The Daily - This Drug Could End H.I.V. Why Hasn’t It?
Episode Date: June 5, 2019Dr. Robert Grant developed a treatment — a daily pill known as pre-exposure prophylaxis, or PrEP — that could stop the AIDS crisis. We look at why that hasn’t happened. Guests: Dr. Grant, who ha...s been working on H.I.V. treatment and prevention for over 30 years, and Donald G. McNeil Jr., a science and health reporter for The New York Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Background reading: Gilead Sciences, the maker of Truvada, the only drug approved to prevent H.I.V. infection, will donate enough of the drug to supply 200,000 patients, but critics questioned the company’s motives.The high cost of drugs remains a major obstacle to ending the AIDS epidemic.Here’s more information about PrEP from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website.
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Discussion (0)
So I chose to pursue a career in science because I believed at some deep level in the transformative power of discovery, that scientific discovery, learning something new can transform our world as we know it.
And yet, over my 35 years, there's only been a few opportunities where I could really feel how that is true.
where I could really feel how that is true.
And one of those moments is when I learned the results of our clinical trial that I'd been working on for eight years that was aiming to prove
that a medicine taken before and after sexual exposure
would be effective and safe for preventing acquisition of HIV.
And so we knew that we were about to learn whether all of that work
was leading to
yet another failure in the HIV prevention field or whether we had discovered some new way of
preventing HIV. So I gathered in this windowless room in Bethesda on the NIH campus. Several of
us had traveled in some cases from places as far away as Peru to be there.
We were sitting around a table with our study sponsors, the investigators, the statisticians,
there was maybe 10 or 15 of us. And we walked through the data and we heard for the first time
that people who had taken the drug did not get HIV infected.
There was a round of applause.
They just, they clapped.
There was nothing to say.
People were stunned.
I think people realized that everything was different,
that everything was changed.
Scientists are celebrating what they're calling a major breakthrough in the fight against AIDS. A new study finds taking a drug called Truvada before exposure to HIV reduces the risk of infection in gay men by up to 73%.
This is the first time a study has been done that shows that taking a drug before exposure to HIV can prevent
infection. I think that we are in an era now for the first time when we can foresee the end of the
AIDS epidemic. From the New York Times, I'm Michael Bavaro. This is The Daily. Today, Dr. Robert Grant
developed a treatment that could finally solve the HIV crisis.
Why it hasn't.
It's Wednesday, June 5th.
As I was graduating, I remember talking to the dean of students,
and he says, well, what do you want to do with your medical career?
And I said, well, I'm going to work on HIV research. And he says, oh, goodness, you want to do with your medical career? And I said, well, I'm going to work on HIV research.
And he says, oh, goodness, Bob, don't do that.
Why?
Well, he said, by the time you're fully trained, the epidemic will be over.
To this day, I don't know if he was overly optimistic about how long it was going to take for the epidemic to end or whether he was overly pessimistic about how long it was going to take me to be fully trained.
or whether he was overly pessimistic about how long it was going to take me to be fully trained.
In either case, I just became really clear that this was okay with me.
If the epidemic ended tomorrow, I would retire and go fishing and tell stories about how there was a deadly disease that was among us for a while
and disrupted our connections and our sex life and killed people when they were young for no reason.
After years of doing research
in the early 2000s into treating HIV, he turns his focus to trying to prevent HIV. And the concept
he comes up with is pre-exposure prophylaxis or PrEP. Donald G. McNeil Jr. has been covering HIV
for decades. Which means taking one pill of HIV medicine per day, a small dose, to prevent you
from getting the disease. You know, I remember, you know, saying, well, the next big task here
is a vaccine. We need an HIV vaccine. And yet, you know, try after try, the vaccines for HIV
were not proving to be effective. And that's when I think many of us became interested in the possibility
that the same antiretroviral drugs that were good for treatment could also be used for prevention.
So he puts together a trial and eventually gets funding for it from the federal government and
the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Our initial proposal was to use a medicine called tenofovir.
Tenofovir is a drug that under the brand name Truvada was already
being used for HIV treatment. He wanted to see whether or not it would work for HIV prevention.
And the drug company that makes it was willing to donate enough doses for the trial.
