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- <text id=93TT1092>
- <title>
- Mar. 08, 1993: Miracle Drug: Only $350,000 A Year
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Mar. 08, 1993 The Search for the Tower Bomber
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 54
- Miracle Drug: Only $350,000 A Year
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Ceredase, a breakthrough treatment for the crippling and sometimes
- fatal genetic disorder called Gaucher's disease, is changing
- lives, even saving them--but not always making them better.
- For Jeanne Rogal, 29, of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, Ceredase
- has reduced the pain from her crumbling bones, removed the lipid
- deposits choking her liver, and restored her energy so she can
- enjoy life again. But with it comes a crushing financial burden:
- Ceredase can cost up to $350,000 for a year's treatment.
- </p>
- <p> Rogal has already exhausted one health-insurance policy and
- is whittling down a second. Although Medicaid pays part of the
- cost of the drug, the government dictates brutally austere terms:
- if Rogal accepts the payments, she isn't allowed to own major
- assets or have a bank account with more than $250 in it. "I
- finally have this great new life where I can do things," she
- says, "and I can't even save the money for a vacation."
- </p>
- <p> Ceredase, and the Massachusetts company called Genzyme that
- makes it, illustrates how some drug companies have turned government
- research and regulations into Big Business. The Federal Government
- financed the discovery of the drug and then paid tax dollars
- so that entrepreneurs could learn how to manufacture it. Now
- it is paying as much as 20% of the nation's Ceredase bill through
- Medicare and Medicaid. And Ceredase isn't the only high-priced
- drug that has flowed from government laboratories. The new chemotherapeutic
- taxol, as well as almost half of all other cancer drugs, owes
- its existence to government scientists, as do nearly all AIDS
- drugs.
- </p>
- <p> The story of Ceredase starts with government-sponsored scientists
- who in 1965 found that Gaucher's disease resulted from the lack
- of an enzyme. Later another group of government scientists
- patented a method for harvesting that enzyme, and contracted
- with researchers at Tufts University to supply the enzyme in
- large enough quantities for research.
- </p>
- <p> During the 1980s the Tufts researchers gradually spun away from
- the university and started the biotech firm Gen zyme. By then
- the government had spent nearly $9 million--fully 20% of all
- measurable research-and-development costs, according to the
- Office of Technology Assessment--to aid in developing Ceredase.
- Genzyme disputes the figure and says the government provided
- only 14% of the drug's development costs. Still, when the company
- brought its drug to market, it set the price extraordinarily
- high, claiming that the process of harvesting the enzyme from
- human placental tissue is expensive, a claim challenged by a
- growing number of Gaucher's patients. "This is the worst illustration
- of corporate greed I've seen," says Abbey Meyers, executive
- director of the National Organization for Rare Disorders. Responding
- to Meyers, Genzyme's chairman of the board, Henri Termeer, says,
- "It's not a matter of greed. It's a high-cost product. There
- is no flexibility on price here."
- </p>
- <p> Genzyme's marketing tactics have also raised eyebrows. Company
- salesmen use the unusual tactic of contacting Gaucher's victims
- and their doctors directly, enticing them with videos and publications
- suggesting that a healthy, pain-free life is at last at hand.
- </p>
- <p> In spite of the aggressive commercial campaign, a mere 800 of
- the 11,000 Gaucher's patients who need treatment have signed
- up for Ceredase. One who refused, Denver teacher Karen Guth,
- estimates she would need to spend $350,000 for the drug each
- year. "It's a terrible position to put human beings in," she
- says.
- </p>
- <p> By Dick Thompson/Washington
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-