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Obstacles to clinical trials

Pancreatic Cancer | Last Active: Jan 24 10:48am | Replies (13)

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@val64

Insurance is very important when you're on a clinical trial. The company pays for their drug, doctor's appointments, and maybe a couple of other things. I also get $50 every time I show up.

You and your insurance company pay for labs, scans, infusions, possibly chemo drugs, and for any hospitalizations that result from drug side effects. Two weeks into a clinical trial that I started last summer, I landed in the hospital for 4 days with neutropenic fever. I got a big bill, and the insurance company got a bigger bill. And that was at an in-network hospital.

Traditional Medicare is great for participating in non-local clinical trials. But if you're too young, you need to have out-of-network coverage AND have a decent amount of cash that you're willing to put into it.

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I guess I shouldn't be surprised that clinical trials for someone who has no other medical options left would only be available for those able to financially subsidize care associated with the trial but it does seem to be a common situation in receiving health care in general.