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Access to cancer medicines deemed essential by oncologists in 82 countries: an international, cross-sectional survey

BACKGROUND: The WHO Essential Medicines List (EML) identifies priority medicines that are most important to public health. Over time, the EML has included an increasing number of cancer medicines. We aimed to investigate whether the cancer medicines in the EML are aligned with the priority medicines...

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Autores principales: Fundytus, Adam, Sengar, Manju, Lombe, Dorothy, Hopman, Wilma, Jalink, Matthew, Gyawali, Bishal, Trapani, Dario, Roitberg, Felipe, De Vries, Elisabeth G E, Moja, Lorenzo, Ilbawi, André, Sullivan, Richard, Booth, Christopher M
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Lancet Pub. Group 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8476341/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34560006
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1470-2045(21)00463-0
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author Fundytus, Adam
Sengar, Manju
Lombe, Dorothy
Hopman, Wilma
Jalink, Matthew
Gyawali, Bishal
Trapani, Dario
Roitberg, Felipe
De Vries, Elisabeth G E
Moja, Lorenzo
Ilbawi, André
Sullivan, Richard
Booth, Christopher M
author_facet Fundytus, Adam
Sengar, Manju
Lombe, Dorothy
Hopman, Wilma
Jalink, Matthew
Gyawali, Bishal
Trapani, Dario
Roitberg, Felipe
De Vries, Elisabeth G E
Moja, Lorenzo
Ilbawi, André
Sullivan, Richard
Booth, Christopher M
author_sort Fundytus, Adam
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The WHO Essential Medicines List (EML) identifies priority medicines that are most important to public health. Over time, the EML has included an increasing number of cancer medicines. We aimed to investigate whether the cancer medicines in the EML are aligned with the priority medicines of frontline oncologists worldwide, and the extent to which these medicines are accessible in routine clinical practice. METHODS: This international, cross-sectional survey was developed by investigators from a range of clinical practice settings across low-income to high-income countries, including members of the WHO Essential Medicines Cancer Working Group. A 28-question electronic survey was developed and disseminated to a global network of oncologists in 89 countries and regions by use of a hierarchical snowball method; each primary contact distributed the survey through their national and regional oncology associations or personal networks. The survey was open from Oct 15 to Dec 7, 2020. Fully qualified physicians who prescribe systemic anticancer therapy to adults were eligible to participate in the survey. The primary question asked respondents to select the ten cancer medicines that would provide the greatest public health benefit to their country; subsequent questions explored availability and cost of cancer medicines. Descriptive statistics were used to compare access to medicines between low-income and lower-middle-income countries, upper-middle-income countries, and high-income countries. FINDINGS: 87 country-level contacts and two regional networks were invited to participate in the survey; 46 (52%) accepted the invitation and distributed the survey. 1697 respondents opened the survey link; 423 were excluded as they did not answer the primary study question and 326 were excluded because of ineligibility. 948 eligible oncologists from 82 countries completed the survey (165 [17%] in low-income and lower-middle-income countries, 165 [17%] in upper-middle-income countries, and 618 [65%] in high-income countries). The most commonly selected medicines were doxorubicin (by 499 [53%] of 948 respondents), cisplatin (by 470 [50%]), paclitaxel (by 423 [45%]), pembrolizumab (by 414 [44%]), trastuzumab (by 402 [42%]), carboplatin (by 390 [41%]), and 5-fluorouracil (by 386 [41%]). Of the 20 most frequently selected high-priority cancer medicines, 19 (95%) are currently on the WHO EML; 12 (60%) were cytotoxic agents and 13 (65%) were granted US Food and Drug Administration regulatory approval before 2000. The proportion of respondents indicating universal availability of each top 20 medication was 9–54% in low-income and lower-middle-income countries, 13–90% in upper-middle-income countries, and 68–94% in high-income countries. The risk of catastrophic expenditure (spending >40% of total consumption net of spending on food) was more common in low-income and lower-middle-income countries, with 13–68% of respondents indicating a substantial risk of catastrophic expenditures for each of the top 20 medications in lower-middle-income countries versus 2–41% of respondents in upper-middle-income countries and 0–9% in high-income countries. INTERPRETATION: These data demonstrate major barriers in access to core cancer medicines worldwide. These findings challenge the feasibility of adding additional expensive cancer medicines to the EML. There is an urgent need for global and country-level policy action to ensure patients with cancer globally have access to high priority medicines. FUNDING: None.
