Slashdot Mirror


Price Tag On Gene Therapy For Rare Form of Blindness: $850K (apnews.com)

A first-of-its kind genetic treatment for blindness will cost $850,000, less than the $1 million price tag that had been expected, but still among the most expensive medicines in the world. Several readers have shared an Associated Press report: Spark Therapeutics said Wednesday it decided on the lower price for Luxturna (Lux-turn-a) after hearing concerns from health insurers about their ability to cover the injectable treatment. Consternation over skyrocketing drug prices, especially in the U.S., has led to intense scrutiny from patients, Congress, insurers and hospitals. "We wanted to balance the value and the affordability concerns with a responsible price that would ensure access to patients," said CEO Jeffrey Marrazzo, in an interview with The Associated Press. Luxturna is still significantly more expensive than nearly every other medicine on the global market, including two other gene therapies approved earlier last year in the U.S. Approved last month, Luxturna, is the nation's first gene therapy for an inherited disease. It can improve the vision of those with a rare form of blindness that is estimated to affect just a few thousand people in the U.S. Luxturna is an injection -- one for each eye -- that replaces a defective gene in the retina, tissue at the back of the eye that converts light into electric signals that produce vision. The therapy will cost $425,000 per injection.

218 comments

  1. 8=D~ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


     

    1. Re:8=D~ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You'll poke your eye out with that thing

    2. Re:8=D~ by wardrich86 · · Score: 1

      But if it blinds him, he may be able to get it cured for one low price of $850K!

  2. Let me guess by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    the basic research that underpinned this (e.g. all the hard work) was done at public University on the public dime.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    1. Re:Let me guess by imgod2u · · Score: 3, Interesting

      That's kinda like saying the Turing machine was invented at a public university on public dime. So why is Intel charging $350 for a processor.

    2. Re:Let me guess by ThosLives · · Score: 1

      What, you mean you don't value eyesight at approximately 17 years of median income?

      --
      "There are a dozen opinions on a matter until you know the truth. Then there is only one." - CS Lewis (paraprhase)
    3. Re:Let me guess by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      University research is literally just that ... the bare basics.

      Thinking that's all that goes into drug production completely neglects to think about financing, building a production plant, clinical trials, government approval, zoning, regulation, packaging, distribution, etc, etc....

      It's naive to think that because some phd in a university got something working using a benchtop setup and a few generations of lab mice, that we can just jump right on in to production batches that can be sold and administered to actual people.

    4. Re:Let me guess by stabiesoft · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If they were charging 350/eye I don't think anyone would be complaining. The problem is the drug industry has been raping the US lately. Have HEP-C, 85 grand, and then there was shekal(sp?) who raised priced on old drugs just because he could. Epi-pens also spiked and had no changes to justify the price surge. And then we have the drug industry that has totally abandoned antibiotics. Something almost all of us need from time to time. Just not profitable.

    5. Re:Let me guess by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the research was done on the public dime, then companies other than Spark should be able to use it to produce the same medicine, and compete against Spark on price.

      Is that not the case? Is there a reason why Spark is the only company that can make this? Because it would be quite injust if THEY hold the patent on research that WE paid for, and further abuse their monopoly to price-gouge.

    6. Re:Let me guess by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      The $350 is the cost of the R&D of incremental upgrade covering the failure of designs over the past decade. The cost of revamping its manufacturing to print these chips, parts labor, share holder..... Then keeping a tidy profit per chip.

      The previous work done had already paid for it self, so it isn't part of the chip price. Hence why we can get a relatively fast chip at a consumer level price.

      The problem with rare drugs for rare problems. Is they cannot sell a lot of them to make up their R&D prices. However it is a problem with the system, where people with a rare condition, must pay more then they would normally make in a life time to pay for it.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    7. Re:Let me guess by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

      Just to explain the downmod. You're analogy is stupid and you're an idiot.

      First, the Turing machine has as much to do with a modern CPU as Peano Logic has to do with the electronics of a modern scientific calculator. So your analogy is as stupid as you are.

      Second, the modern Intel CPU has $100 billion + of Intel funded research behind it while, as the OP was saying, virtually all the work on this was done on publicly funded money. So your analogy is as irrelevant as you are.

      Please go fuck off and die.

    8. Re:Let me guess by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know how far you want to go (sailing, metallurgy, compass, ...), but if we start from Darwin, he changed the way how people look at nature. No-one would probably even tried to search for DNA before him (1859). As far as I know, he was privately funded.

      The actual DNA was first isolated by Friedrich Miescher in 1869, not sure about funding. After that came so many researchers that I don't even want to copy them all, read for yourself: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNA#History_of_DNA_research

      And after the DNA stuff was done, there are dozens of inventions that made is possibly to actually manipulate the DNA. So there is a lot of basic research.

    9. Re:Let me guess by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You realize that only a portion of state University expenditures are covered by taxes, right? It's not like the state funds 100% of the University's operating costs.

    10. Re:Let me guess by jedidiah · · Score: 3, Informative

      > Not so much

      Yes. Pretty much. Even the NIHs own paper on this subject indicates that the bulk of money spend on drug development comes from the private sector.

      The money that the public spends only gets the ball rolling. It doesn't finish the process.

      Plus this isn't your typical "one size fits" all pill kind of treatment. These kinds of treatments have to be custom made for each patient. The cost of that isn't trivial. It requires the employment of a large state of the art facility and staff that goes with.

      Actual production costs are non-trivial here.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    11. Re:Let me guess by Megol · · Score: 1

      They may but that doesn't mean they can afford it.

    12. Re:Let me guess by Mr3vil · · Score: 0

      That's not how antibiotics work. Antibiotics merely make bacteria vulnerable to your auto-immune response which otherwise is unable to fight it off. Surgery used to be VERY risky before antibiotics due to secondary infection. The problem is physicians writing a script for Amoxicillin to someone with a cold or the flu. Viruses aren't affected by antibiotics. It doesn't matter how strong your auto-immune system is, if you get a bacterial infection you're not going to get over it on your own.

    13. Re:Let me guess by DRJlaw · · Score: 1

      the basic research that underpinned this (e.g. all the hard work) was done at public University on the public dime.

      So the not-hard-work includes the Phase I, II, and III clinical trials required to gain approval of a drug that genetically modifies a human being, as well as the mountain of documentation required for marketing approval and the manufacturing process?

      So done "at public University" means done at a private university and private hospital? Ones that are licensing the treatment in exchange for royalties?

      Now where does "on the public dime" come in? Do you have any evidence that the project used NIH grants? Even if you apply a generic contribution of 1/3rd of some fraction of costs, that is not exactly grounds for nationalizing the product.

    14. Re:Let me guess by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      > They may but that doesn't mean they can afford it.

      So you have no idea how health care actually works.

      NO ONE can afford most of the expensive stuff. That's what insurance is for. If you're unlucky, that's also what socialized medicine is for.

      Nobody pays the cash price for procedures like this. Procedures with official price tags like this are pretty common too actually.

      Freaking out about Epipens is so amateur hour...

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    15. Re:Let me guess by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      This option has never been exercised, particularly due to the gop control of the US Congress and their insistence (lobbyists?) on supporting corporate profits over public health.

      With the DNC in total control of the federal government, all we got was a massive handout to the insurance industry. So don't blame the GOP for this mess.

    16. Re:Let me guess by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      I just got a medical sticker shock yesterday. I have some hearing loss due to tinnitus and a constant (and very annoying) ringing in my right ear. The audiologist told me that a hearing aid might help me. There was a 60% chance of it working, but the ringing is so bad that I'm willing to do just about anything. Then, she began to explain how the insurance companies buy the hearing aids in bulk to reduce the price. This should have been my cue that sticker shock was approaching. $1,100. For the base model. A better model would cost me $1,500. She began to tout how it would play white/pink noise and/or nature sounds to help my brain stop focusing on the ringing. I responded that I have a free app on my phone that does that already. Why couldn't I use that and a set of Bluetooth earbuds? She said that should work and would be much cheaper.

      After doing some more research, I found that some manufacturers are working on "smart earbuds" that essentially replicate the functions of hearing aids for a fraction of the price. Honestly, given how prevalent earbuds are, I don't see why someone can't just modify an earbud to replicate hearing aids at a fraction of the price.

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    17. Re:Let me guess by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason why hearing aids are so expensive is because the official ones all go through FDA certification, which is a long and ridiculous process. The actual technology costs a few hundred dollars, tops, but since there's a risk the speaker might stab you in the ear, or crawl away at night and hang out in dive bars, etc., etc., you're not allowed to buy the non-FDA version through the medical system.

      I recommend you start shopping online for off-brand Chinese models. FDA certification makes sense for things like pacemakers and cancer drugs. Not so much for the trivially dangerous.

    18. Re:Let me guess by Daemonik · · Score: 1

      Up until the recent consumer push for wireless earbuds and bluetooth devices, hearing aids were a small market with small R&D budgets, proportionately. They still beat most bluetooth devices on longevity and size though. The question is, have they been gouging prices or are they reasonable for their particular market and the features they offer.

      As for your idea, depends on what kind of patent portfolios you'd have to work around most likely, as the hearing aid mfgs. aren't going to just go away. Also too cheaply sourced earbuds can have distorted and uneven sound.

      It seems Bose has something close to what you're looking for: The Verge but they're not exactly fit in your ear sized.

    19. Re:Let me guess by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      Hearing aids are overpriced. But it can make a big difference to get ones properly tuned for you specific hearing issue. Hearing aids that amplify across the entire range can damage your hearing further/faster than properly tuned ones. So there is value in doing it right. After going cheap for many years, my dad finally spend $3K+ on a pair and he said they were much better than anything he'd had before.

      In the case of tinnitus management, I don't think there is as much risk in trying other approaches. Its a crap shoot no matter what you do.

    20. Re:Let me guess by imgod2u · · Score: 1

      Except in this case, CRISPR is a versatile method that can be used for a whole wide range of things. It's just that this drug is one of the first to use it.

      So think of it as the Intel 4004 or some such.

    21. Re: Let me guess by BellyJelly · · Score: 1

      Or google the Etymotic Bean. It's definitely not a hearing aid (cos that would need approval). It just fits in your ear and helps you hear better. I assume we are only a year or two away from discrete in-ear devices that you tune with an app on your phone via bluetooth. Then maybe the ridiculous hearing aid price gouging will stop.

    22. Re:Let me guess by JohnFen · · Score: 0

      You left off the largest component of the cost of medications: marketing.

    23. Re:Let me guess by Wycliffe · · Score: 2

      That's not how antibiotics work. Antibiotics merely make bacteria vulnerable to your auto-immune response which otherwise is unable to fight it off.

      Antibiotics are like a pesticide. They will kill bacteria in a petri dish even without an immune system present. Yes, your body is still trying to kill them on their own so they are likely fighting side by side but antibiotics still work even in people with completely compromised immune systems.

      Surgery used to be VERY risky before antibiotics due to secondary infection. It doesn't matter how strong your auto-immune system is, if you get a bacterial infection you're not going to get over it on your own.

      Yes, surgery used to be risky because your immune system SOMETIMES couldn't fight off the infection on it's own but plenty of people back then and today have no problem getting over bacterial infections on their own. You are literally fighting off bacterial infections every day and in general your body does this just fine without antibiotics. Most people take antibiotics not because they can't fight the infection off themselves but because having your immune system working in tandem with antibiotics speeds up recovery. I once was in a place where I didn't have access to antibiotics and I got a very nasty staph infection. I generally would have went straight to the doctor and got antibiotics. Instead, I drained and cleaned it daily and although I felt like I was going to die and recovery took longer than usual, I recovered just fine. It's also been shown that antibiotics not only create super bugs, it also makes an individual's immune system lazy so that your immune system is not as good at fighting off infections on its own. Most people would be much better off letting their own immune system take care of it first. The recovery might take a little longer but your immune system is more than capable of killing bacteria and making you 100% well on its own 99% of the time. It's only in rare cases where your body gets overwhelmed that you absolutely need antibiotics. There are plenty of people who survive to adulthood without having once taken antibiotics.

