Dr Neil Minkoff on Hopes, Payer Reactions If a Gene Therapy Is Approved for Sickle Cell Disease

Video

Neil Minkoff, MD, chief medical officer and vice president, EmpiraMed, discusses his hopes if the first gene therapy for sickle cell disease is approved and if he has any concerns with payer reactions.

Neil Minkoff, MD, chief medical officer and vice president, EmpiraMed, discusses his hopes if the first gene therapy for sickle cell disease is approved and if he has any concerns with payer reactions.

Transcript

What are your hopes if the first gene therapy for sickle cell disease is approved?

Well obviously, the hope is highly effective medication. So, what we’re really looking for is something that is as close to curative as possible with a very long tail, which is to say, you do it once, you really are getting benefit—it’s for 5 years, 10 years, 15 years—because that’s the big open question: What is the length of the effectiveness of any of these therapies? But the hope is that you’ll have something that can be administered once and will provide at least a decade or more of effectiveness.

Do you have any concerns about payer reactions if gene therapy for sickle cell arrives?

I have concerns about payer reactions, as a former payer myself, across all the different types of gene therapy because we’re entering unchartered waters, and we don’t know exactly how we’re going to amortize the cost of very expensive therapies. The therapies that have been approved to date are all 7 figure therapies, and we don’t necessarily have a great mechanism right now of tracking patients over time to see how much of that benefit is accruing and to whom it should accrue. So, we need to figure out as payers different ways to accrue or escrow or find ways to get third parties to manage that interaction.

Recent Videos
Barry J Byrne, MD, PhD, the chief medical advisor of MDA and a physician-scientist at the University of Florida
Barry J Byrne, MD, PhD, the chief medical advisor of MDA and a physician-scientist at the University of Florida
Sarah Larson, MD, the medical director of the Immune Effector Cell Therapy Program in the Division of Hematology/Oncology at David Geffen School of Medicine at University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA)
David Porter, MD, the director of cell therapy and transplant at Penn Medicine
David Porter, MD, the director of cell therapy and transplant at Penn Medicine
Georg Schett, MD, vice president research and chair of internal medicine at the University of Erlangen – Nuremberg
Manali Kamdar, MD, the associate professor of medicine–hematology and clinical director of lymphoma services at the University of Colorado
Manali Kamdar, MD, the associate professor of medicine–hematology and clinical director of lymphoma services at the University of Colorado
Ben Samelson-Jones, MD, PhD, assistant professor pediatric hematology, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania and Associate Director, Clinical In Vivo Gene Therapy, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia
© 2025 MJH Life Sciences

All rights reserved.