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spelling pubmed-84763412021-10-01 Access to cancer medicines deemed essential by oncologists in 82 countries: an international, cross-sectional survey Fundytus, Adam Sengar, Manju Lombe, Dorothy Hopman, Wilma Jalink, Matthew Gyawali, Bishal Trapani, Dario Roitberg, Felipe De Vries, Elisabeth G E Moja, Lorenzo Ilbawi, André Sullivan, Richard Booth, Christopher M Lancet Oncol Articles BACKGROUND: The WHO Essential Medicines List (EML) identifies priority medicines that are most important to public health. Over time, the EML has included an increasing number of cancer medicines. We aimed to investigate whether the cancer medicines in the EML are aligned with the priority medicines of frontline oncologists worldwide, and the extent to which these medicines are accessible in routine clinical practice. METHODS: This international, cross-sectional survey was developed by investigators from a range of clinical practice settings across low-income to high-income countries, including members of the WHO Essential Medicines Cancer Working Group. A 28-question electronic survey was developed and disseminated to a global network of oncologists in 89 countries and regions by use of a hierarchical snowball method; each primary contact distributed the survey through their national and regional oncology associations or personal networks. The survey was open from Oct 15 to Dec 7, 2020. Fully qualified physicians who prescribe systemic anticancer therapy to adults were eligible to participate in the survey. The primary question asked respondents to select the ten cancer medicines that would provide the greatest public health benefit to their country; subsequent questions explored availability and cost of cancer medicines. Descriptive statistics were used to compare access to medicines between low-income and lower-middle-income countries, upper-middle-income countries, and high-income countries. FINDINGS: 87 country-level contacts and two regional networks were invited to participate in the survey; 46 (52%) accepted the invitation and distributed the survey. 1697 respondents opened the survey link; 423 were excluded as they did not answer the primary study question and 326 were excluded because of ineligibility. 948 eligible oncologists from 82 countries completed the survey (165 [17%] in low-income and lower-middle-income countries, 165 [17%] in upper-middle-income countries, and 618 [65%] in high-income countries). The most commonly selected medicines were doxorubicin (by 499 [53%] of 948 respondents), cisplatin (by 470 [50%]), paclitaxel (by 423 [45%]), pembrolizumab (by 414 [44%]), trastuzumab (by 402 [42%]), carboplatin (by 390 [41%]), and 5-fluorouracil (by 386 [41%]). Of the 20 most frequently selected high-priority cancer medicines, 19 (95%) are currently on the WHO EML; 12 (60%) were cytotoxic agents and 13 (65%) were granted US Food and Drug Administration regulatory approval before 2000. The proportion of respondents indicating universal availability of each top 20 medication was 9–54% in low-income and lower-middle-income countries, 13–90% in upper-middle-income countries, and 68–94% in high-income countries. The risk of catastrophic expenditure (spending >40% of total consumption net of spending on food) was more common in low-income and lower-middle-income countries, with 13–68% of respondents indicating a substantial risk of catastrophic expenditures for each of the top 20 medications in lower-middle-income countries versus 2–41% of respondents in upper-middle-income countries and 0–9% in high-income countries. INTERPRETATION: These data demonstrate major barriers in access to core cancer medicines worldwide. These findings challenge the feasibility of adding additional expensive cancer medicines to the EML. There is an urgent need for global and country-level policy action to ensure patients with cancer globally have access to high priority medicines. FUNDING: None. Lancet Pub. Group 2021-10 /pmc/articles/PMC8476341/ /pubmed/34560006 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1470-2045(21)00463-0 Text en © 2021 World Health Organization https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).
spellingShingle Articles
Fundytus, Adam
Sengar, Manju
Lombe, Dorothy
Hopman, Wilma
Jalink, Matthew
Gyawali, Bishal
Trapani, Dario
Roitberg, Felipe
De Vries, Elisabeth G E
Moja, Lorenzo
Ilbawi, André
Sullivan, Richard
Booth, Christopher M
Access to cancer medicines deemed essential by oncologists in 82 countries: an international, cross-sectional survey
title Access to cancer medicines deemed essential by oncologists in 82 countries: an international, cross-sectional survey
title_full Access to cancer medicines deemed essential by oncologists in 82 countries: an international, cross-sectional survey
title_fullStr Access to cancer medicines deemed essential by oncologists in 82 countries: an international, cross-sectional survey
title_full_unstemmed Access to cancer medicines deemed essential by oncologists in 82 countries: an international, cross-sectional survey
title_short Access to cancer medicines deemed essential by oncologists in 82 countries: an international, cross-sectional survey
title_sort access to cancer medicines deemed essential by oncologists in 82 countries: an international, cross-sectional survey
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8476341/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34560006
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1470-2045(21)00463-0
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