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by ineedasername
2777 days ago
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Except as a result of the price tag, they priced themselves out of the market and any possibility of revenue. That is not a rational. And efficacy isn't really in question: Perfect cure or not, it has a vast increase in quality of life including the ability to have children, avoid pancreatitis, and enjoy alcoholic beverages to name a few. If insurance companies are covering replacement therapy to the tune of $300,000k/year, that would seem a pretty good sweet spot pricing that insurance companies would clamor to approve due to the savings over annual costs. |
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I’m going to speculate that the drug just wasn’t that good, so the demand wasn’t there and the program folded.
I know Germany pays close to $1M for a specific hemophilia therapy and they pay that annually. The price itself wasn’t the issue, this it must have been the drug itself.