    24. Re:Let me guess by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      I had a pair of smart earbuds, they we're OK, fantastic earbuds, but the tech wasn't there yet for actual hearing help.

      I compared iqbuds to the non RX product at audacous.

      The iqbuds we're fantastic earbuds with good real world pass through, but the augmented hearing was meh, though they we're good for blocking machine noise and allowing voice through, even while listening to music if desired, $300

      The audacous non RX hearing helper worked fantastic for voice in a noisy environment, really helping, but was $700. It made music unlistenable.

      I sent both back, and will likely buy iqbudsv2, if I had more money I would have kept them.

      To;dr, smart buds aren't quite there, and non RX hearing aids have other drawbacks.

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    25. Re: Let me guess by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You sound like one of those anti-vax crazies.

      You probably get few infections because you have never left your house. Also, you antibiotics you took in the past may have cured infections you don't know about. Furthermore, you have no way of knowing how good your immune system actually is honestly.

      This is just some garbage you're making an assumption about

    26. Re:Let me guess by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The medical industry needs a replacement. Throw all execs of all med tech companies in jail for life now. They are literally killing people.

    27. Re:Let me guess by sh00z · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but this (and hopefully your Hep-C) have regimens with a definite end. Avonex (interferon) therapy for MS retails at $50K/month. $600K a year for THE REST OF YOUR LIFE. My plan stopped covering it.

    28. Re:Let me guess by liquid_schwartz · · Score: 1

      Even the NIHs own paper on this subject indicates that the bulk of money spend on drug development comes from the private sector.

      I wonder if that should change. This is a case of where mistrust of the government limits solutions. For example if I thought that it was going to be a data driven meritocracy then I'd be open to the government tackling problems that the private sector seems to either ignore or massively overcharge for. Unfortunately there would be debates on if enough was being done with social engineering concerns (ie hiring quotas, treatments for favored groups over where the data shows a need exists (for example breast cancer vs prostrate cancer)) more than the actual science and process of getting treatments out the door. The sooner the government stops preferred hiring the sooner it can win back some trust from the general population.

    29. Re: Let me guess by Miamicanes · · Score: 2

      Most hearing aids are designed primarily around analog technology. The reason is latency -- digital audio in general, and bluetooth to a HUGE extent -- has WAY more latency than most lower-order analog designs. Latency screws up your ability to "locate" the source of a sound.

      The cruel irony of digital audio is that the number of microseconds a digital filter needs to pre-buffer a sample is usually at least double the number of microseconds of lag that a comparable analog filter would introduce (often, 4x or more due to higher-order artifacts). If you're playing pre-recorded audio, it's no big deal... but for realtime signal processing, it's deal-breaking.

    30. Re:Let me guess by Wycliffe · · Score: 1

      What, you mean you don't value eyesight at approximately 17 years of median income?

      There better be a guarantee with that if I'm paying for that out of my own pocket. But as there are likely quite a few blind people on disability, let's look at that instead. Disability probably pays out about half of the median income so we are now up to 34 years. If we are talking a person who is currently 40, then even if you can cure them, the break even point is age 64 where they then presumably can retire at age 65 so from an actuary standpoint, there is no incentive to cure them at that point as the cost to cure them and the cost to not cure them is basically a wash for a 40 year old and that's assuming they don't die early. From a quality of life standpoint, the person being cured is better off but from a medicaid/medicare/insurance standpoint there is really no advantage to spend 34 years of income to cure someone who might not even live for another 34 years.

    31. Re:Let me guess by Wycliffe · · Score: 1

      Oops. Actually, the breakeven is 74 not 64. Even worse than what I wrote.

    32. Re:Let me guess by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      Do you really think that the US government can manufacture this drug for less than $450k per dose in these low quantities? They'll exceed that just setting up the bureaucracy.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    33. Re:Let me guess by nitehawk214 · · Score: 1

      So a doctor prescribes you a medication, but because you are smarter than that dumb dumb, you don't take it?

      Brilliant.

      --
      I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
    34. Re:Let me guess by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      A lot of older hearing aid technology is sold to hunters for under $100. It was high tech 20 or even 10 years ago.

      The high price of hearing aids doesn't makes sense any more so I suspect it has a historical basis or a medicaid basis.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    35. Re:Let me guess by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      Honestly, given how prevalent earbuds are, I don't see why someone can't just modify an earbud to replicate hearing aids at a fraction of the price.

      Because FDA approval for a medical device is prohibitively expensive for something that can be done with a software upgrade to a non-medical device? Or are you unaware that you can be shutdown by the government for trying to sell non-FDA approved medical hardware?

      Admittedly, this was necessary at one time, to prevent fraudsters from promising the world in exchange for the contents of your bank account. And to some extent is still necessary.

      But something doable in software, given away for free, really shouldn't be any of the FDA's business. Of course, the people making hearing aids have a lot more access to FDA bureaucrats than a software engineer doing a little tinkering on the side.....

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    36. Re:Let me guess by ChumpusRex2003 · · Score: 2

      Antibiotics are like a pesticide. They will kill bacteria in a petri dish even without an immune system present.

      Some antibiotics (like amoxicillin, cipro) work like that. Others, called bacteriostatic antibiotics (like erythromycin, tetracycline, linezolid), don't.

      Bacteriostatic antibiotics temporarily halt bacterial replication, allowing the immune system to finish them off.

    37. Re:Let me guess by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NO ... it's all hard brutal work from the first GC/mass-spec isolation to some Yucatan lizard-skin coloring agent for injectable liquids.

    38. Re:Let me guess by stabiesoft · · Score: 1

      Epi pens are old tech too. The are high priced because they can. Hearing aids are the same. Need the FDA stamp, which provides the necessary barrier to entry. As long as it is not medical, like in the case of hunting, price comes down. There has been a vicious cycle of drug/medical costs covered by insurance, so the consumer did not see the high prices, just the high insurance and even that was often hidden since the employer paid. As prices have come up and up, people are seeing the high insurance rates and often jump to high deductible plans, where they do see the actual costs before the deductible is met. It may break the cycle, but I am not that hopeful. When you can literally extort people with their life, price is no object.

    39. Re:Let me guess by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 2

      At least one child died because of the huge increase in the price of epi-pens.

      There was no excuse to raise the prices. It took the free market close to a year and a half to recover and address the problem. That's a problem with barriers to entry vs the myth that the free market can handle everything. It can't.

      Unlimited capitalism always leads to unlimited fraud. You have to have regulators in there. But then inevitably, the regulators are captured until something goes horrifically wrong and there is reform.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    40. Re:Let me guess by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mistrust of the government is a result of propaganda by corporations that want to profit by supplying services that the government could/should provide.

    41. Re:Let me guess by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, keep scaring the children with those ghost stories and they will grow up into adults who cannot make decent decisions... just like the Americans who voted trump into power... I see what you are doing there

    42. Re:Let me guess by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You wrote

      >>That's what insurance is for. If you're unlucky, that's also what socialized medicine is for.

      Should read as

      That's what insurance is for if you're unlucky. In advanced countries, that is what socialized medicine is for.

      ftfy

    43. Re:Let me guess by wisnoskij · · Score: 1

      shekal raised prices on old drugs to fund new drug development that is already saving lives. The drug industry charges such outrageous prices because they give away 99% of their stock to the poor, and because most other countries either ignore their patents or pay them cents on the dollar. They fund the research for the entire world, so yes they pay outrageous amounts of money, but until another country can create a system where they can research new cures and treatments while selling them for pocket change, and giving them away to the needy, I would not bash the States.

      --
      Troll is not a replacement for I disagree.
    44. Re:Let me guess by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think that you are referring to Medicare legislation passed under Bush with a gop majority, which prevents the US government from negotiating medication prices.

      You'all corporate fascists want to call out the dem majority, but they only held it for six months until Kennedy got brain cancer and Lieberman switched back to voting with the gop. Of course they did manage to save the economy and deliver some improvements to medical insurance, so we can all be grateful for that.

    45. Re:Let me guess by liquid_schwartz · · Score: 1

      Mistrust of the government is a result of propaganda by corporations that want to profit by supplying services that the government could/should provide.

      Mistrust of the government is based on them lying to us (citations below) and playing favorites on who they help and don't help (I'm looking at you SBA with your special set asides for everyone but white males). I don't mind the concept of the government stepping in given the right circumstances. I do mind how the government won't be honest and how it has chosen to explicitly discriminate against me.

      Citations:

      Vietnam https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... Iraq https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... NSA http://www.politifact.com/trut...

    46. Re:Let me guess by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Audiologists can't do jack for tinnitus, but they'll keep scheduling appointments and charging. Hearing aids help keep the gravy train rolling...I jumped off that bandwagon and haven't been back to one in a decade.

      FWIW there is something that provides a little bit of temporary relief you can try.

      Go to youtube and look up some of the Tinnitus Therapy videos. that have the random high pitched tones spiking in one ear or the other, throw on a pair of headphones and listen to one for about 10 minutes. After a while when you remove the headphones you will again hear *quiet* for a good while. Different vids work better for different people so you can try different ones to find one that works best.

      Nothing permanent, but 15 or 20 minutes of actual quiet is awfully nice sometimes.

    47. Re:Let me guess by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It depends what kind of tinnitus it is. Tinnitus isn't just one thing, there's multiple possible causes of it. Audiologists can help with some forms, not necessarily improving them, but preventing further damage.

      The people who have it bad are people like me for whom there is no particular cause. I've had ideopathic tinnitus for as long as I can remember and it gets better and it gets worse, but the cause is completely in my own head. My hearing itself is just fine, in fact it's significantly better than most people, but the tinnitus drives me nuts when I don't have anything else to listen to.

    48. Re:Let me guess by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As somebody that's actually studied microbiology, yes, the GP is correct. Unless the doctor is telling you that you're at risk for amputation or death, you shouldn't be taking antibiotics. If you do take antibiotics, you should take the narrowest one available to reduce the damage that you do to your immune system.

      The current views on antibiotic use that doctors have are based on science that's decades out of date and causes more harm than it solves.

      Bacteria themselves don't generally cause diseases, it's bacteria in the wrong place or out of proportion that can lead to disease. In most cases, you're better off adding other bacteria to compete with the strain that's causing problems rather than genociding the immune system with antibiotics.

      One thing to keep in mind is that most of a person's immune system is comprised of bacteria. Using antibiotics without replacing the ones you didn't mean to kill causes further dependence on antibiotics to prevent the ones you were trying to kill from coming back. It also causes all sorts of digestive disorders as the antibiotics are commonly absorbed through the gut.

      Feel free to take the antibiotics just because somebody in a lab coat gave them to you. Those of us who value our health avoid antibiotics whenever possible.

    49. Re: Let me guess by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope, the science on that is clear and compelling. With the exception of a few problem strains like e. coli 157, which are potentially fatal in small concentrations, antibiotics cause far more harm than good.

      In the vast majority of cases, the body will clear the infection on it's own without need of assistance just by keeping the wound clean and clear of foreign matter.

      If the body needs more help than that, the proper solution is usually to add bacteria rather than to try and subtract them. The currently used antibiotics kill far more strains of bacteria than are necessary and doctors rarely bother to verify that the strain they're looking to kill is there. What's more, because the antibiotics aren't targeted at one strain, the whole immune system winds up being compromised.

      If you do really need to kill a particular strain in the body, that's what bacteriophages are for. They kill precisely one strain, the strain that they evolved to prey on and nothing else. I used to work in a lab that had pictures of what phages can accomplish that I had to walk by every day. All this bullshit about amputating due to infection is completely without medical merit. It's about as scientific as blood letting.

      If that stuff doesn't work, then using a regular antibiotic is OK, but there must always be a provision for returning the bacteria that were killed back to their original state or you wind up with a downward spiral of decreasing immune function because you're continually killing all of the immune system off.

