Product logins

Find logins to all Clarivate products below.


Age-Related Macular Degeneration | Access & Reimbursement | US | 2021

The wet age-related macular degeneration (AMD) market in the United States is unique given that the key approved therapies—Roche / Genentech’s Lucentis, Regeneron’s Eylea, and Novartis’s Beovu—face competition from low-priced off-label Avastin (Roche / Genentech). The approved premium-priced therapies place a substantial burden on payers; therefore, despite being effective and safe, they are subject to payer restrictions. Competition is expected to increase with the launches of Roche’s faricimab, Roche’s ranibizumab port delivery system, Regeneron’s high-dose aflibercept, Kodiak Sciences’ KSI-301, and Regenxbio’s RGX-314; these agents potentially offer a dosing advantage over the currently available VEGF inhibitors and address a substantial unmet in this market. Biosimilar versions of Eylea and Lucentis are also anticipated to launch soon, making it essential to understand how these therapies could impact access to premium-priced brands.

QUESTIONS ANSWERED

  • Does coverage of the key VEGF inhibitors for wet AMD differ on MCOs’ largest Medicare Advantage and commercial insurance plans?
  • How do various cost-control measures impact prescribing of approved wet AMD therapies Eylea, Lucentis, Beovu, and off-label Avastin? How are biosimilar versions of bevacizumab (Amgen’s Mvasi and Pfizer’s Zirabev) reimbursed or prescribed for wet AMD, if at all?
  • Do ophthalmologists expect to prescribe late-phase emerging therapies to their Medicare and commercially insured wet AMD patients? How do payers expect to cover these therapies on their commercial and Medicare Advantage plans?
  • How is the expected availability of biosimilars to Eylea and Lucentis likely to impact access to and reimbursement of their reference brands?

GEOGRAPHY: United States

PRIMARY RESEARCH: Survey of 100 U.S. ophthalmologists; survey of 30 U.S. managed care organization (MCO) pharmacy and medical directors (PDs / MDs)

KEY DRUGS COVERED: Avastin, Eylea, Lucentis, Beovu, faricimab, ranibizumab port delivery system, high-dose aflibercept, KSI-301, RGX-314

CONTENT HIGHLIGHTS: Reimbursement and contracting, access and prescribing, opportunities and challenges for emerging therapies, potential coverage and use of biosimilar anti-VEGF products

PRODUCT DESCRIPTION

U.S. Access & Reimbursement provides integrated brand- and disease-level insight on reimbursement dynamics and the impact of U.S. payer policy on physician prescribing behavior in the market access environment, including up-to-date analysis of drug coverage and restriction policies and payer and prescriber perspectives on key marketed drugs and receptivity to emerging therapies.

Related Market Assessment Reports

Report
Uterine Fibroids – Current Treatment – Treatment Algorithms: Claims Data Analysis – Uterine Fibroids (US)
Treatment for uterine fibroids includes pharmacological approaches and surgical procedures. NSAIDs help alleviate the pain but do not reduce the fibroids’ size. Progestins (e.g., norethindrone,…
Report
Thyroid Eye Disease – Executive Insights – Thyroid Eye Disease | Executive Insights (US)
Report
Irritable Bowel Syndrome – Current Treatment – Treatment Algorithms: Claims Data Analysis – IBS-Constipation (Including IBS Without Diarrhea) (US)
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a chronic gastrointestinal disorder characterized by alterations in motility, stool consistency and frequency, and urgency. It is classified into three subtypes:…
Report
Kidney Transplant – Current Treatment – Treatment Algorithms: Claims Data Analysis – Kidney Transplant (US)
Each year in the United States, thousands of patients with end-stage renal disease undergo a kidney transplant. To prevent rejection and maintain the new kidney’s functionality, patients must…
Report
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis – Landscape & Forecast – Niche & Rare Disease Landscape & Forecast (US/EU5)
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a disorder of the central nervous system characterized by motor neuron degeneration. ALS causes progressive weakness and atrophy of the muscles and loss of…