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| Amsterdam’s VU medical centre. Photo: VUmc.com |
The eight Dutch teaching hospitals are to purchase cancer
medicines collectively in an attempt to cut down the spiralling cost of treatment.
Representative body NFU said the experimental plan concerned an immunotherapy
treatment that currently costs tens of thousands of euros per patient per year.
Experts have warned in recent weeks that the system for funding production and
development is reformed, otherwise cancer drugs could become unaffordable as
survival rates increase.
The hospitals taking part in the initial scheme are
the AMC and VU Medical Centre in Amsterdam, Rotterdam’s Erasmus Medical Centre
and the university hospitals in Utrecht, Leiden, Groningen, Nijmegen and
Maastricht.
The Erasmus hospital says it spent €180 million on medicines last
year, compared to €100 million last year. New cancer treatments accounted for
much of the increase.
René Bernards, of the Antoni van Leeuwenhoek cancer
hospital in Amsterdam, said taking the production of medicines out of the hands
of pharmaceutical companies could slash the cost per patient from €100,000 a
year to around €2,000. ‘We can do it in a different and cheaper way and we need
to take the iniative,’ he said. ‘That’s what society expects of us.’
They have
also said they want to publish details of the discounts on the cost price that
they are able to negotiate with pharmaceutical firms, but the NFU admitted that
this may contravene marketing rules.
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