    50. Re:Let me guess by muecksteiner · · Score: 1

      You might have studied micro-biology, but apparently not medicine. There are cases where you do want to take antibiotics in scenarios short of amputation or death: such as those where you are trying to ward off an infection becoming chronic. Borreliosis is a good example of this: if you trample on this early enough with antibiotics, you can actually get rid of it. But once it has spread far enough in your body, even antibiotics become ineffective against it, and you are in for one hell of a ride with the chronic form of the disease.

    51. Re:Let me guess by mjwx · · Score: 1

      That's kinda like saying the Turing machine was invented at a public university on public dime. So why is Intel charging $350 for a processor.

      Intel are manufacturing, most of their costs cover manufacturing and incremental improvements. The better question you should as is, if the Turing machine was not invented at a university (and the integrated circuit invented at the Ministry of Defence) would Intel even make microprocessors and if they did... would they only be $350 for a high end model?. The difference is, Intel knows it owes everything it has to public research (Intel's problem is that it's a monopolist).

      These companies take decades of publicly funded research, do the last 10 yards and sell it for ultra-inflated prices banking most of it as profit (OK, much of it is paying off the failed ED drug programmes). Yes they do need to be reigned in, companies like this are the reason "compulsory licensing" exists for pharmaceuticals in many nations, because if the government didn't allow someone else to manufacture the treatment for a reasonable price the cost would be out of reach for all but the countries ultra rich.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    52. Re:Let me guess by pnutjam · · Score: 1

      There are plenty of things the Government does efficiently, especially if it can't be politicized.

    53. Re:Let me guess by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      Ignoring the giant qualifier "especially if it can't be politicized", this statement is pretty broad and ambiguous. If you mean all government, inclusive of local government than I'm inclined to agree. You can find examples of well-run, efficient municipal authorities. You can also find horror stories. And the same is true in the private sector (especially when freed from competition by possessing a monopoly). You can find both well-run and horrendous government schools.

      But as the scale increases, so does the kruft. By the time you get to the federal level, I think you'll have a hard time finding something run "efficiently" by the standards of the private sector - though admittedly the comparison is hard because it can be hard to find a good analog in the private sector.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    54. Re:Let me guess by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      If you want to subsidize people with rare conditions with tax dollars, just come right out and say it. Don't pretend you are worried about efficiency. Instead you make this asinine attempt to appeal to people based on "the government can do it cheaper", and then lash out with name-calling when your argument is challenged. Anyone with even a smattering of history education knows what happens when the government tries to centrally-plan the economy.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    55. Re:Let me guess by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obviously, I haven't studied medicine, because I actually know what I'm talking about.

      That's a trivial problem to solve using phages, just culture the bacteria, find the appropriate phage that's already present. Culture it and take it as an IV. Infection is gone within a day. And probably much less.

      If a second world nation like Georgia can figure out how to not use antibiotics, then how on earth do you explain the medical incompetence that we tolerate in the US? Antibiotics are more or less the equivalent of dropping nukes. There's an extremely narrow range of situations where it's the right call, and most doctors understand microbiology about as well as the Donald understands diplomacy.

    56. Re:Let me guess by muecksteiner · · Score: 1

      I'll remain on the fence about this one. If it was that easy to get rid of Borreliosis - don't you think that someone, somewhere, would have tried doing this, along the lines of the recipe you suggest?

      And if they haven't - maybe, just maybe, this is not quite as easy as you make it sound? Say, because an IV injection of specially cultivated phages might not actually get to later stage Borreliosis any better than current antibiotics, because the problem with such a scenario is more in the realm of getting whatever treatment one fancies to these damn micro-organisms, once they have migrated into the CNS? What with the blood-brain barrier preventing most treatments from really taking hold?

    57. Re:Let me guess by Anonymous+Cow+Ward · · Score: 1

      Most of the basic research for this was done at the University of Pennsylvania, a private university, and funding was mixed between public and private money. In addition, if you think the basic research is all the hard work, you know next to nothing about setting up, running, and analyzing clinical trials.

      --
      Examine even your most deeply held beliefs. Nobody is always right.
    58. Re:Let me guess by Anonymous+Cow+Ward · · Score: 1

      This drug doesn't use CRIPSR. This has been in development for about 15 years, which is far longer than CRIPSR has been used by scientists.

      --
      Examine even your most deeply held beliefs. Nobody is always right.
    59. Re:Let me guess by pnutjam · · Score: 1

      Compare SS to any sort of private institution, or Medicaid. They are very efficient.
      Other federal programs do well also, economy of scale and all.
      http://www.motherjones.com/kev...

    60. Re:Let me guess by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      "There’s no real way to compare this to the private sector, because the private sector just doesn’t run programs like this. "

      But he didn't let that stop him. Tell you what, relieve Aetna of their need to write and sell policies, collect revenue, invest money, fund pensions, and negotiate with thousands of individual health providers, and then we'll see how well they compare. Until then, the comparison seems silly - and in any case misses the point. What is the point of government assistance? Is it to get people back on their own two feet? Why are you talking about efficiency as a measure, then? Am I supposed to be impressed that they can write checks while only taking 5-10% off the top? What do these checks accomplish? Measure how you are helping people with these programs, even if that means "wasting" money evaluating performance.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    61. Re:Let me guess by RandomFactor · · Score: 1

      Fair enough, i'll grant it is possible to cause the auditory nerves to autogenerate impulses in other ways than killing or paralyzing the hearing cilia (few blanket statements about the human condition are 100% correct) but the vast majority of cases are due to cilia damage and the auditory nerves beginning to generate impulses on their own.

      --
      --- Mercutio was right.
    62. Re:Let me guess by pnutjam · · Score: 1

      Removing all that cruft is a feature of government run programs. Efficient and well run programs are the norm, we usually hear about the exceptions.

    63. Re:Let me guess by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      It's not "cruft", it is necessary functionality that is split into independent departments. Medicaid still has costs associated with revenue, it's just buried in the IRS budget. The idea that you can take a small sliver of the US government and analyze it in isolation as if it were a standalone company is fundamentally flawed. What is the "SG&A" of the entire federal government? Wanna bet not 5-10%?

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    64. Re:Let me guess by pnutjam · · Score: 1

      Every penny you pay in taxes comes back to taxpayers. No company does that.

    65. Re:Let me guess by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      Every penny you spend in a store also gets recycled back into the economy... what point were you trying to make?

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    66. Re:Let me guess by pnutjam · · Score: 1

      Not true, where are all those offshore Apple pennies, among other companies with huge war chests?
      Your also ignoring that the economy has winners and losers. An appropriately managed government befits us all. YES, even the ones paying for it. The wealthy use all sorts of government services the poor don't need or aren't even aware exists. They also have better access (and usually preferential) to common services.

    67. Re:Let me guess by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      where are all those offshore Apple pennies,

      First, most of those offshore pennies were never onshore to begin with - they were earned overseas. Second, what do you think happens to "cash and short term investments"? Do you picture a giant Scrooge McDuck money vault? Because that's not what happens.

      Your also ignoring that the economy has winners and losers.

      I'm not ignoring it, it just wasn't a part of the discussion until this moment. Of course it has winners and losers, but what do you mean by this? If you mean it is a zero-sum game, then you are wrong. Wealth can be created - a winner does not necessarily create a loser.

      An appropriately managed government befits us all.

      Sure, and unicorn blood provides immortality. We just need to find a unicorn.

      The wealthy use all sorts of government services the poor don't need or aren't even aware exists.

      I don't think I ever said otherwise.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
  3. first by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Only the rich deserve eye sight!

    1. Re:first by DigiShaman · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Dude, if CRISPR can done in a home garage lab, you can bet your ass that people will flying to Asia to get this done on the cheap. Now granted, that's a big risk. But...this tech is getting cheaper, and where ever there's red tape, there's nothing a passport and a flight ticket can't fix.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    2. Re:first by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Reads like the beginning of dystopian vision for future viruses that wipe out humanity

    3. Re:first by Billy+the+Mountain · · Score: 1

      Yeah an' an' zombies!

      --
      That was the turning point of my life--I went from negative zero to positive zero.
    4. Re:first by burtosis · · Score: 1

      Yep, it will probably wind up like futurama in the end.

    5. Re:first by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, if CRISPR can done in a home garage lab, you can bet your ass that people will flying to Asia to get this done on the cheap. Now granted, that's a big risk. But...this tech is getting cheaper, and where ever there's red tape, there's nothing a passport and a flight ticket can't fix.

      CRISPR is (more than) a bit of a bitch to get to work, and you might actually be legally safer running a meth lab in your garage than the sort you'd need for CRISPR.

      Most of the cost here, however, can be traced in part to NIMBYism, so yeah, passport and a flight ticket, either on the patient's end or for a courier to make sure it stays properly chilled (not too hot, not too cold) and doesn't spend too long getting from the lab to the patient. If we can get commercial suborbital flights, the last will be pretty trivial to manage--a suborbital fight will make it very hard to find any part of the planet too far away to reach in that window.

    6. Re:first by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      ...either on the patient's end or for a courier to make sure it stays properly chilled (not too hot, not too cold) and doesn't spend too long getting from the lab to the patient. If we can get commercial suborbital flights...

      For having my eye sight restored, yeah, I'll fly to India. Whatever chilled concoction is required can stay there.

      You know, some of the best tailored made suits are made in HK. Many people will actually schedule a flight to HK just to have one made and purchased.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    7. Re:first by mjwx · · Score: 1

      Dude, if CRISPR can done in a home garage lab, you can bet your ass that people will flying to Asia to get this done on the cheap. Now granted, that's a big risk. But...this tech is getting cheaper, and where ever there's red tape, there's nothing a passport and a flight ticket can't fix.

      Its not the red tape, but the private sector getting in the way. If you want surgery in Thailand, you'll get a western trained doctor in a hospital that has western levels of service.

      The reason Asian nations like Thailand are so much cheaper than many more developed countries is because they compulsorily license many things that the private medical industry hold patients over a barrel for (the holding over a barrel is to allow easier access to your pockets) via the patent and legal systems.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
  4. Theraphy for vision: $850K by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seeing this first post in all of its glory: priceless

  5. This is why we need socialism! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    See, evil greedy capitalists made a treatment for a rare disease that costs money and is therefore evil!

    If we just socialized everything then there wouldn't be a treatment for the disease at all and it would be free! Free dammit!

    1. Re:This is why we need socialism! by HornWumpus · · Score: 2

      Leftists now misuse the term 'socialism' more than right wingers. News at 11...

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    2. Re:This is why we need socialism! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, because blowing billions of dollars (in 1960's dollars) of taxpayer money to land a few guys on the moon never to return was GOOD but this company charging less than a million dollars per person (in 2018 dollars) to help a few thousand people with a rare condition see again while not charging billions of dollars to taxpayers to do it is PURE EVIL because reasons.

      Oh, and the *real* "socialists" in the USSR never did get anyone to the moon.

  6. Injection by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... in my eye?

    No thanks. I'll just stay blind.

    1. Re:Injection by moehoward · · Score: 1

      Don't worry.... You won't see it coming.

      --
      "If you want to improve, be content to be thought foolish and stupid." - Epictetus
    2. Re:Injection by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How would you know it was coming?

    3. Re:Injection by mpercy · · Score: 1

      Had one, not fun.

      A few years ago I had a bad retinal detachment that was treated first with a gas bubble injected into my eye to push the torn flap back into place, followed up by laser treatments to sorta weld the retina back into place.

      Sitting in the chair with the eye surgeon coming at me with a large needle and saying "Don't move"...not fun. Fortunately they did put some numbing drops in the eye first, but I could still see it coming (with the other eye).

    4. Re:Injection by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      I like to tell people about the 'peel your pupil' part of having my eyes lasered. Gets a reaction.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  7. Is the public dime going to handle the liability? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I didn't think so.

  8. Why call it a medicine? by BlueCoder · · Score: 2, Insightful

    A medicine to me is a chemical. This is a genetic treatment. A procedure. Cellular surgery. But not a medicine.

