Department of Pediatrics, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
Novartis Pharmaceuticals Inc, Dorval, QC, Canada.
Orphanet J Rare Dis. 2022 Mar 4;17(1):113. doi: 10.1186/s13023-022-02260-6.
The Canadian government has committed to developing a national strategy for drugs for rare diseases starting in 2022. Considering this announcement, we conducted a comparative analysis to examine patient access to therapies for rare disease in Canada relative to Europe and the U.S.
Given its similarity to the Canadian health care system, we used Europe as the reference point to analyze all of the therapies with an orphan drug designation approved by the European Medicine Agency (EMA) from 1 January 2015 to 31 March 2020. We then contrasted access to these drugs in Canada (Health Canada) and the U.S. (Food and Drug Administration, FDA). We focused on: (1) the number of therapies for rare diseases entering the Canadian market; (2) the percentage of these therapies that are publicly available to Canadians; and (3) the timelines for patients to access these therapies in Canada.
Sixty-three approved therapies with an orphan drug designation from the EMA were identified. Fifty-three (84%) of these drugs had also been submitted to the FDA for approval, and 41 (65%) were submitted to Health Canada for approval. In Europe, Germany, Denmark, and the U.K. had the highest percentage of publicly reimbursed orphan drugs (84%, 70%, 68%, respectively). In comparison, Ontario (32%), Quebec (25%), and Alberta (25%) had the highest percentage of drugs reimbursed among the Canadian provinces. The shortest median duration (in months) from EMA approval to jurisdictional decision on reimbursement was in Austria (3.2), followed by Germany (4.1), and Finland (6.0). In Canada, the shortest median duration (in months) from regulatory approval to reimbursement was in British Columbia (17.3), Quebec (19.6) and Manitoba (19.6), while the longest duration was in P.E.I (38.5), followed by Nova Scotia (25.9), and Newfoundland (25.1).
Our comparative analysis found that relative to the EU Canadians had less frequent and timely access to therapies for rare diseases. This highlights the need for a rare disease strategy in Canada that allows for clear identification and transparent tracking of the pathway for rare disease drugs, and ultimately optimizes the number of patients with access to these therapies.
加拿大政府承诺从 2022 年开始制定一项针对罕见病药物的国家战略。考虑到这一宣布,我们进行了一项比较分析,以检查加拿大与欧洲和美国相比,患者获得罕见病治疗的情况。
鉴于其与加拿大医疗保健系统的相似性,我们使用欧洲作为参考点,分析了自 2015 年 1 月 1 日至 2020 年 3 月 31 日期间,所有获得欧洲药品管理局(EMA)孤儿药认定的治疗方法。然后,我们对比了加拿大(加拿大卫生部)和美国(食品和药物管理局,FDA)对这些药物的获取情况。我们重点关注:(1)进入加拿大市场的罕见病治疗方法的数量;(2)这些疗法中对加拿大人公开可用的比例;以及(3)在加拿大获得这些疗法的时间框架。
确定了 63 种获得 EMA 孤儿药认定的批准疗法。其中 53 种(84%)药物也已提交 FDA 批准,41 种(65%)已提交加拿大卫生部批准。在欧洲,德国、丹麦和英国的公开报销孤儿药比例最高(分别为 84%、70%和 68%)。相比之下,安大略省(32%)、魁北克省(25%)和艾伯塔省(25%)是加拿大各省中报销药物比例最高的。从 EMA 批准到司法管辖区决定报销的最短中位数时间(以月为单位)是在奥地利(3.2),其次是德国(4.1)和芬兰(6.0)。在加拿大,从监管批准到报销的最短中位数时间(以月为单位)是在不列颠哥伦比亚省(17.3)、魁北克省(19.6)和马尼托巴省(19.6),而最长的时间是在爱德华王子岛(38.5),其次是新斯科舍省(25.9)和纽芬兰省(25.1)。
我们的比较分析发现,与欧盟相比,加拿大人获得罕见病治疗的频率较低,时间也较晚。这凸显了加拿大需要制定一项罕见病战略,明确确定罕见病药物的途径,并进行透明跟踪,最终优化获得这些疗法的患者数量。