At that point, we chose to study Truvada for PrEP.
Dr. Grant got the impression that Truvada would soon be out from under patent protection.
And what made you believe that, that it would be going off patent?
Well, it had been invented in 1985.
There were colleagues, friends at Gilead who said, you know, don't worry about it.
By the time your research is done and it's proven that PrEP is effective, the drug would be off patent.
Which meant that the generic companies would enter the market and make cheaper versions available soon.
And that's one of the reasons he chose that drug for the trial.
That was what I was led to believe.
That's what I led my study sponsors to believe.
And it seemed clear that by 2010, the medicine would be available in generic form.
in generic form. I'm not quite sure how we got that impression because Gilead argues that its patents last until 2021 on the drug. But every drug is covered by multiple patents. You can
patent the chemical, the process for making the chemical. You can patent dosages. You can patent
delivery forms, you know, pill versus patch, things like that. So there are many, many ways
to patent a drug and keep your exclusive right to be the only marketer of it. And so Dr. Grant begins a trial in around 2002.
So this clinical trial is being paid for by the federal government, by taxpayers.
That's right.
And private foundations, not by the pharmaceutical company that makes this drug, not by Gilead.
That's right.
And Gilead simply donates the medicine to be used as part of this clinical trial. That's right. And Gilead simply donates the medicine to be used as part of this clinical trial.
That's right.
So he intentionally works with Gilead for, among other reasons,
the idea that this drug at the end of all this, if it worked,
would be available in a relatively inexpensive way
to lots and lots of people who might need it.
In theory.
We were able to recruit 2,500 people in 11 sites in six countries. The trial
lasted eight years and it was a huge success. What we found is that the people who had received the
active form of the drug had much lower HIV infection rates. And if they actually took
the medicine daily, no one got infected. So then the trial ends. It's a success.
They've shown that when people take this drug every day, the vast majority of them don't
get HIV.
What happens next?
Everybody assumed, you know, now men are going to be on it, you know, in the United States
are going to all be on it immediately.
That doesn't happen.
Why not?
As far as I can tell, two reasons.
One, Gilead didn't advertise it, and they never explained why.
But the obvious reason is using a drug as a preventative is different from using it for treatment.
When you treat somebody, they're already sick, so they're not likely to sue.
When you give a drug to somebody who's healthy, if they happen to get sick anyway, they might sue.
The other huge reason people didn't get on Amass is the price.
Tell me exactly why the pricing.
I think it was around $14,000 a year when this new use
started, and then the price has risen up to pretty close to $20,000 a year. That's a very big price
tag. Yeah, it's a high price, and it's a high profit margin because we know that it only costs
less than $60 a year to make. So something that costs $60 a year, Gilead is charging upwards of $14,000 a year for.
Correct.
Well, that's almost $14,000 in pure profit.
That's the way the drug industry works in this country.
Most chemicals don't cost all that much to make.
I mean, once you've got a giant factory-sized process line going, many of these drugs can be made literally for pennies a pill.
many of these drugs can be made literally for pennies a pill.
But because they're patented and nobody else can sell them and the seller can name his price,
they name what they think the market can bear.
So what kind of response has there been to the high price of Truvada?
The high price of Truvada keeps people from getting the drug
because to get over the high price
or to get somebody else to pay for the drug for you is an enormous bureaucratic hurdle. You've got to either do
it through your insurance company or if you're not on Medicaid, you gotta get on Medicaid. If
you're not on Medicare, you gotta get on Medicare. You know, we really, there ought to be a million
people on this drug in the country. That's the number of people who are at high risk of getting
HIV. And now there are only about 270,000 people in the country. That's a tremendously underserved market for a very effective thing that acts like a vaccine.
I'm devastated that only 14% of people who could benefit from PrEP are getting it in the United
States. And I'm devastated that the HIV transmission rates nationwide have not decreased since 2013. You know, this was 20 years of work and risk and effort
to end HIV transmission. And we all know that it can happen if we actually use treatment and use
PrEP, but it's hard to use at a price tag of $2,100 per person per month.
It does not matter if it's not used and if it's not available for everyone who needs it,
and it does not matter unless we can use it to end HIV transmission.