    1. Re:Why call it a medicine? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what about biologics?

    2. Re:Why call it a medicine? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good thing nobody asked you for the definition of "medicine", because it doesn't mean "a chemical".

    3. Re:Why call it a medicine? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The word you're thinking of is "drug". A drug is a chemical. Medicine is what a doctor does. This is medicine.

    4. Re:Why call it a medicine? by gnick · · Score: 1

      A medicine to me is a chemical.

      Which is why we call everyone who practices medicine for a living, "chemist".

      --
      He's getting rather old, but he's a good mouse.
    5. Re:Why call it a medicine? by Kjella · · Score: 1

      A medicine to me is a chemical. This is a genetic treatment. A procedure. Cellular surgery. But not a medicine.

      If you can get a pill or injection or lotion for it I think most people will call it a medicine no matter what it does. I mean what makes it a medicine and not a placebo or toxin is the effect, not the means. It's probably the most natural way to think of it for the company too, it's something they can manufacture very far away and sell. The procedure-delivery business is very different.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    6. Re:Why call it a medicine? by jedidiah · · Score: 3, Insightful

      > Good thing nobody asked you for the definition of "medicine", because it doesn't mean "a chemical".

      Calling this thing a medicine really contradicts the vernacular understanding of what a medicine is. This leads to a lot of butt hurt about how expensive this procedure is when people don't fully understand that it's bespoke manufacturing for a single patient.

      So yeah, calling this thing a "drug" or a "medicine" is really pretty stupid.

      The point of language is communication, not getting your rocks off "sounding fancy" or being a grammar nazi.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    7. Re:Why call it a medicine? by fish_in_the_c · · Score: 1

      you defined a drug ( which are sometimes synonymous with medicine) . However , Medicine generally is a broader term, covering all practices which make people healthier.
      http://www.dictionary.com/brow...

      --
      âoeTolerance applies only to persons, but never to truth. Intolerance applies only to truth, but never to persons.
    8. Re:Why call it a medicine? by blindseer · · Score: 1

      Which is why we call everyone who practices medicine for a living, "chemist".

      Actually, in much of the world a "chemist" is a person that dispenses or sells medicine. It's almost as if "medicine" and "chemical" are synonymous.

      A person that practices medicine, and usually prescribes the chemicals a chemist would sell, is a physician or surgeon.

      I do wish that Americans would learn some proper English. I say this as an American. A "doctor" is someone with a doctoral degree, not necessarily a doctorate in medicine. I don't go to a "doctor" for my medicine, I go to a pharmacist or chemist. When I need medical care I don't necessarily see a "doctor" either, but I'll go see a physician, surgeon, or nurse.

      I could go on with my language lesson but it's so depressing to see how badly we've all mangled our words.

      --
      I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.
    9. Re:Why call it a medicine? by gnick · · Score: 1

      ...I say this as an American...I don't go to a "doctor" for my medicine, I go to a pharmacist or chemist.

      If you're an American and you're getting your medicine from a chemist, you're on meth.

      A "doctor" is someone with a doctoral degree, not necessarily a doctorate in medicine.

      You're not wrong, but context makes distinction very simple. E.g. If somebody shouts, "Is there a doctor in the house?!" You don't respond, "Yes! I'm a geologist!" If you tell your boss, "I don't feel well; I'm going to the doctor," he'll know you mean a doctor of medicine.

      --
      He's getting rather old, but he's a good mouse.
  9. Breaking News by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bleeding edge technology is expensive, and people are shocked.

    Video at 11

  10. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  11. Shocking... by DeplorableCodeMonkey · · Score: 5, Interesting

    A gene therapy for a disease that has a pool of potential patients in the thousands costs nearly seven figures? Absolutely shocking! If we can put a man on the moon, surely we can defeat the law of supply and demand!

    But ironically, if it works, it makes far more sense than a lot of the emotion-driven spending we do via public healthcare programs and private insurance such as spend hundreds of thousands on treating quite possibly terminal disease in people past their gender's life expectancy.

    How about another example? We treat funding cancers that mainly impact retirement age women as the highest cancer priorities, but people doing childhood cancer treatment practically have to sell drugs and do bake sales to get any real funding. Fuck you 6 year old sally, we can't have your parent's 65 year old neighbor die of breast cancer because she's a voter and you're not.

    1. Re:Shocking... by EvilSS · · Score: 1

      If we can put a man on the moon, surely we can defeat the law of supply and demand!

      Sure, just increase demand and you can lower the cost to the individual. Maybe we can develop a gene therapy that give the condition to healthy people then cure them. Boom, cost savings!

      --
      I browse on +1 so AC's need not respond, I won't see it.
    2. Re:Shocking... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If we can put a man on the moon, surely we can defeat the law of supply and demand!

      This has nothing to do with supply and demand. Nothing. If there was more demand, it would have been priced lower!

    3. Re:Shocking... by blindseer · · Score: 1

      Not only that, look at the top ten leading causes of death for men. We have in order from highest rate to tenth, heart disease, cancer, unintentional injuries, chronic lower respiratory illness, stroke, diabetes, suicide, Alzheimer's disease, influenza and pneumonia, chronic liver disease.

      I expect things like diabetes and heart disease is the result of an unhealthy diet, and this shows highly in women too. What doesn't make the top ten for women? Suicide.

      What about "unintentional injuries" which ranks third for men? I could not find this defined right quick but I think it's safe to assume this is made up of a lot of automotive accidents and workplace injuries. How does this rank for women? Sixth, between Alzheimer's disease and diabetes.

      Also think of what might drive liver disease and lung disease. Men are drinking and smoking themselves to death. Lifespans, and quality of life, for men has been decreasing lately. Why isn't that brought up more often? I'm pretty sure that "suicide" is a preventable condition. Maybe we should invest some money to investigate the causes of that?

      Apparently there's a video going around lately showing someone coming across a man that hung himself to death in some woods. I have not seen it and I don't want to. The discussion of this video though has brought this problem of men's health to light for me. I just saw how men's health has declined while that of women and children has improved. Shouldn't we get some equality here? Men are people too.

      I guess some people are more equal than others.

      --
      I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.
    4. Re:Shocking... by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      This is a general problem in many democracies. Younger people don't vote as much as older ones, so get screwed.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    5. Re:Shocking... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about another example? We treat funding cancers that mainly impact retirement age women as the highest cancer priorities, but people doing childhood cancer treatment practically have to sell drugs and do bake sales to get any real funding. Fuck you 6 year old sally, we can't have your parent's 65 year old neighbor die of breast cancer because she's a voter and you're not.

      It's true that some cancers are just a matter of bad luck. But the way I see it, if you're 6 years old and dying of cancer, you should just die. What's the point of wasting money in a body that can't keep itself alive? Of course you could apply this line of thought to any age, but at some point, society has invested enough money on you (i.e. if you live in a decent country, where universities are free) that treating you may be cost efficient, in the sense that keeping you alive is a good return on investment. But investing money in a 6-year old who's dying of cancer just means you're propagating a bad gene line...

  12. While I generally hate Medical Insurance Companies by SigIO · · Score: 1

    I can't see treatments like this coming to market without huge cash dispensing machines like public or private insurance. The market for those needing treatment is just too small to offset the price of R&D.

    Perhaps a better financial approach would be for our public institutions to offer a large bounty for cures like this. (And a substantially lower bounty for remedies that are periodic continuously taken treatments.) Then the private market can respond with a price point that makes having medical insurance irrelevant.

  13. Not really. Company for 10 years, pays the univer by raymorris · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You'd be guessing wrong, more or less. The company has been developing this drug since October 2007, ten years ago. Their 2016 annual report shows they spend about $86 million / year on internal R&D, mostly for this drug in recent years. That's "e.g. all the hard work".

    They also booked $10 million in external R&D for this drug in 2016, but that number is going to get bigger. External R&D is the company paying the university (Penn) for the research the school did over ten years ago. Now that the drug has been approved and it's going on the market, the company will have to pay the school another $3.8 million plus about 5% royalty on all sales. 1,000 patients at $850,000 is $850 million. 5% of that is $42 million. So the school will get about $42 million royalty, plus the $3.8 million base, plus the millions they've already received. Figure the school may have spent $200,00-$500,000 on the initial research, they are doing extremely well. Something like $300K spent on research will net the school about $60 million.

    http://ir.sparktx.com/static-f...

  14. Capitalism gond wrong... by fish_in_the_c · · Score: 1

    There used to be this idea of a 'fair' price, but one of my greatest criticisms of the Republican way of thinking is that a 'fair price' is the same as 'the maximum the market will allow'.

    I think a better measure would be something like ( and I suspect these number can be determined fairly well).
    I've kicked around some kind of consumer reporting law that would at least make real data available on a given product.
    Something like

    ( Total number of expected units sold * ( cost of physical materials involved + manufacturing costs)) + cost of product research and development + cost of marketing + corporate overhead) = projected production cost.

    (Total number of expected units sold * sale price ) - projected production cost = total return on investment.

    Honestly if a company isn't already doing this kind of math before they start on a product they are likely to go broke.

    A person might even consider a law saying something like more then a 200% return on investment is considered unfair, but at least if it is reported people can have the discussion.

    I know the typical objection is ( but what about all the failed products they also research , but there is no reason you can't build that into the cost by make cost of research = total research cost / successful number of products to get an average cost for research across the company.

    --
    âoeTolerance applies only to persons, but never to truth. Intolerance applies only to truth, but never to persons.
    1. Re:Capitalism gond wrong... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can have absolute fairness every time... ...if the price isn't fair/agreeable to you, don't pay it.

    2. Re:Capitalism gond wrong... by KBentley57 · · Score: 1

      If you believe anything in nature plays by fair rules, you're mistaken and wrong. The maximum the market will bear is inline with reality. I'm not saying it doesn't suck, just that it's true.

    3. Re:Capitalism gond wrong... by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      I know the typical objection is ( but what about all the failed products they also research , but there is no reason you can't build that into the cost by make cost of research = total research cost / successful number of products to get an average cost for research across the company.

      So, you save for your last badly written sentence a suggestion that the companies look at their entire body of costs, revenue, opportunity costs, losses, overhead, future prospects, number of prospective users, and then take that all into account when figuring out what a very advanced procedure for a tiny number of patients actually costs if they want to stay in business and continue to invest in more R&D and the billions of dollars they have to spend in government compliance costs. Which is exactly what they do. Stop contradicting yourself.

      The fact that you're thinking a 200% return on money invested in a given project - in the context of a huge company spending front-loaded billions on projects that frequently go nowhere except in to pure losses - is somehow "not fair" tells me that you've never, ever actually run a business. Probably not even mowed lawns for pocket money. Because your outlook on this is absurd. If you think we'd be better off with a centrally controlled economy where a government bureaucrat decides if your personal paycheck or your company's week-to-week profits and losses look "fair," then I encourage you to use only the advanced medical technologies produced in places where the government tells people what they're allowed to make on long-range investments in new technologies. Perhaps you'd like it in Cuba, or Venezuela, or North Korea. They have MUCH better gene therapy programs for a tiny number of blind people. You'd love it, because people don't get to keep their "unfair" earnings, which of course inspires people to really invest in more long term projects.

      Please don't endanger other people by recklessly doing things like voting. You're not up to it.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    4. Re:Capitalism gond wrong... by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      His premise is 'pants on head' wrong in the first place.

      Capitalists are maximizing profit, not price.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    5. Re:Capitalism gond wrong... by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      If you're talking about something nonessential like music, definitely. You have the option of not buying the latest album a band releases if you think it costs too much. If you're talking about essential medicine, however, you're giving people the option of "overpaying or dying." that's not a very good option to call "fair."

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    6. Re:Capitalism gond wrong... by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      While you are fixating on "fairness" you are neglecting the fact that nobody is a charity. You don't work for free. Why do you expect anyone else to.

