Findings from the latest edition of the PMPRB’s Meds Entry Watch report show a continued rise in the number of new specialized treatments entering international markets.
OTTAWA, Jan. 15, 2020 /CNW/ - Findings from the latest edition of the PMPRB’s Meds Entry Watch report show a continued rise in the number of new specialized treatments entering international markets. Coupled with high treatment costs, specialty orphan and cancer medicines now account for a sizable share of the new drug landscape. This fourth installment in the Meds Entry Watch report series, published by the PMPRB under the National Prescription Drug Utilization Information System (NPDUIS) initiative, looks at the medicines that received first-time market approval through the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the European Medicines Agency (EMA), and/or Health Canada in 2017 and 2018. The number of new medicines that were approved annually in recent years is higher than the longer term average. Although fewer new medicines were authorized for market in Canada than in the US and Europe in 2017, those that were approved for sale here account for close to 90% of all new medicine sales across the OECD by the end of 2018, which suggests that the higher-impact new medicines are available to Canadian patients. The increasingly high cost of new medicines poses access and affordability challenges and is the driving force behind a host of recent and pending reforms in pricing and reimbursement policy, both domestically and internationally. In Canada, the PMPRB protects consumers by regulating the ceiling prices of patented medicines sold here and keeps them informed on trends in the pharmaceutical market through its reporting function. Quick Facts
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