INSIGHT

PBS process proving a headache for migraine medications

By Sarah Matheson AM, Carolyn Oddie, Nick Li
Healthcare

In brief 10 min read

Migraine Australia has threatened to challenge the Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee's (PBAC) decision in the Federal Court if two groundbreaking migraine treatments are not included on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS). Challenging a PBAC decision is not straightforward. We take a look at the available options.

Key takeaways

  • PBAC decisions to recommend or not recommend a medicine for inclusion on the PBS are administrative decisions for which a merits review is not available. However, such decisions are amenable to judicial review, on application by a party adversely affected by the PBAC decision.
  • The PBAC may consider a wide range of matters in its deliberations and may include certain restrictions in its recommendation to the Minister for Health (Minister). While recommendations as to the funding caps that should apply may be beyond the PBAC's jurisdiction, courts have been reluctant to narrow the matters that the PBAC can consider. This can make judicial reviews of PBAC decisions challenging.
  • Even with a positive PBAC recommendation, the Minister must not declare a medicine for inclusion on the PBS until a price agreement for the medicine is reached between the Minister and the supplier.

Who in your organisation needs to know about this?

Legal counsel, pricing teams and health economists.

Approaches to unsatisfactory PBAC recommendations

Background

Recently, the Minister has been under increasing pressure from the Opposition and patient groups over alleged delays in listing migraine treatments Emgality and Ajovy on the PBS.

Emgality (galcanezumab) and Ajovy (fremanezumab) are monoclonal antibody treatments targeting the calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) pathway. Anti-CGRP antibody treatments have been widely hailed as a new era in the treatment of migraine.

An estimated 400,000 Australians suffer chronic migraine. The cost of the medication is driving the push for these treatments to be listed on the PBS, which would see the maximum charge to the patient at $41 per dose (or $6.60 for concession card holders), in contrast to the current retail price of Emgality (around $1,000 per month) and Ajovy (approximately $850 per month).

The PBAC recommended including Ajovy on the PBS in March 2020, and Emgality was recommended for inclusion in October 2019. However, neither treatment has yet been included on the PBS as the pricing arrangements are still to be agreed.

For a medicine to be included on the PBS, the product's sponsor must apply to the PBAC, which recommends to the Minister whether the product should be included or not. The Minister must also reach a price agreement with the supplier. If the PBAC makes a positive recommendation, and a price agreement is reached, the Minister may then declare by legislative instrument that the medicine be included on the PBS.1

The current disagreement relates to the PBAC's recommendation to include the two new treatments under the same annual funding cap as the existing migraine treatment, Botox. The problem for the sponsors is that the annual funding cap for Botox alone is exceeded within the first quarter of every year. This recommendation has drawn criticism from Migraine Australia, a patient advocacy organisation, suggesting that the PBAC's decision to include Emgality and Ajovy under the Botox cap was made in error as being a 'budget decision, not a health decision, and therefore not a decision PBAC should be making'.2

Challenging PBAC recommendations

Migraine Australia is not the sponsor applying to have the medicines listed on the PBS. Further, PBAC recommendations, and declarations by the Minister to include medicines on the PBS, are administrative decisions that are not open to merits review by the Administrative Appeals Tribunal.

So what is the basis of its threat to challenge the PBAC's recommendation in the Federal Court?

The main avenues for addressing unfavourable PBAC decisions are summarised in Figure 1 and include:

  • making a new submission to the PBAC for the same medicine (resubmission);
  • seeking an independent review of the PBAC decision; or
  • seeking judicial review of the PBAC decision.
Options for challenging PBS listing decisions
Options for challenging PBS listing decisions

Making a resubmission or seeking an independent review are options that are only available to the sponsor applicant. An applicant may also choose to make a resubmission if it is dissatisfied with the PBAC outcome (either the PBAC rejected its application, or made a positive recommendation with certain qualifications and limitations).

An independent review is only available where the PBAC rejects the application in full, but does not compel the PBAC to change its original decision. While in practice the PBAC will consider the report prepared  under an independent review, as the process has no legislative basis, there is no enforceable right to require an independent review or to compel the PBAC to reconsider its decision.

Judicial review under the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 (Cth) (ADJR Act) is the only recourse in the face of an unfavourable PBAC outcome by which the original decision may be quashed and the PBAC may be compelled by a court to make the decision again. Judicial review is also the only means by which an affected third party other than the sponsor applicant may challenge the decision of the PBAC. This could include patients who would benefit from better access to the medication if it is listed on the PBS

Under the ADJR Act, an aggrieved person must file an application for judicial review within 28 days of notification of the decision. The court has discretion to consider out-of-time applications, but the applicant will be required to explain the reason for the delay.

Common grounds for judicial review (whether of the PBAC’s or the Minister’s decision) include that:

  • procedures that were required by law to be observed in connection with the making of the decision were not observed;
  • the person who purported to make the decision did not have jurisdiction to make the decision;
  • the decision was not authorized by the enactment in pursuance of which it was purported to be made;
  • the decision-maker did not consider all relevant considerations or considered an irrelevant consideration;
  • there was no evidence or other material to justify the making of the decision or the decision was unreasonable; and
  • the decision was otherwise contrary to law.

Given the PBAC's broad statutory powers and functions, the court is likely to be reluctant to read down the breadth of matters that can be considered and the recommendations that may be made by the PBAC. Further, for a third party seeking to challenge a PBAC decision, there are additional challenges.

First, much of the material in a submission to the PBAC in an application to list a medicine on the PBS is confidential. It can therefore be difficult for affected third parties (eg patient advocacy groups, such as Migraine Australia) to obtain evidence to support any challenge.

