UNITED STATES NEWS

Limits to anti-nausea pill coverage wear on cancer patients and doctors

Sep 10, 2024, 6:29 AM | Updated: 7:58 am

Cancer patient Steven Manetta sits for a portrait Thursday, Aug. 29, 2024, in his Lemont, Ill., hom...

Cancer patient Steven Manetta sits for a portrait Thursday, Aug. 29, 2024, in his Lemont, Ill., home where he takes at least a dozen pills daily to keep a form of the blood cancer leukemia in remission. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)
Credit: ASSOCIATED PRESS

(AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)

Cancer patients can ward off waves of vomiting after treatment with a relatively cheap anti-nausea pill, but some are running into coverage limits.

Doctors say restrictions on the number of tablets patients receive can hurt care. Pharmacy benefit managers say their limits guard against overuse, and they offer workarounds to get more tablets.

In between sit patients, who might ration pills or opt for less effective help for a dreaded side effect of radiation or chemotherapy.

The conflict shows how an array of coverages and poor communication can complicate even simple acts of care in the fragmented U.S. health care system.

“This is sort of the dirty underbelly of the current health care environment,” said oncologist Dr. Fumiko Chino. “Insurance companies and pharmacy benefit managers are somehow weirdly ending up in my exam room, standing between me and my patients.”

Steven Manetta takes at least a half dozen pills daily to help keep a form of leukemia in remission. For more than a year, he rationed his go-to anti-nausea pill, ondansetron, known by the brand-name Zofran.

Manetta’s coverage through CVS Caremark paid for 18 ondansetron pills every 21 days. That forced him to sometimes use alternatives that make him extremely drowsy in order to stretch his supply. He only recently got approval for a 90-day supply.

“It’s just like an extra thing to think about all the time,” the 33-year-old Lemont, Illinois, resident said. “When you’re on so many medications, the ones with the least side effects are the ones you always want to reach for.”

Ondansetron hit the U.S. market more than 30 years ago. It was the first in a series of drugs that gave doctors a better way to control nausea and vomiting, said Dr. Alexi Wright, an oncologist who teaches at Harvard Medical School.

Wright and other cancer specialists call ondansetron a cornerstone treatment because of its relative safety, effectiveness and limited side effects.

The price doesn’t hurt either: Thirty tablets of ondansetron can cost under $12 through prescription discount websites.

Pharmacists and doctors say they’ve dealt with restrictions on anti-nausea drugs like ondansetron for years. Wright says she finds the limits “infuriating” in part because the drug is affordable.

More than half the plans sold on the U.S. individual insurance marketplace limit the number of ondansetron tablets that patients can get, according to preliminary results from a study by Chino and Michael Anne Kyle, a University of Pennsylvania researcher.

Pharmacist Yen Nguyen frequently sees these restrictions, including the limits from CVS Caremark that Manetta encountered.

“Over four or five months of chemotherapy, you’re fighting for dimes and nickels here,” said Nguyen, executive director of pharmacy for the Houston-area practice Oncology Consultants.

Jennette Murphy paid cash for ondansetron when her cancer treatment started earlier this year because she couldn’t get coverage for the amount her doctor requested. Then she got a letter telling her the drug wouldn’t be covered.

“It freaked me out,” the Tehachapi, California, resident said. “I’m like, ‘Really? Have you ever been through chemo?’”

Pharmacy benefit managers say they set limits based partly on the treatment and offer several ways for doctors to request more.

Prime Therapeutics limits 4- and 8-milligram prescriptions of ondansetron to 21 tablets over 30 days. That helps provide “maximum dosing” for seven days of treatment a month, chief clinical officer David Lassen said in an email.

He said quantity limits are approved by independent doctors and pharmacists. They help prevent waste and excessive use that may not be safe.

CVS Caremark spokesman Mike DeAngelis said his company bases limits on Food and Drug Administration guidelines. He added that the company can make a decision on requests for more tablets in less than 24 hours.

Doctors say they don’t always know when patients will need more.

Coverage limits vary, and some patients may not tell their doctor that they got a smaller-than-desired amount. Also, nausea intensity can be hard to gauge with newer treatments.

Chino says she wants patients to start with 90 tablets of ondansetron, enough to take the drug three times a day for a month if needed. But she often sees limits of 21 or 30 tablets.

“The fact that there’s still restrictive patterns on this very useful medication is insane,” said Chino, who recently moved from Memorial Sloan Kettering in New York to MD Anderson in Houston.