This initiative is designed to make sure all people get access to PrEP and comprehensive
prevention services.
Why are you putting the dollars on the table? The programs need more money. Give them more
money.
And it's terribly expensive and I think we really need to have a conversation as a community
about how we're being taken advantage of by the drug companies and in particular Gilead.
If anything happens, why didn't you tell us about it?
Gilead, your price gouging is killing people.
Your price of true blood is so high that people in the U.S. cannot afford it.
So we have additional questions that have come from all of you,
and I know you want to hear them.
No, we have recommendations.
We'll be right back. So what has Gilead's response been to this call to make this drug cheaper and therefore more accessible?
The two things Gilead's done in response is they have announced that a generic company will be able to enter the field one year earlier than expected in 2020 instead of 2021. And just a few weeks ago, the Trump administration announced that it reached
a deal with Gilead for Gilead to donate to 200,000 patients anywhere in the country.
The Trump administration announced Thursday that Gilead Sciences, which manufactures Truvada,
plans to donate the drug for as many as 200,000 people for up to 11 years.
How big a deal are either of those? How meaningful are they?
Having generic competition one year earlier means that the process of the price dropping
will start one year earlier. It probably won't be instantaneous. It usually takes four or five
generic companies entering the field before the price really dropped substantially, and that may take longer. And 200,000 free doses is an important move, but the AIDS activists are suspicious of
this move. Why are they suspicious? Because of the terms of the deal. Roughly a million people
need the drug. Only about 250,000 are on it. So it's not going to cover everybody who needs it.
And most of the people who needs it are poor, gay, black, and Hispanic men who are not very well connected to the medical care system.
The deal is only for 11 years, and this is a drug you need to take for life.
But the other part of the deal that makes the activists most suspicious is the fact that in the middle of the donation, everybody will be switched over from Truvada to Gilead's new drug, Descovy,
as soon as it's approved for PrEP. Descovy is a slightly different form of tenofovir that
supposedly has fewer side effects, although tenofovir is a relatively safe drug and Descovy
has some side effects of its own. The fear that the activists have is that people are going to
start demanding Descovy once they've been switched onto it.
And Descovy is now patented for the next 20 years, and Gilead says it'll price it for $20,000 a year.
They see this as a way of creating a market for Descovy.
Ah, I think I'm starting to understand.
Okay.
So to activists, this feels a bit like a bait and switch. It's kind of insidious in the sense that it's not nearly enough pills to helpor to stay on Dyscovy, even though the
federal government's going to say, wait a minute, we've got really cheap Truvada here, you know,
so we want to put you on that. It's making a market for a new drug that otherwise would have
cost them a lot of advertising money to create. And it's drying up the demand for generic Truvada
because nobody's going to want it anymore. Right. Donating the Truvada costs them almost nothing
because we know that it, you know, costs less than $60 a year to make.
So the activists estimate that that donation is costing them less than $10 million a year.
But they're taking a tax deduction for something like the retail cost, not the cost of making it.
That's how donations work for the pharmaceutical industry.
You donate something that costs you pennies to make and you take the tax deduction for the dollars that you sell it for.
So Gilead is theoretically making money in this donation, possibly.
I'm not with the IRS, but in theory, yeah.
But the larger picture is that this is part of the Trump administration's goal to help end the HIV epidemic, which helps American citizens.
But the activists fear that the result of it is going to be helping a drug company increase its profits.
Is this a novel strategy to donate drugs like this?
No, it actually echoes something that happened 20 years ago when AIDS was ravaging Africa.
More than 35 million people around the world have AIDS, and about two-thirds of them are African.
The death rate in Kenya is more than 500 a day.
HIV drugs cost $15,000 a year.
The drug companies did not want to lower their prices.
Originally, they completely turned their back on Africa
and let people die because they were charging those prices.
And there was an enormous outcry.
This is a crime.
You cannot have 40 million people dead
and then more dying every year.
And then the issue should be about money.
It seemed incredibly immoral for them to ignore the market, so their first
offer was to give a certain number of free
or deeply discounted drugs into the market
basically in order to make themselves look good.