Second, it may be more difficult for patient groups to show a decision having an adverse effect on patients in cases where the PBAC has made a positive recommendation (ie a recommendation to include the medicine on the PBS), but the issue is with any attendant conditions or restrictions.

However, given the nature of the criticism by Migraine Australia — which suggests it is not within the power of the PBAC to make the relevant recommendation about the cap — the primary issue will be the as yet untested scope of the PBAC's statutory powers and functions.

PBAC's role and the nature of its recommendations

Insight into why an affected party might seek judicial review of the PBAC's recommendation, and the difficulties associated with any such challenge, requires an understanding of the PBAC's role and the nature of its recommendations.

Under the National Health Act 1953 (Cth) (NH Act), the Minister cannot declare a medicine to be included on the PBS without the prior recommendation of the PBAC.3 The NH Act confers a dual function on the PBAC to:

  • make recommendations to the Minister as to the medicines that 'should be made available as pharmaceutical benefits'; and
  • advise the Minister upon any other matter concerning the PBS referred to it by the Minister.4

The matters that the PBAC may consider are broad and include (but are not limited to) the effectiveness and the cost of the therapy.5 In the course of its deliberations, the PBAC is entitled to inform itself in whatever manner it sees fit.6

In the current Emgality and Ajovy debate, a key question is whether it was within the PBAC's remit to make a recommendation as to the funding cap (namely, the Botox cap) under which the treatments should be listed.

Where the PBAC has an opinion that the medicine should only be included in certain circumstances, the NH Act permits it to specify the relevant circumstances in its recommendation.7 However, even though cost effectiveness is a matter the PBAC rightly considers, it is not clear that this permission was intended by the legislature to confer upon the PBAC a power to make recommendations with respect to the costing structure of a medicine to be listed on the PBS. Arguably, the PBAC's remit to recommend whether a medicine 'should' be included on the PBS does not encompass recommending any budgetary terms to which the medicine should be subject if it is to be included on the PBS. As Migraine Australia argues, this may be a political decision.

A further question that will need to be answered in the current case is whether the Minister is in fact bound by the conditions and restrictions specified in the PBAC recommendation. By analogy, there may be some support for the proposition that the Minister is not so bound. AstraZeneca Pty Ltd v Minister for Health and Ageing8 involved a review of a decision by the Minister under section 84AG of the NH Act to include a medicine in a particular therapeutic group. The court held that while the PBAC may recommend that the medicine be included on the PBS only in certain circumstances, the Minister is under no obligation to follow the recommendation.9

Section 84AG is quite different on its face to the discretion of the Minister under s85(2) of the NH Act to declare a medicine to be included on the PBS. Notably, s84AG(3) provides that the Minister 'may' have regard to the PBAC's advice. In contrast, s85(2) is silent on whether the Minister must declare the medicine in accordance with the conditions and restrictions specified by the PBAC. Accordingly, it is unclear whether the Minister must follow the conditions and restrictions recommended by the PBAC in declaring a medicine to be included on the PBS.

The wide remit of the PBAC means it may be difficult to quash a decision by judicial review. This may be why so few cases proceed to judgement and, in turn, why there is little published guidance.

In one example, GSK sought to quash a recommendation of the PBAC to vary an earlier recommendation to the Minister in relation to Zyban (bupropion hydrochloride). The court held that the PBAC was permitted to vary its previous recommendation, and rejected GSK's argument that this was beyond the jurisdiction conferred upon the PBAC under s101(3) of the NH Act.

Similarly, AstraZeneca failed in its attempt to quash a determination by the Minister relating to Crestor (rosuvastatin) by criticising the PBAC's consideration of its application.10 It sought to challenge the way the PBAC looked at the concept of 'therapeutic group' when the strength of the product was not interchangeable at the patient level. Whilst not finding for the applicant, the court did acknowledge that error on the part of the PBAC may invalidate the Minister's subsequent decision.11

On the other hand, Pfizer succeeded in having the original PBAC decision not to recommend Viagra (sildenafil citrate) quashed on grounds of procedural fairness. Specifically, that the PBAC failed to inform Pfizer it was taking into account information adverse to Pfizer's interests, thus affording Pfizer no opportunity to respond.12

Given these practical challenges and legal uncertainties in pursuing judicial review, it will usually be a more effective means for achieving the desired outcome if the interested party engages with the political process. It remains to be seen whether the political pressure applied by Migraine Australia (with the help of the Opposition) will achieve its desired result to get Emgality and Ajovy on the PBS.

Footnotes

  1. NH Act s85(2).

  2. Migraine Australia, Press Release 'Migraine Awareness Month is not 'Astroturf'' (17 June 2020).

  3. NH Act s101(4).

  4. NH Act s101(3).

  5. NH Act s101(3A); Pfizer Pty Ltd v Birkett (2001) 112 FCR 305 [47] and [50].

  6. GlaxoSmithKline Australia Pty Ltd v Anderson [2003] FCA 617 [49].

  7. NH Act s101(3C).

  8. [2011] FCA 487 (12 May 2011).

  9. GlaxoSmithKline Australia Pty Ltd v Anderson [2003] FCA 617 [19].

  10. AstraZeneca Pty Ltd v Minister for Health and Ageing [2011] FCA 487 (12 May 2011).

  11. AstraZeneca Pty Ltd v Minister for Health and Ageing [2011] FCA 487 (12 May 2011) [7].

  12. Pfizer Pty Ltd v Birkett (2001) 112 FCR 305 [77].