NHS cuts 5 blood cancer drugs from CDF, adds 1
More about the CDF and the NHS
The CDF—set up in 2010 and currently due to run until March 2016—is money the government has set aside to pay for cancer drugs that haven’t been approved by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) and aren’t available within the NHS in England. Most cancer drugs are routinely funded outside of the CDF.
NHS England said it is working with cancer charities, the pharmaceutical industry, and NICE to create a sustainable model for the commissioning of chemotherapy. The agency has also updated its procedures for evaluating drugs in the CDF, in an effort to ensure sustainability.
In addition, NHS England has set up an appeals process by which pharmaceutical companies can challenge the decision-making process.
And a newly assembled national taskforce, headed by Harpal Kumar, chief executive of Cancer Research UK, is set to produce a refreshed, 5-year cancer plan for the NHS. ![]()