Feature

Cystic fibrosis in retreat, but still unbeaten


 

Cost and access

All experts interviewed for this article agreed that while the care of patients with CF has improved exponentially over the last few decades, there are still troubling inequities in care.

One of the largest impediments is the cost of care, with the triple combination costing more than $300,000 per year.

“Clearly patients aren’t paying that, but insurance companies are, and that’s causing all kinds of trickle-down effects that definitely affect patients. The patients like myself who are able to have insurance that covers it benefit, but there are so many people that don’t,” Dr. Desch said.

Dr. Sweezey noted that prior to the advent of ETI, patients with CF in Canada had better outcomes and longer life expectancy than did similar patients in the United States because of universal access to care and coordinated services under Canada’s health care system, compared with the highly fragmented and inefficient U.S. system. He added that the wider availability of ETI in the United States vs. Canada may begin to narrow that gap, however.

As noted before, there is a substantial proportion of patients – an estimated 10% – who have CFTR mutations that are not correctable by currently available CFTR modulators, and these patients are at significant risk for irreversible airway complications and lung damage.

In addition, although CF occurs most frequently among people of White ancestry, the disease does not respect distinctions of race or ethnicity.

“It’s not just [Whites] – a lot of people from different racial backgrounds, ethnic backgrounds, are not being diagnosed or are not being diagnosed soon enough to have effective care early enough,” Dr. Desch said.

That statement is supported by the Lancet Respiratory Medicine Commission on the future of cystic fibrosis care, whose members noted in 2019 that “epidemiological studies in the past 2 decades have shown that cystic fibrosis occurs and is more frequent than was previously thought in populations of non-European descent, and the disease is now recognized in many regions of the world.”

The commission members noted that the costs of adequate CF care may be beyond the reach of many patients in developing nations.

Still, if the substantial barriers of cost and access can be overcome, the future will continue to look brighter for patients with CF. As Dr. Sweezey put it: “There are studies that are pushing lower age limits for using these modulators, and as the evidence builds for the efficacy and safety at younger ages, I think all of us are hoping that we’ll end up being able to use either the current or future modulators to actually prevent trouble in CF, rather than trying to come along and fix it after it’s been there.”

Dr. Brown disclosed advisory board activity for Vertex that ended prior to her joining the CF Foundation. Dr. Desch, Dr. Goss, and Dr. Sweezey reported no relevant conflicts of interest.

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