Financial Burden of Drugs Prescribed for Cancer-Associated Symptoms

  • Gupta A
  • Nshuti L
  • Grewal U
  • et al.
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Abstract

PURPOSE The financial toxicity of anticancer drugs is well-documented, but little is known about the costs of drugs used to manage cancer-associated symptoms. METHODS We reviewed relevant guidelines and compiled drugs used to manage seven cancer-associated symptoms (anorexia and cachexia, chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy, constipation, diarrhea, exocrine pancreatic insufficiency, cancer-associated fatigue, and chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting). Using GoodRx website, we identified the retail price (cash price at retail pharmacies) and lowest price (discounted, best-case scenario of out-of-pocket costs) for patients without insurance for each drug or formulation for a typical fill. We describe lowest prices here. RESULTS For anorexia and cachexia, costs ranged from $5 US dollars (USD; generic olanzapine or mirtazapine tablets) to $1,156 USD (brand-name dronabinol solution) and varied widely by formulation of the same drug or dosage: for olanzapine 5 mg, $5 USD (generic tablet) to $239 USD (brand-name orally disintegrating tablet). For chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy, costs of duloxetine varied from $12 USD (generic) to $529 USD (brand-name). For constipation, the cost of sennosides or polyethylene glycol was

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APA

Gupta, A., Nshuti, L., Grewal, U. S., Sedhom, R., Check, D. K., Parsons, H. M., … Dusetzina, S. B. (2022). Financial Burden of Drugs Prescribed for Cancer-Associated Symptoms. JCO Oncology Practice, 18(2), 140–147. https://doi.org/10.1200/op.21.00466

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