And if you can give enough free drugs
into a market, you dry up the demand
and that keeps everybody quiet because there's no need, no incentive for the generic makers to get into it.
Because the pills are already there.
Right. Because the pills are already there.
And meanwhile, you're getting large tax deductions for the pills you're giving away.
So if you can keep them out of the market, you kept an entire world of competition out of your field.
So what Gilead is doing with this donation is actually following a pretty well-worn playbook,
just doing what pharmaceutical companies have long done before, actually in the course of
the HIV epidemic.
So maybe no one should be all that surprised that that's how this played out.
It's one of many, many market-protecting plays that the drug companies have learned to use,
yeah.
I realize now that I was naive.
Everywhere I went, people would raise the concern
that PrEP is never going to be inexpensive enough to actually use
and that the price is always going to be high.
And I would assure people that one way or another,
we will find a way to lower the price to what it can be and should be.
And what I regret is that I feel like I left that promise
without staying involved enough to make sure that we made good on that promise.
And when I discovered just last year
that the price has been increased year after year and that so-called efforts to make this available
to everyone who needs it are half-hearted, I said, look, you know, this is not correct for me. I need
to get back into this and stand by the promises that I made that we will find a way to end this epidemic. And so at one point,
I got a call from the House Oversight Committee's staff, and they wanted to hear me talk about my
story. And I told them. And about a week after that, they invited me to the hearing.
I now want to welcome our witnesses. Dr. Robert Grant, professor of medicine at the
University of California, San Francisco.
So Dr. Grant goes and testifies before Congress a few weeks ago. I devoted the last 20 years of my career to the development of PrEP.
I am here today at my own expense because I promised that PrEP would become available if proven.
We have not kept that promise.
I come today to ask for your help.
And he basically asked Congress to step in,
arguing that Gilead has essentially made it impossible
for an affordable version of the drug to get to market.
In my experience, the root cause of low PrEP access is the high price.
And the Gilead CEO is also there testifying and answering questions from Congress.
And Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez from New York
asks about the price in other countries.
So the list price is almost $2,000 in the United States.
Why is it $8 in Australia?
Truvada still has patent protection in the United States,
and in the rest of the world it is generic.
So, Donald, on paper this feels kind of sinister,
but isn't this just how the system works in this country? A pharmaceutical company has the right to defend its intellectual property, its investment, its years of work in creating these drugs, no matter how much they actually technically cost to make each pill. And that's just how our market system functions.
and that's just how our market system functions.
Yes, they're playing by the rules, but they help make the rules. And the big example of that is that in this country, unlike any other country,
federal agencies that buy drugs from the drug companies
are not allowed to negotiate with those companies over the price of the drugs.
When you go to buy a car, you're a big buyer of a big
ticket item. You can negotiate over price, but the federal government is stuck. It can't negotiate
prices. And they're a very big ticket buyer. Absolutely. That's unusual and anti-business,
and it's only in the United States that that's done because the pharmaceutical lobby is so
powerful. What else conceivably could the U.S. government do to bring down the cost of this drug? Well, what the activists wanted to do is literally cancel
the patent. There is provision under American law called margin rights. This use for this drug was
substantially paid for by the United States government. They paid for the trial that
established PrEP. So if the drug is not available
at a reasonable price,
the government has march-in rights
to go in, take the patent away
from the company,
and assign it to somebody else.
Literally march-in.
Yeah.
Because of their financial stake.
It would be totally legal
under American law to do that.
The government has historically
always hesitated to take away
any sort of patent rights
from the pharmaceutical
industry. Why? Because they have a very powerful lobby. And there's also perhaps the specter,
which doesn't feel entirely American or capitalist system of kind of nationalization,
taking something from the private sector, kind of claiming it for the public sector.
Well, actually, the government does this kind of thing all the time. I mean, we have a concept of eminent domain. When you need to build a highway,
you can take away somebody's home. More importantly, this is actually a license that's
granted by the government. That's what a patent is. So the government can take back a patent
license the same way it can take away your driving license or your hunting license if you abuse it.
