- 13 September 2019
- 3 min read
Cystic fibrosis patients in Scotland get access to life-extending drug
SubscribeThe treatment will be made available in Scotland after a pricing agreement was reached with the Government there.

Vertex reach pricing agreement with Scottish Government
Hundreds of cystic fibrosis sufferers in Scotland will be able to get drugs which can help extend their life, after a deal on costs was reached.
Pharmaceutical firm Vertex International has reached a pricing agreement with the Scottish Government – and said that, as a result, approximately 400 patients will be able to benefit from Orkambi and Symkevi.
The drugs will be made available for five years with a “confidential discount”.
It comes just a month after the Scottish Medicines Consortium (SMC) – the body which approves drugs for use by the NHS in Scotland – rejected the treatments, saying the “cost in relation to its health benefits was not sufficient”.
£100,000 per year per patient
The cost of Orkambi – reported as being £100,000 a year per patient – means that in England the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice) has already deemed it not cost-effective.
David Ramsden, chief executive of the Cystic Fibrosis Trust, hailed the access agreement in Scotland as a “landmark moment for the hundreds of people with cystic fibrosis and their families across Scotland who have tirelessly campaigned for years to access these drugs”.

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