NICE approves Keytruda, MSD’s lung cancer drug, to be used as routine treatment on the NHS

nhs-england-logoA green light has been given for lung cancer drug Keytruda by NICE for the treatment for certain patients in England.

Merck, Sharp, and Dohme (MSD)’s Keytruda will be available for those with previously untreated metastatic nonsquamous non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), where tumours have specific protein and genetic markers.

Keytruda is the first treatment to break the new budget impact threshold for new products that cost of over £20 million a year. Following a deal created by MSD and NHS England, Keytruda has been deemed cost-effective by the Cancer Drugs Fund (CDF) for routine commissioning in NHS England via NICE.

NHS England worked closely with MSD to reach an agreement, demonstrating that the drug works for patients, the taxpayer and industry. Keytruda would have cost around £84,000 per patient at its full list price but NHS England and MSD struck a confidential arrangement for reimbursement to enable NICE to recommend it to be routinely available on the NHS.

Immunotherapy drugs such as Keytruda are known as ‘checkpoint inhibitors’. These monoclonal antibodies work by preventing cancer from pushing a ‘stop button’ on immune cells, which catalyses  the body’s natural immune system.

Simon Stevens, NHS England chief executive, said, “This is another milestone in our rapidly improving modern NHS cancer care. This win-win deal for patients and taxpayers brings genuine innovation and proven survival gains to cancer patients across England.”

Gary Middleton, professor of medical oncology at the University of Birmingham, was also positive, calling the decision a ‘landmark’. He said, “Lung cancer is such a tough disease but treatments like immunotherapies that harness the patient’s own immune system to fight their cancer have transformed the way we think about the disease and more importantly treat it.

“Progress in this space has been phenomenal and we are confident that the next five years will deliver many more advances in the immunotherapy of lung cancer.”

Louise Houson, UK MD of MSD explained that since 2016, the CDF gave the industry a framework within which to progress the availability of Keytruda while gaining evidence to support its routine funding across the NHS.

Over half the patients diagnosed with NSCLC have metastatic cancer that has spread throughout the body by the time of diagnosis. The disease has an estimated five-year survival rate in the UK of approximately 6% and treatment gives patients extra 16 months of life on average.

Source: Pharmaphorum

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