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Bill Of The Month: For Toenail Fungus, A $1,500 Prescription

During Anne Solovievs semiannual visit to Braun Dermatology & Skin Cancer Center in Washington, D.C., in January, the physician assistant diagnosed fungus in two of her toenails. Soloviev is vigilant about getting skin checks, since she is at heightened risk for skin cancer, but she hadnt complained about her toenails or even noticed a problem.

The assistant noted some unusual discoloration where the nail meets the skin. They took a toenail clipping and said, yeah, you have a fungus, Soloviev recalled.

So the PA called a prescription into a specialty pharmacy with mail-order services, which would send medication to Solovievs Capitol Hill home.

It seemed like an easy fix to an inconsequential health issue. I did not ask how much it cost it never crossed my mind, ever, said Soloviev, a former French teacher, who still works part time.

Then the bill came.

Patient: Anne Soloviev, 77 on March 18, of Washington, D.C.

The Bill:泭$1,496.09 for Kerydin, a topical medication that treats toenail fungus. Originally produced by Anacor Pharmaceuticals Inc., it is now a product of Sandoz, a Novartis division.

Service Provider:泭My Express Care Pharmacy, plus Braun Dermatology & Skin Cancer Center

The Medical Treatment: Shortly after the physician assistant phoned in the prescription to My Express Care Pharmacy, in Maryland, the pharmacy contacted Soloviev for her health insurance information.

Soloviev is covered by Medicare, Parts A and B, and has supplemental insurance through her late husbands government health benefits that covers prescription drugs. She also has a health reimbursement account (HRA), which contains almost $1,500 pretax dollars each year to pay for uncovered medical expenses. She typically uses that pot of money to cover copays for the other medicines she takes regularly.

Kerydin, the toenail medication, arrived by overnight mail, and an automatic refill came a few weeks later. She began swabbing it on the two toenails, as directed, having been told it would take about 11 months to treat the fungus.

She thought little of it.

But when Soloviev went to her local CVS to pick up another medication a statin that is usually paid for by her HRA she discovered her reserve was empty.

Unbeknownst to her, Kerydin, which it turned out costs nearly $1,500 per monthly refill, had wiped out her entire reimbursement account.

What Gives:泭Were talking about mild toenail fungus. The price tag is difficult to rationalize, experts said.

Reality check this is $1,500 for a medicine to treat [it], said Wendy Epstein, an associate law professor at DePaul University, who researches health care law. Thats quite a chunk of change.

Leslie Pott, Sandozs vice president of communications, explained that Kerydin is patent-protected and priced at parity with its one market competitor, Jublia. She also pointed out that to secure a place on an insurers list of approved drugs its formulary the drugmaker often had to offer substantial discounts to insurers and various middlemen. We have no visibility into the extent to which these discounts are passed onto patients or payers, she wrote in an email.

There are many prescription treatment for toenail fungus both older medicines in pill form and newer topical treatments such as Kerydin, said Dr. Shari Lipner, an assistant professor at Weill Cornell Medicine and director of its nail unit. The patient in this case would have been a candidate for quite a few of them.

Patients are likely to pay less for the pills, for which a course of treatment lasts three months, compared with the newer topical treatments, she said, adding that the pills also seem to have greater efficacy.

In its for Food and Drug Administration approval granted in 2014, Anacor Pharmaceuticals highlighted that a yearlong treatment of Kerydin completely cured toe fungus in 6.5 percent of patients for one trial, and 9.1 percent of patients in another.

Over-the-counter treatments are also available, but there's not much data on them, Lipner said.

Xavier Davis, Braun Dermatology & Skin Cancer Centers practice manager, said a drugs price tag simply isnt a factor when prescribers recommend a course of treatment.

When our providers are treating patients, were not treating them based on what the costs going to be. We look for whats the best care for the patient, Davis said. If the patient calls and says thats too expensive, then well look for alternatives.

Kavita Patel, a nonresident fellow at the Brookings Institution and a practicing physician, said this process contributes to the problem. My sisters a dermatologist, and shell do the same thing shell prescribe and she doesnt know. Youre getting at many layers of how [messed] up the system is, starting with the doctor doesnt know.

And patients often dont see the actual price. Or they see it too late, when theyre at the pharmacy counter picking up medicines they have been told they need or in a roundabout way discover unexpected payouts.

In January, Solovievs insurance plan was billed the full price of Kerydin. Of that, $1,439.57 came from her HRA. The difference, $56.52, was covered by a patient-assistance program from the drug manufacturer, explained Jonathan Lee, a pharmacist for My Express Care.

In February, when Solovievs prescription was refilled, her plan was again billed the full drug price. But she didnt know about that either. A manufacturer coupon was applied to cover what remained of her insurers $2,000 annual deductible and the $60 copay. Her insurance then kicked in to pay the difference.

Such patient-assistance programs and coupons are meant to insulate patients from cost sharing, so that they dont feel a pinch from a drugs price. But in this case, the drugmakers patient-assistance program apparently took effect only once Solovievs HRA has been wiped out, allowing the manufacturer to maximize revenue from both patient and insurer.

DePaul Universitys Epstein said it took her 15 minutes to figure out what was going on here. And, unlike the average patient, she studies this issue for a living.

Lee, the pharmacist, said even he didnt realize that money could be withdrawn directly from a patients HRA without her knowledge, and hes been in the business for the better part of a decade.

None of that is consolation for Soloviev, who said: I just find it is outrageous for a fungal medicine to cost $1,400, to be prescribed for 11 months, and for neither the PA nor the pharmacy to warn you, Soloviev said.

賊梗莽棗梭喝喧勳棗紳:泭Though she has told My Express Care not to renew the prescription, Solovievs HRA is depleted. For the rest of the year, shell have to pay out-of-pocket costs for any other medications, an expense she hadnt planned on.

The Takeaway:泭For even the most informed of patients, getting a new prescription can mean walking through a financial minefield. And Soloviev hit a number of booby traps.

Bottom line, experts say, medical professionals should make the patient aware if they prescribe a high-priced medicine and explain why its beneficial.

Patients should play defense and ask their physicians about the cost of every new prescription. They should ask again at the pharmacy even if that means calling a mail-order pharmacy. Because costs can vary depending on each patients coverage, they may need to contact their insurance carrier or the PBM that handles their medicine claims.

And if the cost is extremely high, they should ask their doctor about generic or over-the-counter alternatives.

This is an important component of the decision a patients going to make, Epstein said. If its toenail fungus and not life-or-death, it strikes me an individual might want to have relevant data.

This is a monthly feature from Kaiser Health News and NPR that will泭dissect and explain realmedical bills in order to shed light on U.S. health care prices and to help patients learn how to be more active in managing costs. Do you have a medical bill that youd like us to see and scrutinize?泭Submit it here泭and tell us the story behind it.

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