Department of General Oncology, Division of Cancer Medicine, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX, USA.
Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Oncologist. 2022 Nov 3;27(11):958-970. doi: 10.1093/oncolo/oyac143.
Cancer mortality is high in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), partly due to inadequate treatment access. We explored access to and affordability of cancer treatment regimens for the top 10 cancers utilizing examples from Kenya, Uganda, and Rwanda.
Population, healthcare financing, minimum wage, and cancer incidence and mortality data were obtained from the WHO, World Bank, public sources, and GLOBOCAN. National Essential Medicines List (NEML) alignment with 2019 WHO EML was assessed as a proportion. Cancer regimen pricing was calculated using public and proprietary sources and methods from prior studies. Affordability through universal healthcare coverage (UHC) was assessed as 1-year cost <3× gross national income per capita; and to patients out-of-pocket (OOP), as 30-day treatment course cost <1 day of minimum wage work.
A total of 93.4% of the WHO EML cancer medicines were listed on the 2019 Kenya NEML, and 70.5% and 41.1% on Uganda (2016) and Rwanda (2015) NEMLs, respectively. Generic chemotherapies were available and affordable to governments through UHC to treat non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, cervical, breast, prostate, colorectal, ovarian cancers, and select leukemias. Newer targeted agents were not affordable through government UHC purchasing, while some capecitabine-based regimens were not affordable in Uganda and Rwanda. All therapies were not affordable OOP.
All cancer treatment regimens were not affordable OOP and some were not covered by governments. Newer targeted drugs were not affordable to all 3 governments. UHC of cancer drugs and improving targeted therapy affordability to LMIC governments in SSA are key to improving treatment access and health outcomes.
撒哈拉以南非洲(SSA)的癌症死亡率很高,部分原因是治疗机会不足。我们利用肯尼亚、乌干达和卢旺达的例子,探讨了前 10 种癌症的治疗方案的可及性和可负担性。
人口、医疗保健融资、最低工资以及癌症发病率和死亡率数据均来自世卫组织、世界银行、公共资源和 GLOBOCAN。我们评估了国家基本药物清单(NEML)与 2019 年世卫组织 EML 的一致性,将其作为比例。通过公共和私人资源以及先前研究中的方法来计算癌症方案的定价。通过全民医疗保险(UHC)的可负担性评估标准为:1 年费用<人均国民总收入的 3 倍;对患者自费(OOP)而言,30 天的治疗费用<1 天最低工资。
共有 93.4%的世卫组织 EML 癌症药物被列入 2019 年肯尼亚国家基本药物清单,70.5%和 41.1%分别列入乌干达(2016 年)和卢旺达(2015 年)国家基本药物清单。通过 UHC,各国政府可以获得和负担得起治疗非霍奇金淋巴瘤、宫颈癌、乳腺癌、前列腺癌、结直肠癌、卵巢癌和某些白血病的通用化疗药物。新型靶向药物通过政府 UHC 采购无法负担得起,而在乌干达和卢旺达,一些卡培他滨类方案也无法负担得起。所有治疗方案都无法自费负担。
所有癌症治疗方案自费负担都很重,一些方案没有得到政府的覆盖。新的靶向药物都无法负担得起所有这 3 个政府。撒哈拉以南非洲中低收入国家的癌症药物全民医疗保险和提高靶向治疗的可负担性,是改善治疗机会和健康结果的关键。