Access4Kids: A new model to pay for pediatric cell and gene therapies
Science is pioneering cures for pediatric rare diseases in a coming wave of new cell and gene therapies. However, the biopharmaceutical industry’s insistence on large patient populations and high profit margins may prevent these life-saving treatments from reaching the children who desperately need them. When successful therapeutics fail to see commercialization, experts say they have fallen into the “Valley of Death.”
To address this, leaders from pediatric healthcare, federal organizations, academia, industry and patient advocacy groups gathered at the Children’s National Research & Innovation Campus. Their objective: build a new framework to deliver these transformative drugs to clinics worldwide.
Meet the team forming Access4Kids, a nonprofit whose mission is to build new pathways to pay for cures and provide hope to children with life-limiting diseases. This group is working to change medicine and how we pay for it, under the leadership of Catherine Bollard, M.D., M.B.Ch.B., director of the Children’s National Center for Cancer and Immunology Research, Crystal Mackall, M.D., director of the Stanford Center for Cancer Cell Therapy, Julie Park, M.D., Oncology Department chair at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, and Alan Wayne, M.D., pediatrician-in-chief at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles.