FDA/CDC

CMS to cover Alzheimer’s drugs after traditional FDA okay


 

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services has announced that Medicare will cover drugs designed to slow Alzheimer’s disease once they receive traditional approval by the Food and Drug Administration.

The one caveat is that CMS will require physicians to participate in registries that collect evidence about how these drugs work in the real world.

Physicians will be able to submit this evidence through a nationwide, CMS-facilitated portal that will be available when any product gains traditional approval and will collect information via an easy-to-use format.

“If the FDA grants traditional approval, then Medicare will cover it in appropriate settings that also support the collection of real-world information to study the usefulness of these drugs for people with Medicare,” the CMS says in a news release.

“CMS has always been committed to helping people obtain timely access to innovative treatments that meaningfully improve care and outcomes for this disease,” added CMS Administrator Chiquita Brooks-LaSure.

“If the FDA grants traditional approval, CMS is prepared to ensure anyone with Medicare Part B who meets the criteria is covered,” Ms. Brooks-LaSure explained.

The CMS says broader Medicare coverage for an Alzheimer’s drug would begin on the same day the FDA grants traditional approval. Under CMS’ current coverage policy, if the FDA grants traditional approval to other drugs in this class, they would also be eligible for broader coverage.

Currently two drugs in this class – aducanumab (Aduhelm) and lecanemab (Leqembi) – have received accelerated approval from the FDA, but no product has received traditional approval.

Lecanemab might be the first to cross the line.

On June 9, the FDA Peripheral and Central Nervous System Drugs Advisory Committee will discuss results of a confirmatory trial of lecanemab, with a potential decision on traditional approval expected shortly thereafter.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Recommended Reading

Unawareness of memory slips could indicate risk for Alzheimer’s
MDedge Family Medicine
Cautious optimism for new Alzheimer’s disease biomarkers and treatments, expert says
MDedge Family Medicine
Donanemab bests aducanumab in head-to-head Alzheimer’s trial
MDedge Family Medicine
AHA backs screening for cognitive impairment after stroke
MDedge Family Medicine
Hearing aids are a ‘powerful’ tool for reducing dementia risk
MDedge Family Medicine
FDA approves first drug to treat Alzheimer’s agitation
MDedge Family Medicine
Deep sleep may mitigate the impact of Alzheimer’s pathology
MDedge Family Medicine
Internet use a modifiable dementia risk factor in older adults?
MDedge Family Medicine
Which interventions could lessen the burden of dementia?
MDedge Family Medicine
Younger age of type 2 diabetes onset linked to dementia risk
MDedge Family Medicine