California Healthline September 23, 2021
Michelle Andrews

It took years for Elle Moxley to get a diagnosis that explained her crippling gastrointestinal pain, digestion problems, fatigue, and hot, red rashes. And after learning in 2016 that she had Crohn’s disease, a chronic inflammation of the digestive tract, she spent more than four years trying medications before getting her disease under control with a biologic drug called Remicade.

So Moxley, 33, was dismayed to receive a notice from her insurer in January that Remicade would no longer be covered as a preferred drug on her plan. Another drug, Inflectra, which the Food and Drug Administration says has no meaningful clinical differences from Remicade, is now preferred. It is a “biosimilar” drug.

“I felt very powerless,” said Moxley, who...

Today's Sponsors

LEK
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

LEK

 
Topics: Biotechnology, Patient / Consumer, Pharma / Biotech, Provider
Walgreens to help bring cell and gene therapies to patients as it expands specialty pharmacy services
Merck beats earnings expectations, raises outlook on strong Keytruda and vaccine sales
Bristol Myers Squibb beats on revenue, launches $1.5 billion cost cuts as it posts quarterly loss
Will The White House’s Plan To Curb Drug Shortages Work?
Pharma Pulse 4/24/24: 5 Things You Should Know About Women's Health, Microsoft Makes Push Into Smaller AI Systems & more

Share This Article