      ANY activity needs to yield a good return on investment or no one will bother. Ventures that are high risk or require a large up front investment will require a better potential upside.

      While you're whining about "fairness" you're undercutting the incentives that will cause useful work to get done. That means YOU are putting lives at risk. You are undermining all future progress in medicine.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    7. Re:Capitalism gond wrong... by sound+vision · · Score: 1

      For a treatment like this, which has just been approved, and furthermore is the first treatment of its kind to ever become available, I think it'd be "fair" to sell it, initially, at such a huge price. A fair transaction, to me, is one where both parties benefit, and nobody on the sidelines dies as an externality.

      If they can get 20 millionaires to opt for the treatment at close to a million a piece, that's almost 20 million in development costs recouped. The millionaires are essentially forced to put their money back into the economy in a more-useful context (medical research) instead of hoarding it. Some of the money that they *should* have paid in taxes to fund research like this in the first place. After the moneyed wave of early adopters has blown through, R&D costs are recouped, and then the procedure can be performed at rates affordable to the working class - theoretically.

      Theoretically because this assumes all parties are acting in good faith, and also the underlying assumption that healthcare functions as a free and fair market. It never has, and it never will, due to the intrinsically non-optional nature of so much of the work that's done in medicine. Insurance companies and the other instruments of finance that have been shoehorned into the industry only serve to further obscure whatever free-market forces there are. Even for millionaires, question #1 is going to be: Does my insurance cover it? And that will sway people's decisions.

      Separate from that is the question of whether the pharmaceutical company will drop the price by a fair amount. Here I define "acting in good faith" as lowering the cost enough so that everyone who needs the treatment can get it, or if it's not possible to do that and remain profitable, to lower the cost as much as is possible. What we have seen demonstrated over and over is that these people do not act in good faith. The solution to that problem starts with neverending vigilance, and branches out with several options from there...

    8. Re:Capitalism gond wrong... by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      The point of civilization is to do better than nature's savagery, and it has seen success in many other areas, even trade issues.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    9. Re:Capitalism gond wrong... by fish_in_the_c · · Score: 1

      I think you entirely misread my statements , if not misinterpreted my point.

      1st I didn't says they should 'have to ' do something to stay in business
      .
        I implied ( although admittedly did not outright stated ) any large company that can't figure out weather or not they are able to make a profit on a given product isn't going to be in business long. So if you think the management of the company hasn't already done that kind of math I'm suggesting they make public you are very likely mistaken.

      2nd my musing was more an attempt to get people to consider what 'fair' means. Is 50% profit fair ? 100% , 200% , who decides what is fair?
      Why and when? 200% return on your investment seems to be more then fair under most circumstance, do you say 5000% why or why not? Do you really believe that it is 'fair' to NOT provide life saving treatment to people so you can make a 5000% profit? I'm not attempting to set any specific limit, but I do think it is something people never actually discuss.

      The other thing I suggested was that such a discussion can't really start until we have better transparency. So I'd much prefer to see laws that require reporting on these things first. Then , if the public sees a value in using the information for later laws, we can have the discussion.

        Of coarse it is entirely possible in this specific case that the $850,000 price tag actually represents a 2 or 3% profit, because the company doesn't make numbers available that they should already have.

      --
      âoeTolerance applies only to persons, but never to truth. Intolerance applies only to truth, but never to persons.
    10. Re:Capitalism gond wrong... by fish_in_the_c · · Score: 1

      I didn't say I expected anyone to work for free. The whole article is about price and at least implied discussion fairness. I'm only attempting to get people to consider and quantify what they consider fair. It is possible the $850,000 treatment is barely breaking even for the company , in which case no one has any right to complain. A much more interesting question is when does making a profit, become , making a profit by the abuse of others. A classic case is something like Gas when a hurricane is in the Gulf of Mexico and people are trying to evacuate. Are gas station owners justified if they can sell all their gas at 10000 times the normal price and price, and let everyone either pay it or die? The consensus seems to be no, which is why their are anti-'price gouging' laws. So when does 'making a profit' become price gouging? if you are making 100% return on investment is that good enough? 200, 300, 3000, 1000000? Is there a limit and do you have any responsibility to the people who can't afford your price, especially on a product that is a need, like food , shelter, and medicine.

      --
      âoeTolerance applies only to persons, but never to truth. Intolerance applies only to truth, but never to persons.
    11. Re:Capitalism gond wrong... by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      I implied ( although admittedly did not outright stated ) any large company that can't figure out weather or not they are able to make a profit on a given product isn't going to be in business long.

      Which, again, suggests that you really don't understand any of this at all. Of COURSE they, especially pharmaceutical companies, don't and cannot know if a given area of research is going to be a winner or a multi-billion-dollar loss. They can't know that. It's the very nature of that line of work. And it's why they have to be involved in many, many such projects at any given time, and make very solid profits on those that can make it through the very long, incredibly expensive process of getting something tested and actually useful and suitable for human use. This can take years, sometimes decades per product, and most - the vast majority - are failures and lose huge amounts of money.

      And yet those companies ARE still in business, because they are rational and charge necessarily high prices on their few successes, to make up for their enormous overhead, which is weighed down by the huge R&D costs. These are almost all publicly traded companies. You're making sound like we have to speculate and guess about this stuff. It's all out in the open! There's no need for "it's entirely possible" type speculation on your part.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    12. Re:Capitalism gond wrong... by liquid_schwartz · · Score: 1

      There used to be this idea of a 'fair' price, but one of my greatest criticisms of the Republican way of thinking is that a 'fair price' is the same as 'the maximum the market will allow'.

      I'd really like to see this solved too, but placing blame on one side won't do it nor is it accurate. The public, both D and R, knows that drug companies have bought both D and R politicians off. Both parties are bought off. If not, then why didn't Obamacare deal with drug companies in any meaningful way? The D party had the power but not the will. They talk a good game about helping the people but when you actually look at what they do they have little appetite for the hard work - just like the R party.

      You could, in an afternoon, make huge strides in reigning in health care costs with such simple measures as allowing drugs to be imported from outside the US and allowing insurance companies to operate across multiple states. Not hard, but it would mean less profit for drug companies so you will see neither D nor R actually try and fix anything. Both sides have in the last decade had complete control - if they wanted it, it could have happened.

    13. Re:Capitalism gond wrong... by fish_in_the_c · · Score: 1

      It's all out there? prove it. What was the research cost of this company during the time of this products development?
      How many products did it bring to market? What are their projected profits?
      I found one article saying the company posted huge losses last year, but where is the information as a whole is published on some wall street web site?
      I suspect much of what you say is correct, but all the people on here who are saying the price 'isn't fair' have never looked or seen the data.
      I can't say as I have either, as I'm not sure where to find it. You claim it is publicly available. Can you tell me where?

      --
      âoeTolerance applies only to persons, but never to truth. Intolerance applies only to truth, but never to persons.
    14. Re:Capitalism gond wrong... by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Every publicly traded company is required by law to publish an annual report. Their entire financial picture is there for you to peruse at your leisure. You have to go them if you're not a shareholder. Shareholders can have them sent to them electronically or in print, automatically, every year, with no further fuss. You can't not know this.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
  15. Very convenient to forget by SPopulisQR · · Score: 1

    It is very convenient to forget that we, the people, know have a choice which we did not have in the past. All those people who think that it is a very expensive medicine, forget that if not for the scientists and entire product teams, this product would not exist at all. It is somewhat comparable to the 16 and 17 century... Only very affluent people had access to buy glasses to improve their vision. Lens were very very expensive. Nevertheless, advancements in optics allowed creation of multiple products that do contain lens. Using the logic of today's people that innovations are expensive, consider the world where optical properties were never analysed out of the fear that optical products will be expensive.

    1. Re:Very convenient to forget by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed.

      Consider a system which placed price controls on drugs such as this. I don't think anyone would argue this wouldn't likely reduce innovation. Suppose innovation is reduced to the point that even 5% fewer useful drugs came to market each year (which seems like a reasonable guess), at some point in the future there would be half as many useful drugs available that had been developed after the price controls were put in place as there would have been in our current system. Note by "unavailable", I mean at at any price to anyone - just as MRIs, CT, and PET scans were unavailable 100 years ago or Rituximab was unavailable as a very effective treatment resulting in cure rather than death for some cases of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma and other B-cell lymphomas just thirty years ago.

      Now compare that to our current largely market driven system.

      In one, there is NO very effective treatment at any price in 2070 a number of diseases; in the other system effective treatments for these diseases are available at "generic" price levels (since the patents have expired) -- but at the horrible cost that only SOME people with some of these diseases could afford the very expensive treatments in 2018. Which is fairer? Which is more humane? The answer seems simple.

      With respect to this particular treatment for blindness, it seems likely that a centralized system that focused on "best value for taxpayer investment dollar" wouldn't have developed this treatment for this condition (although, admittedly, this is among the first of a new class of medications and others in the class might have made the cut). Based on the FDA press release, it appears that between 1000 and 2000 people in the US suffer from the condition Luxturna treats - so perhaps 20-40 new patients a year if one assumes a 50 year lifespan (in case blindness results in shorter lifespans). But there are millions of legally blind people in the United States so the money would probably be better spent simply on educating people to wear safety glasses more in order to prevent blindness or on research to develop "artificial" sight that could result in substantially improved vision sense for a million or more people.

  16. Only if that's true by rsilvergun · · Score: 0

    the vast majority of pharmaceutical research is done with public funds. Then Pharma moves in, does a few clinical trials and uses a few common tricks to let them patent it (or is just plain given the patents). A close family member survived cancer with drugs invented in European Universities and owned by American pharmaceutical companies, so I've got some first hand experience.

    Oh, and Intel also doesn't charge $850k for a CPU....

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    1. Re:Only if that's true by Major+Blud · · Score: 2

      the vast majority of pharmaceutical research is done with public funds

      I see this come up a lot but I've had a hard time verifying that this is actually the case. Although the public portion is significant, from what I can tell it's not even a majority:

      https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/b...
      "In 2004, federal agencies funded roughly one-third of all U.S. biomedical R and D (Moses et al. 2005). "
      "Private sector drug, biotechnology, and medical device companies provide the majority of U.S. biomedical R and D funding (about 58 percent)."

      --
      If you post as Anonymous Coward, don't expect a reply.
    2. Re:Only if that's true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unless you have some sources to cite you're just talking out your ass.

    3. Re:Only if that's true by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      > I see this come up a lot but I've had a hard time verifying that this is actually the case.

      Of course you did. It's just bullshit "media narrative". These people are like old women passing chain letters amongst themselves.

      As much as they whine, you would think that these people had all been denied coverage for very expensive treatments for rare conditions.

      When it's actually your butt on the line, it's much more important that these things exist at all. Frankly, I am amazed that the economic incentives actually work out for people with rare diseases.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    4. Re:Only if that's true by imgod2u · · Score: 1

      For this specific case, it looks like the method of virus delivery and CRISPR gene modification can be used for a whole host of diseases. This just happens to be the first application.

    5. Re: Only if that's true by limaxray · · Score: 1

      I doubt this is true. A very large part of the costs of bringing a medical product to market comes from seeking regulatory approval - this is on the order of hundreds of millions of dollars to approve a single drug for a single use, regardless if it'll go on to treat more than 100 million people or less than 100. It takes billions of dollars worth of dedicated capital to get these approvals and pharma companies conveniently have just that - it's almost like it's a barrier to entry that was created by the FDA to protect these companies from competition...

      Also understand these universities make out very well from this whole arrangement. In my experience, the universities that develop these drugs are the ones that actually hold the patents and the pharma companies only license them, paying the institution royalties in return. This means the university doesn't have to risk investing in further trials that might fail, while also recouping at least some of the cost of their research even if it does.

      Even if we assume this expensive approval process is necessary for patient safety rather than being yet another example of revolving door corporatism, you'd still want such agreements as universities simply are not geared to bring a compound from the lab to the open market. This is called specialization; leave the science to the scientists and industrial production to the industrialists.

