CMS Spends Billions on Drugs Granted FDA Accelerated Approval With Unproven Clinical Benefits

  • Jun 09, 2022

    Through 2020, CMS spent $68 billion on 38 drugs that were granted accelerated approval from the FDA between 2012 and 2017, with spending after conversion to standard approval accounting for 75% of overall spending, according to a JAMA Health Forum study. However, only 34% of these drugs had a confirmatory trial evaluating a clinical outcome as a primary end point and more than $40 billion was spent for drugs evaluated using surrogate end points. Clinical trials for one drug that converted to standard approval (pembrolizumab) and three that remained unconverted (atezolizumab, durvalumab and olaratumab) for their original indications failed to confirm benefit for primary efficacy end points, while these drugs cost CMS $14 billion in total through 2020. The researchers concluded that “persistent evidentiary gaps should prompt payers to limit spending on promising drugs with unproven benefits.” Read more
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  • Jinghong Chen

    Jinghong has been producing infographics and data stories on employer-sponsored insurance, public health insurance programs and prescription drug coverage for AIS Health’s Health Plan Weekly and Radar on Drug Benefits since 2018. She also manages AIS Health’s annual executive compensation database for top insurers and Blue Cross and Blue Shield affiliates. Before joining AIS Health, she interned at WBEZ, Al Jazeera English and The New York Times Chinese. She graduated from Missouri School of Journalism with a focus on data journalism and international reporting.

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