Welcome to our new website! If this is the first time you are logging in on the new site, you will need to reset your password. Please contact us at raps@raps.org if you need assistance.
Your membership opens the door to free learning resources on demand. Check out the Member Knowledge Center for free webcasts, publications and online courses.
The highly-anticipated fifth edition is here! Get the must-have resource for achieving compliance with medical device regulations.
Hear from leaders around the globe as they share insights about their experiences and lessons learned throughout their certification journey.
Drug prices are not just a US problem. Greece's minister of health on Tuesday expressed dismay over Roche's decision to withdraw a cancer medicine because of a new mandatory discount imposed by the country.
Greek health minister Andreas Xanthou called the move by Switzerland-based Roche "unacceptable" and said citizens' access to innovative medicines should not be a business decision, according to a translation of a statement released Tuesday.
The cancer treatment that was pulled from Greece's market by Roche is Cotellic (cobimetinib), which is used to treat melanoma in combination with Zelboraf (vemurafenib). Cotellic was approved in the US in 2015, and the combo is reportedly priced at $17,600 per month, or about $211,000 per year.
Roche spokesperson Anja von Treskow told Focus: "With the imposition of the mandatory 25% discount on new innovative products, which is added to a series of mandatory discounts, making Cotellic available in Greece at the reimbursed price has become unsustainable. "We want to ensure that Greek patients continue to have access to innovative medicines and treatments now and in the future. At the same time, we need to protect our company from the extremely unfavorable environment created by the rebate and discount based pricing policy for pharmaceutical companies in Greece," the drugmaker said.
According to news reports, the mandatory 25% discount has been applied retroactively to January 2017 in Greece and could cause other companies to withdraw products from the market.
James Love, director of Knowledge Ecology International, told Focus he thinks Greece should issue compulsory licenses on expensive cancer medicines and "this is a good candidate."
Tags: Greece, Roche, Cotellic