SOME INSURERS SAY THEY WON'T COVER NEW ALZHEIMER'S DRUG
Some private insurers are balking at paying for the first drug fully approved to slow mental decline in Alzheimer's patients.
Insurers selling coverage in
Their decision stands in contrast to Medicare, which will wind up covering most patients who take the drug. The federal coverage program mainly for people ages 65 and older announced shortly after Leqembi received full approval last month that it will cover the treatment while still tracking its safety and effectiveness.
Leqembi is the first medicine that's been convincingly shown to slow the cognitive decline caused by Alzheimer's disease, though only modestly. The
That approval came after regulators reviewed data from a large study in which the drug slowed memory and thinking decline by about five months in those who got the treatment compared with those who got a dummy drug. Some Alzheimer's experts say the delay is likely too subtle for patients or their families to notice.
Alzheimer's mainly affects the elderly. About 76% of the people taking Leqembi will be covered by Medicare, according to the Japanese drugmaker
But people under 65 - even, rarely, as young as their 30s - also can get diagnosed. They are more likely to have commercial coverage.
"That's why we're just dumbfounded that commercial plans are not covering it," said
The full picture on commercial insurance is still emerging in the patchwork
Companies saying no so far include Highmark, which provides
Highmark and the
"That re-evaluation made it clear to us that the existing evidence does not allow for conclusions to be drawn about the safety and effectiveness of Leqembi," said Dr.
A Highmark spokesman said that company made its decision after also consulting with specialists to determine if the drug's benefit outweighs its side effects, which include brain bleeding and swelling.
Prominent insurers that will cover the drug for commercial plans include
Because Medicare covers the drug, patients with privately run Medicare Advantage plans will receive coverage, said
Many other insurers say they have yet to make a decision.
Most insurers will probably cover the drug but heavily restrict its use through things like requiring pre-approval, said
For commercial coverage, insurers often pay for treatments that have full FDA approval. But that is not guaranteed.
Chambers said they have found that the decision to not cover a drug largely happens when the evidence supporting the drug is considered questionable.
The denials for Leqembi don't surprise
He noted Leqembi's serious side effects and high cost. The price doesn't include the cost for repeated brain scans patients need to check for side effects.
But Hoadley said insurers also may have a hard time explaining themselves.
"It's going to be a harder-to-justify decision for them if they know that Medicare has made a decision to cover it," he said.
Patients who don't get coverage through a commercial plan may eventually receive it through Medicare or state- and federally funded Medicaid programs.
But waiting is risky. Those who advance out of early-stage Alzheimer's may no longer qualify for Leqembi.
Bortz, who lives in the
She's watched Jaime progress from repeatedly losing her phone and keys to struggling to help her 7-year-old daughter with homework.
"I don't want to get to the next stages of all this,"
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