Cancer drug access: study prompts more dialogue
In the first comprehensive and systematic study of Canadian medical oncologists' access to unfunded IV (intravenous) cancer drugs for patients with metastatic disease, Sunnybrook researchers quantitatively show half nationally have access in their own hospitals with a patchwork of access provincially, for example, from 92 per cent to 12 from one province to another.
The study, published in the Journal of Oncology Practice, also reports medical oncologists feel strongly that all means of access to unfunded drugs should be available, and they do use these methods despite varying comfort levels on the means of access especially via non government-funded private infusion clinics in Canada or the United States.
New drugs offer modest improvements on outcomes for patients but at significantly higher costs. The complexities of the issue make for difficult discussions in Canada's publicly funded healthcare system. The Pan-Canadian Oncology Drug Review started reviewing drugs in October 2011 with the hope to improve consistency in cancer drug funding in Canada.
"Our study confirms that your ability to access needed cancer drugs varies substantially across the country," says Dr. Scott Berry, a medical oncologist with the gastrointestinal and genitourinary cancer care teams at Sunnybrook's Odette Cancer Centre, and the study's principal investigator. "We recognize there are difficult choices on which new drugs to fund given the system's resource limits, but there needs to be more dialogue among policymakers about how to improve consistency of access across the country," says Dr. Berry, also an assistant professor of medicine and the director of the medical oncology training program at the University of Toronto.