Begin Rant: Making the economic case for #MigraineLove

I’ve been doing a whole lot of emotional bleating about #MigraineLove – the #NoAimovigNoVote petition I started to get funding for migraine research and awareness, and importantly, to get the new breakthrough class of medications to prevent migraine on the PBS. The only one of this new CGRP class currently available in Australia is Aimovig – hence, no Aimovig, no vote. (Emgality has been approved by the TGA to be available 1 June.)

This is a long post, so here are the bullet points:

  • There’s a new class of medication, called CGRP (Calcitonin Gene-Related Peptide) medications, that prevent migraine attacks. They are the first drugs ever developed to specifically prevent migraine attacks, and they work. The three brand names either available now or soon are Aimovig, Emgality and Ajovy.
  • 4.9m Australians suffer from migraine, most of them working age women. Around 400,000 Australians are significantly disabled by chronic or serious forms of migraine.
  • Migraine costs the Australian economy $35b a year, most in lost productivity.
  • Listing the entire class of medications without any restrictions or caps is likely to cost a billion dollars. The estimated cost with restrictions and caps for the first 3 is $70-$100 million.
  • Listing these meds on the PBS just for chronic and severe patients will potentially save the federal budget $1.4b in up front savings, plus flow on benefits from increased tax revenue and productivity, and decreased impact on the health system.
  • Listing these meds for episodic (less than 15 migraine days per month) will unlock even greater economic benefits, including contributing to decreasing the gender pay gap.
  • There’s a significant access issue that needs to be addressed: there aren’t enough neurologists, especially in rural areas.

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