      Frankly, I think as long as your doctor is sure you understand the risks involved and it is in your best interest, you should be allowed to buy a drug without FDA approval. This would make treatments for rare diseases like this far cheaper and more available as trial data could be collected over time without such a massive outlay. It would also enable smaller companies to take on promising compounds for rare conditions that have been passed over by big pharma. Obviously this means significantly more risk to the patient, but that risk may be worth it to someone with blindness or a terminal illness, and it should be up to them and them alone to make that subjective determination.

      But this would never happen as it'd result in more competition for big pharma and less quid pro quo for those in the FDA.

    6. Re:Only if that's true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Those 'few clinical trials' can easily be the most expensive part of getting a drug to market. Some of them also basically are the FDA being paranoid--and not always in the 'reasonable and well-informed' way, either. So you sometimes end up having to do really pointless tests--like if a drug that should never be given to somebody who can possibly be pregnant can make it through the placenta. You might also see the test with the highest accuracy+reliability required...despite it providing an insignificant improvement above the next best test which costs several times less to do.

  17. I want it so gimme. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have a problem seeing so I want this procedure, but I can't pay for it. Can someone please force them give it to me? I can't think of a better way to thank the creators for all their work and effort in building this miracle then to force my problems on them. Besides, I'm sure they owe it to me somehow.

  18. change master price? what is the real price for by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 2

    change master price? what is the real price for this aka the cost that the health insurance will cover?

    1. Re:change master price? what is the real price for by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a good question. My wife has one of the eye conditions that could be treated by this. I say could because there could be other genes at play in this family of conditions and until they do a test to determine if this will help her, we don't know. (They think there could be as many as 22 genes involved in the variations of these conditions)

      I'm wondering what my part of this is going to be after insurance. If it's cost prohibitive even after the insurance companies fund it, it's a moot point. I could see Medicare picking it up if the outcomes take people off of disability.

    2. Re:change master price? what is the real price for by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      You should tell her you don't look exactly like Brad Pitt before the procedure. Don't want to shock her.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    3. Re:change master price? what is the real price for by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good point, wouldn't want to incur additional medical costs from the heart attack after the $850K of eye shots.

  19. So how do we fix this? by Okian+Warrior · · Score: 3, Interesting

    So how do we fix this?

    We have readers who are experts on economics, law, medicine, and game theory(*). What's the solution to this?

    There are rare diseases that affect only a handful of people in the US, and there are tons of medical procedures and devices which could be used but aren't.

    Two anecdotes: a) I talked to a doctor at Berman-Gund (Boston) who claims to have a cure for a rare inherited disease that affects only 450 people in the US, but has given up because it's too expensive to develop(**). b) My dentist (heavily involved in research at Tufts) mentioned that there's lots of new diagnostic methods available, but insurance companies won't allow them because they're afraid they will turn up undiscovered conditions that are expensive to treat. Essentially, it's cheaper (in the actuarial sense) to let things go until they are untreatable so that the patient dies quickly.

    A) What are the characteristics of a system that fixes these problems, and

    B) How do we get from where we are to that system?

    (*) For a situation with an incentive for better health.
    (**) Meaning: With only 450 potential patients, there is no potential profit and no one is willing to pay for development, trials, and certification

    1. Re:So how do we fix this? by prisoner-of-enigma · · Score: 1

      there is no potential profit and no one is willing to pay for development, trials, and certification

      How about instead of "there is no potential for profit" it's instead seen in terms of "there is no way to recoup costs associated with development, trials, and certification." It's not always about greedy, money-grubbing profiteers. For every "pharma-bro" there are thousands of people dedicated to helping the human condition. However, their labs don't come for free. Their research time isn't free. They have to put food on their tables, too. This is "greed" this is simple economics: the allocation of scarce resources based on costs vs. benefits.

      If time and resources were infinite this wouldn't be an issue. Neither are, hence no matter how noble it would be to "fix" certain things, hard choices occasionally need to be made. Do you spend tens of millions researching a drug that will benefit, say, 500 people or that same money on a drug that will benefit 50 million people?

      --
      In the end they will lay their freedom at our feet and say to us, Make us your slaves, but feed us. - Fyodor Dostoyevsky
    2. Re:So how do we fix this? by Orne · · Score: 1

      My armchair solution is risk exposure mitigation.

      Drug testing are insanely expensive because if you screw something up, you will be sued to oblivion. So, these niche products never make it to production because the consumers (limited size) cannot absorb that cost. Solution: Create a class of drug licenses that waive the Phase 3 human trial requirements, and allow the patients to sign off on a document that absolves the drug company from liability.

      And, we should extend the "treatment of last resort" laws. Phase 4 cancer patients should get immediate access to trials and experimental medicines. I have a friend who's 7yo son died of a brain tumor (DIPG) while on a waiting list for a trial. They should not just cut the red tape, but eliminate it, with government funding backstops proportional to the severity of the illness.

      Next you have people who can't afford the cutting edge medicine. This is pretty much pure R&D for the drug companies, which is expensive. For that, there should be a risk pool set up by the government that covers these extremely rare conditions, that will pay for the cost of the development. Like everything else the government touches, this fund would be ripe for abuse, so you may have to link the payments to number of cured patients.

      We should also rank drugs / medical solutions by avoided total costs, i.e. if this drug were given, does it displace a cost from another sector? Laser eye surgery means never needing glasses again, so if it is cheap enough, the insurance companies should be paying us to get the laser, not the other way around. If every blind person could be cured by this treatment, how much money could be saved in ADA compliance requirements? That's pie in the sky, but what if there was a diabetes medicine? We need to stop thinking in terms of chronic management (where nothing is ever cured) and think about the total cost.

    3. Re:So how do we fix this? by Kjella · · Score: 1

      Yes, but the problem is not that we're starved of new medicine. There always seem to be a luxury market for millionaires that can afford the best treatment money can buy. I mean if the medicine didn't exist then doctors would simply tell you there's nothing more that can be done, it's not the prettiest part of their job but doctors deliver bad news all the time. The problem is that the medicine exists at a ridiculous price which makes them a huge burden on the system. And while each niche medicine is small there's a large number of niches making the total unbearable both to insurance companies and universal healthcare. Yet it's extremely harsh to tell people that yes we could do better but you're not worth the money.

      So it the cause price gouging from medical companies or that we're developing increasingly sophisticated treatments for increasingly rare diseases, driving per-patient costs through the roof? Definitively both. Our medical knowledge keeps expanding and there's research into diseases so rare you need a global network just to find subjects. I mean if you go back 20 years ago those we're debating whether to help today generally wouldn't get any help. On the other hand the pharmaceutical industry knows you haven't got a choice, they're not the ones holding a gun to your head but a serious health condition is the same kind of duress. It's not easy to feel that any price is fair under those conditions...

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    4. Re: So how do we fix this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most pharmaceuticals drop in price by a factor or 10 or more when they go off patent.

    5. Re: So how do we fix this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      âoeCreate a class of drug licenses that waive the Phase 3 human trial requirements, and allow the patients to sign off on a document that absolves the drug company from liability.â

      Domperidone (generally approved around the world, except for the US) would be a great candidate. It is now off patent, so there will never be a Phase 3 trial in the US for FDA approval. But plenty of people import it into the US for use in gastroparesis.

    6. Re:So how do we fix this? by zifn4b · · Score: 1

      Answer: you whine and pontificate on slashdot

      --
      We'll make great pets
    7. Re:So how do we fix this? by fatwilbur · · Score: 1

      I think we just need to accept the way it is.. resources are not infinite and our current system directs capital towards what is most valuable. In the case of medical research, it seems to be working as the most common diseases receive heavy funding while smaller ones like this receive little. Sounds harsh, but again it's really just the most efficient allocation of scarce resources.

    8. Re:So how do we fix this? by AHuxley · · Score: 1

      Look at how other nations do healthcare, insurance and citizenship.
      Dont accept non citizens into any national health care system. Non citizens have to take out full private cover during their stay.
      Give a national health care card to all citizens after proving the are a citizen.
      Take a percentage of every persons wage to cover that cost.
      For that citizens get medical care and access to a rationed range of low cost medications. Generic, older medications that a nation can do a bulk deal for.
      Place all weather, day night helicopter crews as needed to ensure all citizens have an equal fast pathway into the best emergency care when needed.
      Only hire the very best emergency care doctors that have passed your nations difficult exams and who can prove they can perform. Do not hire another nations below average doctors.
      Educate your own doctors to the very best standards and set exams to only pass the very best. That keeps the doctors wages up, stops the creation of average skills sets from entering the medical profession. No social advancement and not passing no merit. Just enough really good experts who all get top wages.
      Let them enjoy their private practice too. Good wages and conditions for medical staff.

      Tourists, foreign students, guest workers have to take out full private cover during their stay. Cant afford private cover during the stay ? No entry to that nation.
      When their study is over, their work ends, guest workers and students return to their own nations. No decades of free care for non citizens.
      That would reduce costs and keep citizens cared for most of the time. Citizens are covered for most accidents, long term lifestyle issues. They get low cost medical care and fast 24/7 access to the best emergency care.
      What more? Go private.
      Make sure private cover that offers cover for full hospital care in a private hospital and any hours of private emergency care actually covers such services. No junk cover.

      What to do about the new medical advances and a fully rationed tax payer funded medial system?
      The private sector can cover people who can pay extra.
      Slowly accept new medications for consideration for free cover every decade. That 30 or 50 year old medication can finally be covered and offered.
      Fund university research for new medications that can be sold to the world. Use the global profit to cover rationed medical care domestically and to fund more domestic university research.
      The system can be make to work. Never pay for any non citizens as they all have private cover, make everyone pay into the system and keep a fully functional private system.
      Have the best emergency care and all weather, day night helicopter crews. Any normal, advance nation can educate the needed rescue helicopter crews to fly to a good standard at night.
      Get citizens to hospital quickly in all conditions and start the care expert needed. All non citizens are covered by their private insurance.

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    9. Re:So how do we fix this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Drug testing are insanely expensive because if you screw something up, you will be sued to oblivion.

      A more important reason why drug testing is insanely expensive is that most drugs have small therapeutic effects, so you have to test them on an enormous number of people to measure the effect size with reasonable accuracy. Add to that that figuring out whether side effects cause more harm than good also takes big sample sizes.

      If you throw liability to the wind and make clinical trials small, you will end up not being able to figure out which drugs are actually useful and which drugs cause more harm than good.

    10. Re:So how do we fix this? by mjwx · · Score: 1

      (**) Meaning: With only 450 potential patients, there is no potential profit

      There in lies the problem. This is why US health care is both more expensive than the UK's NHS and of a far lower quality. You built your health care system to produce profit, not heal people.

      The private sector has never fixed health care, all they do are hard-on pills and placebo vitamins (which is where the profit is). Stop relying on them to find real cures.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
  20. Apropos of nothing... by Okian+Warrior · · Score: 1

    If you have a strong immune system, you should never need antibiotics.

    Apropos of nothing, where can I get one of those?

    1. Re:Apropos of nothing... by blindseer · · Score: 1

      If you have a strong immune system, you should never need antibiotics.

      Apropos of nothing, where can I get one of those?

      I heard that they are available with gene therapy treatment for about $850K. It's probably cheaper to just use the antibiotics.

      --
      I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.
  21. Re:Not really. Company for 10 years, pays the univ by suutar · · Score: 3, Informative

    This is very informative, thank you. Given those figures, 850k looks depressingly like breakeven for the company (if that 86mil/yr was all for this, it would take them (860mil+10mil+3.8mil)/0.95 = 919.79 mil revenue to break even, or about 920k per for 1k patients). I'm sure they have some profit baked in to the figure, but not as egregious as the summary headline sounds by itself.

  22. Re:While I generally hate Medical Insurance Compan by DogDude · · Score: 1

    Or we could do like other countries do: let the government pay for the research and the treatment.

