Price should be based on cost of production, not on how often the drug is needed. So stupid not to make it available because someone was crazy to price it that high.
A drug with high cost of production that’s not needed very often will cost a lot of money per dose. The article mentions that hundreds of millions of dollars were spent on R&D and clinical trials, and maybe a couple thousand people in the first world have this disorder. Development costs have to be recouped entirely off of first world sales, since the rest of the world isn’t going to ever pay any appreciable amount of money for a drug, so even if they could sell this to everyone in their target market the breakeven cost seems like it would be about $100,000. Since they’re not going to be able to sell to everyone (there are limits on what various governments and private insurance will pay for medical treatment), and since ongoing care for this disorder costs hundreds of thousands of dollars a year, $1M/dose seems like a perfectly reasonable price.
How much does it cost now, after all the R&D and tests are completed? I doubt they need millions to actually produce the drug once they know how to and that it works. So they basically prefer not to produce it at all, than to sell it at affordable prices. It makes no sense to me.
I think it makes no sense because you are greatly underestimating the cost to produce and market the drug, even after sunk costs. It could easily be many hundreds of thousands of per dose.
It looks like uniQures business model is to take risky products through clinical development then sell them to other manufacturers. Faced with no buyers and large costs to keep it on the market, they chose to pull it.
We can speculate on what the cost per dose would be with no profit, but ultimately, there wasn't enough profit at a reduced price for uniQure to provide it.
The fact that no other companies are licensing the drug shows that they agree that there isn't enough of profit to be made.
Well, that's my point. They developed it, but no one can make it now even if it's cheap to actually make (not to pay licensing for it). Probably patents and such. Not a big fan of such kind of methodology for medicine where profits trump benefits for people.