PAXLOVID FULLY APPROVED — The FDA on Thursday approved Covid-19 treatment Paxlovid for adults at high risk of progression to severe disease, but access to the medication is not changing in the short term because the government still has millions of doses on hand. “Paxlovid continues to be widely available for free and distributed by the U.S. government through all existing USG channels and retail pharmacies nationwide,” an HHS spokesperson said in an email. Since the antiviral treatment won FDA emergency use authorization in December 2021, about 9.3 million doses have been dispensed to patients, according to HHS. The U.S. still has 9.6 million doses on hand and an additional 4 million at health care provider locations nationwide. Clinical data: Walid Gellad, director of the University of Pittsburgh’s Center for Pharmaceutical Policy and Prescribing, said that while there is no question that Paxlovid helps people at high risk of progression to severe Covid-19, providers are awaiting data from the United Kingdom’s PANORAMIC clinical trial to see the antiviral’s efficacy in a predominantly vaccinated population. The FDA said the approval was supported by a randomized clinical trial, which found that Paxlovid administered within five days of Covid symptom onset reduced hospitalization or death by 86 percent compared with a placebo among people who were not vaccinated or previously infected by Covid-19. “The price is going to influence how careful insurers are in determining who is going to get this drug,” Gellad said. “Almost no one is at high risk of progression — literally almost no one now that they’ve been quadruple and quintuple vaccinated.” Price point: When asked what the price of Paxlovid will be, Pfizer did not offer a number but said it expects to make the drug "commercially available later this year." Angela Hwang, president of Pfizer’s global biopharmaceuticals unit, told investors on a May 2 earnings call that the commercialized price will reflect the number of hospitalizations and deaths averted by Paxlovid treatment. IT’S FRIDAY. WELCOME TO PRESCRIPTION PULSE. Send your favorite Zelda discovery or tips to David Lim (dlim@politico.com or @davidalim) or Katherine Ellen Foley (kfoley@politico.com or @katherineefoley). TODAY ON OUR PULSE CHECK PODCAST, host Alice Miranda Ollstein talks with Carmen Paun, who explains why some Democrats say the HALT Fentanyl Act that the House passed yesterday is a distraction.
|