More than often, Cell therapies now offer a new way of treating diseases. What was once a chronic disease treatment that was paid using “fee for service” models, we now have cell therapies which would be an upfront cost that could effectively completely treat a disease and create incredible value for patients. This could include a literal lifetime. A lifetime of health, sight, or one without chronic pain. How do insurance companies go about evaluating the cost of these new treatments? There have already been suggestions such as a payment plan or paying only if the treatment works.
(Question: why isn’t this viewed almost as a vaccine? Yes it is a specialized treatment that requires specialized preparation but at the end of the day, much like a vaccine, it is a one time treatment that stops a lifetime of disease? Vaccines seem to already have value. However, I do see the problem as this makes orphan diseases pretty much non-commercializeable considering how little vaccines cost. As mentioned previously, in comparison with biologics, vaccines bring in very little. The true goal is to create value for shareholders with this new technology.
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41434-019-0074-7
This is another article that mentions this in a similar vein. I throughly enjoyed this article because it jumped into the patient journey and the necessity to change how physicians work together with other stakeholders in the provider system to give care to patients. Clearly many hospitals have yet to design their systems to accommodate for cellular therapy patients. This creates an issue with clinical trials. Often times cellular therapies target smaller populations as they target specific genes but can do so in ever so slgihtly different ways. How can they get patient recruitment to sites that are unready and how can they become commercializable with a small trial? The article argues for a new way to perform clinical trials for cell therapies that follows more of the “medical device model”. As we know how cell therapies work, their testing should be on the gene known rather than the overall “cell therapy” model.