    --
    I don't respond to AC's.
  23. Learn to say "no" to PlutoCare by Tablizer · · Score: 0

    Governments should refuse to fund research on expensive treatments, or at least give disincentives. It's hard for the medical establishment and politicians to say "no" to expensive treatments because regular folks often suffer, but this jacks up medical bills for everyone. Therefore, it's best to reduce that type of research. Instead, research should focus on cheaper treatments that help more people. Single-basers, no more home-runs.

    The home-runs have been too profitable compared to incremental and simpler treatments. It's one of the reasons why US medical costs are more expensive than other industrialized countries. Further, the rich come here from other countries to get the expensive treatments. We have PlutoCare.

    Some argue that today's expensive treatments will be tomorrow's commodity treatments. But a treatment promoter should be able to make a reasonable case that such is fairly likely to happen.

  24. We ought to be rejoicing by KBentley57 · · Score: 1

    I know it's fun to hate on $INDUSTRY, but lets get down to the technology here, the science, and what is possible today that wasn't possible five years ago. We can argue about the costs later, it fundamentally doesn't matter. No single person will pay $850K for this treatment, it'll be insurance, charity, etc. What has been developed is a virus that introduces DNA into specific regions of the body. It's really mind-blowing! Think of the possibilities this opens into other treatments. We may be able to adapt the science heal lungs in those born with cystic fibrosis, repair hearts of children born with cardiomyopathy, cure Type I/II diabetes, etc. Besides, if Toyota had to build only as many cars, as patients received this treatment, those would cost a million bucks too! The price seems reasonable for the amount of work that was surely required.

    1. Re:We ought to be rejoicing by dddux · · Score: 1

      Yes, think of the possibilities. And that's all you can think of when you haven't been able to pay all your bills this month and craving food, so you have to eat cheap shit and poison yourself with it.

      --
      "It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society." - Jiddu Krishnamurti
  25. Dont worry the cost of this will drop dramatically by backslashdot · · Score: 0

    I am in this field and there is no reason it cant cost less than $500. In fact i bet it costs $500 to make currently with zero new technological advancements needed . You are paying for all the prior research, clinical trials, FDA bullshit. It costs $2 billion to push a sugar pill through the FDA clinical trials process. The early adopters have to pay off the $2 billion. Think about how few people need this treatment and those few have to pay off $2 billion plus provide a decent return for investors.

  26. They're literally making the blind see by SlaveToTheGrind · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And all we can find to do is bitch about the price? Maslow is indeed a harsh mistress.

    This is amazing stuff, folks. If you want more of it, leave the profit motive in place. If you want less of it, do the opposite.

  27. FDA should revoke appeal ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... on the grounds that it causes heart attacks when people see the bill.

    1. Re:FDA should revoke appeal ... by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      I hate to break it to you (really I don't) but there are already common medical procedures that bill out at MORE than this procedure.

      Tens of thousands of people see bills like this every year. Considering the alternative, I doubt if it distresses them too much.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  28. Grr... FDA should revoke approval... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... on the grounds that it causes heart attacks when people get the bill.

  29. 850K? No problem! Just 60 BTC! ;) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Too bad hospitals don't accept crypto-currency ... yet!

  30. Re:Not really. Company for 10 years, pays the univ by HornWumpus · · Score: 0

    The number of potential patients is 'a few thousand people in the U.S.'

    The USA isn't the world. Even though the drug companies can count on being strong armed for discounts by the eurotrash, they will see revenue.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  31. Cost of litigation by mpercy · · Score: 1

    Virtually every new drug, device, or treatment will eventually have a class-action lawsuit that will cost the company billions. Gotta factor that into the equation too. And the class action may be for minor effects, such as the one currently in vogue for a breast-cancer treatment that caused permanent hair loss or for slightly increased risk of suffering from the thing treatment was supposed to support (increased risk of depression among users of anti-depressant drugs).

    1. Re:Cost of litigation by fish_in_the_c · · Score: 1

      That would fall under company overhead ( insurance and litigation).

      --
      âoeTolerance applies only to persons, but never to truth. Intolerance applies only to truth, but never to persons.
  32. Re:While I generally hate Medical Insurance Compan by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    Which government is that exactly? Name ONE drug or gene therapy treatment that can be had for peanuts in another "socialist" country because the government actually did all the work.

    Things don't work like that even in Europe.

    It turns out that people don't work for free.

    Also, governments are notoriously stingy and taxpayers everywhere complain that they pay too much.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  33. Re:Not really. Company for 10 years, pays the univ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The most common form of inherited eye condition, Retinities Pigmentosa, affects 1 in 3500 to 1 in 4000 people in the US. It usually starts at a young age but isn't caught until the person is older. In my wife's case, she was diagnosed in her 30's but after the diagnosis, her parents were able to look back and, with this knowledge, find events in the past that were probably early indicators. She definitely had issues in her late teens and early 20s but nobody noticed.

  34. It's good value. by XB-70 · · Score: 1
    Regardless of the arguments for or against Big Pharma, Socialized Health Care etc. etc. somebody is going to pay.

    So, let's look at the equation:

    Cost of being blind:

    - Limited job opportunities.

    - Need for 'translation' of reading materials, screens etc. etc.

    - Depression (a very real factor)

    - Danger while traveling/navigating

    With vision:

    - Significant potential for increased income.

    - Minimal need of additional social resources.

    - Increased safety while traveling/navigating

    Net result: Increase ability to earn and, therefore pay taxes.

    If the cost were a mortgage, the payout could be in about 30 yrs. 30 Yrs. of productive income, lifestyle and freedom.

    It's expensive, true, but, on balance, worth it.

    --
    *** Don't be dull.***
    1. Re:It's good value. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except when the insurance company chooses to pay for some over-priced blindness medication, or save the life of a child. This all depends on your perspective, and the opportunity cost involved. Unfortunately, these "carrots" that pharma keeps dangling in front of people are the root cause of the health care problems in the US. How much do you think this drug will cost someone in India, China, Malaysia, Peru? I'm willing to bet that in time this drug will just be copied and given to people for the cost to manufacture it.

    2. Re:It's good value. by blindseer · · Score: 1

      Have you considered that the cost to manufacture is on the order of hundreds of thousands of dollars per dose?

      If they offer it for the cost to manufacture, and the cost of manufacture is still a half million bucks, then it's still godawful expensive.

      --
      I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.
  35. Seems like it is still a good deal at that price by flink · · Score: 2

    I wouldn't be surprised if even at $850k, the cost of this treatment is less than a lifetime of assistive support for blindness. Hopefully those that qualify for this can get it covered.

  36. Re:While I generally hate Medical Insurance Compan by prisoner-of-enigma · · Score: 1

    Or we could do like other countries do: let the government pay for the research and the treatment.

    By all means! After all, these "other countries" just magically shit money out of nowhere. It's not like the citizens pay taxes or anything, right?

    Oh, wait, they do pay taxes! Which means perfectly healthy people are forced to pay for R&D and treatment of diseases they don't have, won't get, and more or less can never benefit from. Oh, sure, it's all noble to say you're helping your fellow man, but isn't that what charitable contributions are for? By golly, yes, that's exactly what they're for! What an amazing concept! People voluntarily helping others instead of the government taking their money and giving it to whoever they feel is most worthy of getting it. And of course such dispensations are never, ever politically motivated and the government never, ever wastes money through fraud, graft, inefficiency, or laziness, right?

    --
    In the end they will lay their freedom at our feet and say to us, Make us your slaves, but feed us. - Fyodor Dostoyevsky
  37. Re:While I generally hate Medical Insurance Compan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or we could do like other countries do: let the US government pay for the research then regulate the crap out of drug manufacturing and sell the pills at cost.

    FIFY

  38. Re:Dont worry the cost of this will drop dramatica by prisoner-of-enigma · · Score: 1

    You say this:

    I am in this field and there is no reason it cant cost less than $500.

    And then you say this:

    It costs $2 billion to push a sugar pill through the FDA clinical trials process.

    You are aware these two things are related, right? The R&D and approval costs are baked into the final price of the drug. The whole "reason" it has to cost more the $500 right now and for the foreseeable future is those costs have to be covered. If not, there is no money put back into R&D and approval for the next medical breakthrough and healthcare research essentially stops.

    --
    In the end they will lay their freedom at our feet and say to us, Make us your slaves, but feed us. - Fyodor Dostoyevsky
  39. Re:Not really. Company for 10 years, pays the univ by Daemonik · · Score: 1

    Don't forget however, that every dollar they spend in figuring out this sort of treatment can be recouped later when the technology is perfected and they get FDA permission to start treating other more common diseases. This is proof of concept and easing the idea of messing with our DNA into a world that's still dodgy over GMO foods.

  40. Many problems with this by Okian+Warrior · · Score: 1

    there is no potential profit and no one is willing to pay for development, trials, and certification

    If time and resources were infinite this wouldn't be an issue. Neither are, hence no matter how noble it would be to "fix" certain things, hard choices occasionally need to be made. Do you spend tens of millions researching a drug that will benefit, say, 500 people or that same money on a drug that will benefit 50 million people?

    There are many problems with this view, but I'll focus on the most obvious one.

    There is no way for a patient to "exit" this system in order to take control of their situation. They cannot go to the doctor and sign a waiver saying they know the risks but want to do it anyway - that's illegal.

    They are condemned to a lifetime of no hope and no recourse. It would be simple and inexpensive to give them a legal way out of the medical system we have now, so that they could at least try things on their own under the supervision of a real doctor.

    There's also the humanitarian angle - we're actually *not* researching drugs that benefit 50 million people medically, we're researching boner drugs and hair-growth drugs, and drugs that mask symptoms long-term but don't actually cure anything. Because *those* drugs can affect 50 million people for profit, while curing actual diseases doesn't.

    1. Re:Many problems with this by wisnoskij · · Score: 1

      OK, yes the medical regulations first world nations have does do loads of harm. Preventing a working but not proven cure from getting used does harm, but in general people have decided that more harm is done by allowing anyone to claim anything and give any random treatment. That provem with for example allow said doctor to use his cure to cure the 450 patients, is that the second that was allow 1000 other people would suddenly pop up with 1000 different "cures" would would completely drown out the the one doctor who actually could of theoretically helped them.

      --
      Troll is not a replacement for I disagree.
    2. Re:Many problems with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's also the humanitarian angle - we're actually *not* researching drugs that benefit 50 million people medically, we're researching boner drugs and hair-growth drugs, and drugs that mask symptoms long-term but don't actually cure anything. Because *those* drugs can affect 50 million people for profit, while curing actual diseases doesn't.

      You do realize that those 'boner drugs' are the things you should be getting given if female and have menstrual cramps, right? They improve blood flow to the region, regardless of what you've got, and that's what causes menstrual cramps.

      And if you're not female? Imagine having your dick and balls caught in a clamp that's rigged to automatically put whatever's inserted under the absolute highest amount of compression possible. Yes, it's not going to be fatal for the sufferer, but it's incredibly painful.

  41. I was with you until by rsilvergun · · Score: 0

    External R&D is the company paying the university (Penn) for the research the school did over ten years ago.

    If a University did the research why the heck wouldn't we just fund it out of the Government? That way instead of letting this company profit to the tune of $800 million vs a $50 million outlay we could just spend $50 million, give 1000 people their sight back, add to that everybody who's insurance won't pay or who don't have insurance, and call it a day?

    I still don't see any value this company is adding. The research was still done at schools. You could argue they funded it, but the amount of money we're talking about ($50 million if we count royalties, which are only that high because of exorbitant fees) is chicken scratch. Especially when compared to the $800 million in profit.

    The whole system of drug companies funding Universities looks like an outgrowth of budget cuts from the Reagan/Clinton/Bush era of rampant cuts of government programs. The end result is the same: Public universities do all the work, private companies get all the profits; and to top it off poor and lower working class people lose access to life changing medicine. It's a corrupt system and rotten at its core.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    1. Re:I was with you until by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I still don't see any value this company is adding

      That's because you have no idea what you're talking about and if you had your way this drug wouldn't exist.