And there's precedent for this. In the wake of the
9-11 attacks, the country was hit with anthrax. Supposedly, there was only one cure for anthrax,
and that was ciprofloxacin. Bayer, the same company that makes aspirin, held the patent
on ciprofloxacin, and they were charging $13 a pill. The government wanted 200 million pills
for its stockpile, and Bayer said it'll be $13.
And the government said, no, that's too much.
And if you don't lower the price, we can take away your patent on Cipro.
And Bayer said, OK, the price is $1.50.
Bump.
End of problem.
And for public health purposes, the activists argue the government should be doing it because
the company is charging so much that people can't get a vaccine-like medication that they need.
that people can't get a vaccine-like medication that they need.
So, Donald, what should we make of the fact that the government has not done any of the things that you just described to lower the price?
I think we should make it that the government doesn't recognize how important it is to stop this disease,
that you have to kind of pull out all the barriers in order to stop HIV. And that means making it as easy to get on PrEP as it is to get a measles shot in this country.
If you want to stop a disease, you have to protect everybody who's at risk.
And you need to make it easy to protect them. Either you have the government has to go do it
itself or make it really, really easy and cheap for people who are motivated enough to seek it out for themselves to go get it.
Is what you're really saying that the government doesn't think AIDS is that big of a crisis?
AIDS has been around for more than 30 years now.
And believe me, if this had been available back in the early days of the epidemic, this would have been the vaccine against HIV.
Now that we've gone on for 30 years and it's taken a long time to create these drugs
and then realize that they could be used for prevention too,
it's like the government's interest has waned.
You don't see people dying of HIV anymore, so you don't worry about it.
And unfortunately, most of the people getting HIV now are poor and black and living in the South,
not gay and well-educated
and living in New York City. So the political arm-twisting that goes on when you have a large,
powerful lobby in New York City and Washington, D.C. just isn't there anymore.
I was thinking this morning that I wanted to tell you a story.
I was thinking this morning that I wanted to tell you a story.
This project went on over many years, and there were just so many people who gave so much to make PrEP research possible.
And there's one person I wanted to mention in particular,
a sociologist that worked with me for 12 years.
And he worked in my lab, and he guided the design of these studies. His name is
Jeff McConnell. And in 2014, he died. He died shortly after the end of my research on PrEP.
He was a man living with HIV infection. And one of the questions I remember him asking
was, if we discovered a way to end the HIV epidemic, would we?
And I realize now that I don't know the answer to that question.
I feel like he's still asking that question.
If we found a way to end the HIV epidemic, would we?
And, you know, at the time I was optimistic and I was naive. I said, of course we would.
Yeah. If we knew how to end it, we would end it. And right now I have to say, I'm not sure.
I'm not sure we'd end it. Cause I do know that we know how to end this epidemic.
We have all the technology we need to end this epidemic. And yet we don't. We don't end this epidemic. And so I feel like I
lied to Jeff. I told him, yes, we would. And now I have to say, I'm not sure. I'm not sure we would
end the epidemic, even once we know how to do it. because we do know how to do it, and we're not doing it.
We'll be right back.
We'll be right back. that Brexit would eventually happen, despite May's repeated failure to negotiate a deal.
I would say, yeah, I would think that it will happen,
and it probably should happen.
This is a great, great country, and it wants its own identity.
It wants to have its own borders.
It wants to run its own affairs. The president said it was in the best interest of Britain
to leave the European Union,
and promised that the U.S. would negotiate a, quote, phenomenal trade deal with Britain to ease its transition out of the EU.
And it is right to respond to this tragedy with decisive action.
Let Virginia set an example for the nation that we can respond to tragedy with action.
On Tuesday, in response to the mass shooting in Virginia Beach,
Virginia's governor, Ralph Northam, called for a special session of the state legislature
to vote on a series of gun control measures.
I will propose many of the same ideas that we have proposed before.
Universal background checks,
a ban on assault weapons
to include suppressors and bump stocks.
Many of the measures proposed by Northam
have already been voted down by Virginia lawmakers,
and they face an uncertain fate
in the Republican-controlled legislature.
After Northam spoke,
the Speaker of the Virginia House of Delegates,
Kirk Cox,
called Northam's request for a special session,
quote,
hasty and suspect.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Bavaro.
See you tomorrow.