Ensifentrine for COPD: Out of reach for many?
Good drug, high price
An independent appraisal committee for ICER determined that “current evidence is adequate to demonstrate a net health benefit for ensifentrine added to maintenance therapy when compared to maintenance therapy alone.”
But ICER also issued an access and affordability alert “to signal to stakeholders and policymakers that the amount of added healthcare costs associated with a new service may be difficult for the health system to absorb over the short term without displacing other needed services.” ICER recommends that payers should include coverage for smoking cessation therapies, and that drug manufacturers “set prices that will foster affordability and good access for all patients by aligning prices with the patient-centered therapeutic value of their treatments.”
“This looks like a pretty good drug,” Dr. Rind said. “It looks quite safe and I think there will be a lot of patients, particularly those who are having frequent exacerbations, who this would be appropriate for, particularly once they’ve maxed out existing therapies, but maybe even earlier than that. And if the price comes down to the point that patients can really access this and providers can access it, people really should look at this as a potential therapy.”
Drug not yet available?
However, providers have not yet had direct experience with the new medication. “We haven’t been able to prescribe it yet,” said Corinne Young, MSN, FNP-C, FCCP, director of Advance Practice Provider and Clinical Services for Colorado Springs Pulmonary Consultants, president and founder of the Association of Pulmonary Advance Practice Providers, and a member of the CHEST Physician Editorial Board.
She learned “they were going to release it to select specialty pharmacies in the 3rd quarter of 2024. But all the ones we call do not have it and no one knows who does. They haven’t sent any reps into the field in my area so we don’t have any points of contact either,” she said.
Verona Pharma stated it anticipates ensifentrine to be available in the third quarter of 2024 “through an exclusive network of accredited specialty pharmacies.”
Funding for the ICER report came from nonprofit foundations. No funding came from health insurers, pharmacy benefit managers, or life science companies. Dr. Rind had no relevant disclosures.
