A comparative study on costs of cancer and access to medicines in Europe.

Author:

Wilking Nils Erik1,Brådvik Gunnar2,Lindgren Peter2,Svedman Christer2,Jönsson Bengt3,Hofmarcher Thomas4

Affiliation:

1. Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden;

2. The Swedish Institute for Health Economics, Lund, Sweden;

3. Stockholm School of Economics, Stockholm, Sweden;

4. The Swedish Institutet for Health Economics, Lund, Sweden;

Abstract

e19051 Background: Cancer care is evolving rapidly, and costs and value of new treatments are often causing headlines without being discussed in a larger context. This study estimates the cost of cancer and access to medicines in Europe in 2018 and extends a previous analysis for 1995–2014. Methods: Cancer-specific health expenditure for 31 countries (EU-27 plus Iceland, Norway, Switzerland, and the UK) were derived from national estimates. Data on cancer drug sales were obtained from IQVIA. The productivity loss from premature mortality was estimated from data from Eurostat and the WHO. Estimates of the productivity loss from morbidity and informal care costs were based on previous studies. Results: The total cost of cancer was €199 billion in 2018. Total costs ranged from €160 per capita in Romania to €578 in Switzerland (after adjustment for price differentials). Health expenditure on cancer care was €103 billion, of which €32 billion was spent on cancer drugs. Informal care costs were €26 billion. The total productivity loss was €70 billion, composed of €50 billion from premature mortality and €20 billion from morbidity. Between 1995 and 2018, cancer incidence increased by 50 percent from 2.1 million to 3.1 million cases in Europe. Cancer mortality increased only by 20 percent. Health spending on cancer care doubled from €52 billion to €103 billion (in 2018 prices and exchange rates), whereas the share of cancer care on the total health expenditure remained stable at around 4 to 7 percent. A shift from treatment in inpatient care to ambulatory care has probably saved costs. Expenditure on cancer medicines more than tripled from €10 billion to €32 billion between 2005 and 2018 (excluding confidential rebates). Productivity loss from premature mortality decreased over time, linked to mortality reductions in working-age patients. Conclusions: There are large country differences in spending on cancer care and outcomes in Europe. Access to new cancer medicines is low or very low in certain parts of Europe. Inequalities are mainly related to countries’ economic strength and not to the disease burden of cancer.

Funder

EFPIA

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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