead. Simultaneously, we urge
developers of newer drugs, including Janssen/Johnson &
Johnson (the maker of bedaquiline) and Otsuka (the developer of
delamanid), to establish affordable global prices for their
products that will allow their inclusion as part of a $500
drug-resistant TB regimen.
# # #
1
https://mailchi.mp/stoptb.org/a-message-for-the-entire-tb-community-2018-the-year-when-we-make-it-or-break-it-830041?e=7f346d0e72
2
http://www.tbonline.info/media/uploads/documents/letter_to_who_re_mdr_guidelines_final_2.1.18.pdf
3
http://www.health.gov.za/index.php/2014-03-17-09-48-36/2014-03-17-09-49-50?download=2797:media-statement-new-bedaquiline-data-shows-reduction-in-tb-mortality-cases
Source:
Treatment Action Group