Limits can hurt patients who have big copayments for each refill or trouble getting to the drugstore, noted Dr. Ramy Sedhom, an oncologist and palliative care specialist with Penn Medicine Princeton Health.

“I have a lot of patients who only go to the pharmacy once a month when their niece or nephew is in town to pick up the (prescriptions),” he said.

If patients run out of ondansetron, even for a few days, uncontrolled vomiting can send them to emergency rooms or force a treatment pause, doctors say.

Murphy, the cancer patient, has avoided all of that. She said coverage started for ondansetron after her City of Hope cancer center doctor requested it.

She faces a stretch of chemotherapy cycles that will extend well into the fall. The treatments leave her bedridden for days with nausea even while taking ondansetron.

“I would hate to not have it,” she said.

___

The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

United States News

FILE - Candidate Tina Peters speaks during a debate for the state leadership position Saturday, Feb...

Associated Press

Former Colorado county clerk Tina Peters to be sentenced for voting data scheme

A former Colorado county clerk and one-time hero to election conspiracists is set to be sentenced Thursday for leading a data-breach scheme inspired by the rampant false claims that voting fraud altered the result of the 2020 presidential race. A jury found Tina Peters guilty of most charges against her in August for orchestrating the […]

26 minutes ago

A male tarantula looks for a mate on the plains near La Junta, Colo., Friday, Sept. 27, 2024.(AP Ph...

Associated Press

Spider lovers scurry to Colorado town in search of mating tarantulas and community

LA JUNTA, Colo. (AP) — Love is in the air on the Colorado plains — the kind that makes your heart beat a bit faster, quickens your step and makes the hair on the back of your neck stand up. It’s tarantula mating season, when male spiders scurry out of their burrows in search of […]

28 minutes ago

Associated Press

How Black leaders in New York are grappling with Eric Adams and representation

NEW YORK (AP) — It wasn’t a shock to many Black New Yorkers that Mayor Eric Adams has surrounded himself with African American civil rights leaders, clergy and grassroots activists since his indictment last week on federal bribery charges. Adams, a Brooklyn native who rose from the city’s working class to its highest political office, […]

32 minutes ago

Associated Press

Middle East latest: Israeli strike kills at least 6 in Beirut as foreign nationals evacuate

At least six people were killed in an Israeli airstrike on an apartment building in Beirut overnight, Lebanon’s Health Ministry said, as governments around the world scrambled to evacuate their citizens from the country. Israel was pursuing a ground incursion into Lebanon against Hezbollah while conducting strikes in Gaza that killed dozens, including children. The […]

1 hour ago

Denise Wieck and her son Guy Boyd, who was shot in the eye with a ghost gun, pose in Ypsilanti, Mic...

Associated Press

The flood of ghost guns is slowing after regulation. It’s also being challenged in the Supreme Court

WASHINGTON (AP) — Guy Boyd was hanging out with friends he had known for years in Ann Arbor, Michigan, on the night an accidental gunshot tore into his head. The high schoolers were too young to buy guns legally, but federal and state laws didn’t apply to the gun parts kit his best friend bought […]

1 hour ago

Bud Stoddard, a regional church leader, holds a rendering of the temple planned by The Church of Je...

Associated Press

Mormon faith pushes ahead with global temple building boom despite cool reception in Las Vegas

LAS VEGAS (AP) — A historic building boom of big, bright Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints temples — beacons to the faithful with steeples pointing heavenward around the world — is meeting resistance in some parts of the U.S., including one place not really known for moderation. In Las Vegas, just a 30-minute […]

1 hour ago

Sponsored Articles

...

Collins Comfort Masters

Collins Comfort Masters: Leading the Way in HVAC and Plumbing Services in Arizona

Tempe, AZ – Since its inception in 1985, Collins Comfort Masters has been a cornerstone in the HVAC and plumbing industry in Phoenix and the surrounding Valley.

...

Dr. Shanyn Lancaster, Family & Sports Medicine physician, Midwestern University Comprehensive Care Clinic – Central Phoenix

Exercise is truly your best medicine

“You never slow down, you never grow old”. – Tom Petty

...

Collins Comfort Masters

Here’s how to be worry-free when your A/C goes out in the middle of summer

PHOENIX -- As Arizona approaches another hot summer, Phoenix residents are likely to spend more time indoors.

Limits to anti-nausea pill coverage wear on cancer patients and doctors