National Kidney Foundation Concerned about Proposed Changes to Medicare Part D

The
Patients want lower costs but are not willing to trade their lives or put their kidney transplant at risk. The proposed rule would remove key protections for transplant patients that allow them to access the immunosuppressive drug regimen that best meets their individual needs and would leave the government in the position of deciding what is clinically appropriate when reviewing Part D plan formularies.
Immunosuppressive drugs are prescribed in combinations tailored to meet the unique needs of the individual transplant recipient in order to achieve sufficient immunosuppression while minimizing the toxicity associated with individual agents. Restrictive formularies limit physicians' ability to prescribe the right combination of medications to protect the recipient from organ rejection and other serious side-effects. This delicate balance was recognized in the original decision to include these medications under protected status.
Not all patients respond the same to just one or two combinations of medications. Often, the first prescribed drug combination needs to be adjusted or replaced altogether, further underscoring the need to have all drugs available under Part D plans.
While we understand the need to control healthcare spending, this is not the way to achieve savings. As of October, this year there have been over 30,000 organ transplants in the
It is also likely to result in higher spending under Medicare Parts A and B, particularly if more patients' organs fail, fueling the need for more health care services and/or the need for a Medicare covered transplant.
Most immunosuppressive drugs are generic and in fact there has been little innovation in new drugs. A kidney transplant is not a cure, but for most patients is the superior treatment. New medications to prevent rejection and reduce side-effects are sorely needed and the CMS proposal will hinder innovation in this space.
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