ESMO International Consortium Study on the availability, out-of-pocket costs and accessibility of anti-neoplastic medicines in countries outside of Europe
Menée par enquête auprès de 189 correspondants de 82 pays, cette étude analyse l'efficacité, les coûts, les frais restant à charge du patient et l'accessibilité de plusieurs médicaments anticancéreux dans les pays à faibles et moyens revenus
Résumé en anglais
Background: The availability and affordability of safe, effective, high-quality, affordable anti-cancer therapies are a core requirement for effective national cancer control plans.
Method: Online survey based on a previously validated approach. The aims of the study were to evaluate: 1) the availability on national formulary of licensed anti-neoplastic medicines across the globe; 2) patient out-of-pocket costs for the medications; 3) the actual availability of the medication for a patient with a valid prescription; 4) information relating to possible factors adversely impacting the availability of antineoplastic agents and 5) the impact of the country’s level of economic development on these parameters. A total of 304 field reporters from 97 countries were invited to participate. The preliminary set of data was posted on the ESMO website for open peer review and amendments have been incorporated into the final report.
Results: Surveys were submitted by 135 reporters from 63 countries and additional peer-review data was submitted by 54 reporters from 19 countries. There are substantial differences in the formulary availability, out-of-pocket costs, and actual availability for many anti-cancer medicines. The most substantial issues are in lower middle- and low-income countries. Even among medications on the WHO Model List of Essential Medicines (EML) the discrepancies are profound and these relate to high out-of-pocket costs (in low-middle countries 32.0% of EML medicines available only at full cost and 5.2% and are not available at all, and for low-income countries the corresponding figures are even worse at 57.7% and 8.3% respectively).
Conclusions: There is wide global variation in formulary availability, out-of-pocket expenditures and actual availability for most licensed anti-cancer medicines. Low- and Low middle-income countries have significant lack of availability and high out-of-pocket expenditures for cancer medicines on the WHO EML, with much less availability of new, more expensive targeted agents compared to high-income countries.