    2. Re:I was with you until by DRJlaw · · Score: 1

      The end result is the same: Public universities do all the work, private companies get all the profits; and to top it off poor and lower working class people lose access to life changing medicine. It's a corrupt system and rotten at its core.

      The University of Pennsylvania is a private university.

  42. 3.5% average profit by raymorris · · Score: 2

    The company may well lose money. The $86 million internal R&D was for 2016 only. They've been working on this treatment for ten years. I know they also had $10 million external R&D for this treatment in 2016; I don't exactly know how much of the $86 million was for this, but it looks like they had four "promising" ones that would account for most of it. So maybe $25 million internal and $10 million external on this treatment on 2016.

    How much was spent on *this* one doesn't much matter, though, because most medications aren't approved. They need to R&D many in order to find one that works well, is safe, and gets approved. If they spend $100 million looking at 8 possible treatments and one of those gets approved and generates $80 million revenue, they've lost $20 million overall.

    Overall, large pharmaceutical companies made an average 3.7% return on their R&D investment in 2016 and 3.2% in 2017 (Deloitte). Small firms do better on average, but also have a higher chance of bankruptcy if they don't score a hit.

  43. Funniest thing today by JohnFen · · Score: 1

    "We wanted to balance the value and the affordability concerns with a responsible price that would ensure access to patients," said CEO Jeffrey Marrazzo

    That's comedy gold, right there!

    Unless, of course, you happen to have this form of blindness without being a multimillionaire. Then, it's just an insult.

  44. Okay, but... by fyngyrz · · Score: 2

    Actual production costs are non-trivial here.

    Well, the question at hand is, are they $850k (including enough margin to survive) non-trivial?

    If they are, fine. If not... then there's plenty of room for looking askance at the pricing.

    --
    I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
  45. Must be partially going to Penn State by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since they were the ones that allowed faculty to rape kids...why not also rape those suffering from blindness.

  46. Re:Dont worry the cost of this will drop dramatica by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't think it costs $2 billion to push a new implantable medical device through clinical trials. What are you guys doing so badly that it costs $2 billion to push a sugar pill through trials?

  47. Math fail. 3.5% profit by raymorris · · Score: 1

    The company has been working on this for ten years. I looked at a breakdown of the R&D numbers for one of those ten years and found they spend $86 million on internal R&D and $20 million on external. So figure the total R&D cost alone to find and develop this treatment and move it through approvals is maybe $800 million. That doesn't include the carrying cost of the $800 million over ten years, administrative costs, etc.

    If 1,000 patients get it, the treatment brings in $850 million retail minus roughly $80 million in corporate subsidies they've announced, minus distribution so maybe $750 million or so. They'll lose roughly $100 million on the US market, but hopefully make that up in Europe. It depends on how many of the 2,000 or so Europeans affected by the disease get the treatment.

  48. All tech starts expensive by micahraleigh · · Score: 1

    The first computers cost millions of dollars.

    This is not a mature technology, people. It starts expensive.

  49. Re:Not really. Company for 10 years, pays the univ by ranton · · Score: 1

    This is very informative, thank you. Given those figures, 850k looks depressingly like breakeven for the company (if that 86mil/yr was all for this, it would take them (860mil+10mil+3.8mil)/0.95 = 919.79 mil revenue to break even, or about 920k per for 1k patients). I'm sure they have some profit baked in to the figure, but not as egregious as the summary headline sounds by itself.

    Don't forget that only about 1 in 10 drugs pass all three phases of clinical trials, so for companies to get funding they would need to be reasonably sure they could return at least 5-10x the cost of development. So if it takes a billion dollars to break even, they would probably be expecting in the ballpark of $5-$10 billion in profits from this drug (and from licensing of patents related to the research). Too much less than that and it wouldn't make sense to fund the drug research in the first place.

    --
    -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
  50. Somewhat OT, my 3yo started doing multiplication by raymorris · · Score: 0

    This is somewhat off-topic, perhaps, but it made me smile the other day when my three year old daughter started using multiplication and subtraction in her daily play recently.

    Meanwhile, liberals like this guy figure ($86M + $10M) X 10 years + $42M = $50 million total.

    I guess it's your business if you decided to ditch school and smoke pot all day, but please stay out of public policy. You only manage to completely fuck yourself when you try to make economic policy decisions without the ability to do basic arithmetic.

  51. Re: While I generally hate Medical Insurance Compa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Indeed: âoeThe U.K. agency charged with reviewing medicines for use by the National Health Service (NHS) rejected its eighth straight breast cancer drug when it issued draft guidance today stating it would turn down the use of Rocheâ(TM)s Kadcyla (trastuzumab emtansine) because its benefits did not in its view outweigh its per-patient cost of £90,831 (about $153,000) per course of treatment.â

  52. Patents are harmful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But let them keep at it. When drug prices hit high enough values we csn be rid of patents once and for all.

  53. I just can't see charging that much for treatment by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

    .nt

    --
    She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
  54. Pricetag by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Looking at lifelong cost for a blind person from a socioeconomic point of view it would make sense for any government to spend the money to cure said person thus decreasing expenditure and a million ain't bad

  55. Re:Not really. Company for 10 years, pays the univ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How much will it cost to get it approved in over a dozen European countries? That's not cheap either. It's not at all unreasonable for pharmaceutical companies to just ignore certain countries with malicious bureaucracies. The US wins only because the market is big enough to pay for the bureaucratic inefficiency.

  56. Re:While I generally hate Medical Insurance Compan by Uecker · · Score: 1

    Read a book about the history medicine. Most of modern medicine has been developed by academics on government payroll. In "socialist" Europe, you indeed usually pay nothing as a patient (or a very small co-pay).

    Of course, modern drug development is now usually based on commercial companies, this doesn't mean that it couldn't be done directly by the government. In fact, government institutions still do develop a lot. You asked for an example. Here is a relatively recent and important one: NIH researcher developed the hepatitis A vaccine

  57. Re:Seems like it is still a good deal at that pric by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's almost certainly true, but the insurance companies only care about *this* fiscal year. GLWT.

  58. Ugg big pharma at it again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I understand the financial impacts of creating something, getting it tested, and bring it to the public. What I don't understand is that these companies put money over life. I refuse to use any of their products. I was put on Lisinipril for high blood pressure. I looked up the side effects and stopped taking it that day. I found supplements that will cure high blood pressure and the only side effect is that they also help my over all health and my immune system in general. My doctor got very concerned about it so I asked him this simple question....."Do you think what is wrong with my body, that is creating high blood pressure, is a lack of lisinipril?" He said no and that was the last he spoke about it. Screw the pharma companies, slowly people are moving away from them. There is typically better methods of repairing the body than chemicals. I read today that a woman has cured herself of blood cancer, after 3 attempts at chemo had failed. She simply started eating Turmeric Curcumin, lots of it, and now she has been cancer free for over 5 years! At a cost of less than eating at McDonald's once a day.....pharma method = over 500 grand, and did not work! Natural method costs 5 bucks a day and has worked for over 5 years now, that is impressive.

  59. Re:Somewhat OT, my 3yo started doing multiplicatio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fuck you and your piece of shit daughter.

  60. Re:Somewhat OT, my 3yo started doing multiplicatio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Granted, the original poster's view was a little simplistic - it takes a lot of money and R&D efforts (in some cases) to take an idea from an University to create products.

    However, your stretch of imagination and tall tales is truly a thing of beauty - looks like your dealer really likes you ;)

  61. Stop bitch'n about the price by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is a work around. An embryonic genetic test could detect this inherited gene giving the parents the option to abort it. For those who Don't want to abort this treatment is your option.

  62. *potential* by raymorris · · Score: 1

    A couple thousand people in the US have the disease. I guesstimated that half of those might pay full price for the treatment (via their insurance company). The pharmacuetical company has already announced their own subsidies, so some will get the treatment at less than full cost. Some won't be good candidates for whatever reason, and some may decide to stay away from this genetic therapy stuff for now.

  63. You mean like Viagra, Rogaine, and Propecia? by NotSoHeavyD3 · · Score: 1

    Which were originally developed to treat high blood pressure and prostate enlargement. (They got used for other things when some of the side effects were noticed.)

    --
    Did you know 80 to 90% of the moderators on slashdot wouldn't recognize a troll even if one dragged them under a bridge.
  64. We could just fund the research through the gov't by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    the scientists don't really care who pays them. They're doing the research because they love it. We only need the profit motive in place because we want it there.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
  65. Re:We could just fund the research through the gov by SlaveToTheGrind · · Score: 1

    the scientists don't really care who pays them.

    Hey, it's funny -- I was just reading an article that explained how the government-funded NSA is bleeding talent because they can make a lot more in the private sector. And there was this dude named rsilvergun who said:

    these guys can clear $500k/yr working for Wallstreet. It's no wonder they don't want to settle for $140k/yr working for Uncle Sam.

    I know, I know... consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds. But still.

  66. Capitalist apologists need to STFU by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People who do this kind of research go into it because they want to help people, not because they want to become filthy rich. That's good for them because the corporations get rich, not the heart-bleeding sucker who developed the cure.

    There will ALWAYS be a queue of people willing to do research for a reasonable salary or even less. They don't want to price-gouge and they don't need obscene profits to motivate them to do their work.

    We don't need our healthcare system to be structured the way it is in order for it to be effective. It excessively punishes people for their misfortune and takes advantage of people when they are most vulnerable.

  67. -o- by easyTree · · Score: 1

    We wanted to balance the value and the affordability concerns with a responsible price that would ensure access to patients but then we thought, 'you know what? Fuck It! Restoration of vision is a great incentive to pay almost anything we ask.'

  68. Re:Not really. Company for 10 years, pays the univ by jabuzz · · Score: 1

    Same as 30 European countries though this will be going down to 29 next year. That market is somewhat larger than the US one.

  69. You totally missed the point there by DeplorableCodeMonkey · · Score: 1

    This is a general problem in many democracies. Younger people don't vote as much as older ones, so get screwed.

    I used a pediatric cancer patient as an example. In my example, she was 6 years old. There is no "democracy" out there where a 6 year old can vote. It is the moral imperative of her elders to represent her interests. In modern democracies, there is absolutely epic fail there as the elders are now increasingly in a vampiric mindset of "I'll extract the most resources I can to ensure I get the lifestyle I want."

    I'm not going to argue for a duty to die, but the 65 year old voters should have the mentality associated with the Titanic: the children take priority over everyone in getting them to safety. One of the reasons Boomers sometimes get flabbergasted that I don't respect my elders is precisely that so many of them see their interests as of equal importance with that of the youngest generation (Gen Z, not Millennial; I am Millennial). As a Millennial father of two "Gen Z" kids, I take strong exception to my elders wanting respect and consideration when so many of them cannot even consider the traditional sacrifices the elderly have made to protect their grandkids and grandkids' generation as a whole.

  70. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 0

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  71. Re:Dont worry the cost of this will drop dramatica by Anonymous+Cow+Ward · · Score: 1

    Maybe you're in medicine overall, but there's no way you're in gene therapy if you think you can make enough clinical-grade vector for human eyes with $500. It costs my lab several thousand dollars for enough research-grade vector to do a basic mouse experiment.

    --
    Examine even your most deeply held beliefs. Nobody is always right.
  72. Previous price ... by eric_harris_76 · · Score: 1

    Previous price: infinity. Not available at any price.

    The trend will continue, no doubt. Though that first price decrease will be tough to beat.

    --
    There's no time like the present. Well, the past used to be.
  73. Great society. by dddux · · Score: 1

    In a true communist society it would cost you... nothing. Because a great society cares about everybody. It's not based on who is the most psychopathic=wins.

    --
    "It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society." - Jiddu Krishnamurti
  74. Re:We could just fund the research through the gov by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Phycisist here. Earning $50k/yr before taxes doing research at a university, and wouldn't want to work for either Wallstreet or Uncle Sam despite those pay rises.