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Virginia Postrel's avatar

I know about Skyrizi from the many, many direct-to-consumer commercials they run on various streaming services. Your story suggests that many doctors do need nudges from their patients with psoriasis asking about this drug they’ve seen on TV. The Trump administration is making noises about banning such ads.

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RH's avatar
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The experience you described is very similar to the experience I had last year with a drug called XYWAV for Narcolepsy. It was a weird experience that felt off and suspicious from the start. The quoted price for the drug was astronomical, but there was a large team of people working to push it through my insurance. They assured me that my costs would be minimal. The pharmaceutical company gave me my first month for free while they worked on my insurance. In the end, the side effects were not worth the minimal benefit I got from the drug, so I stopped taking it after a couple of months.

I agree that the American Medical System is both amazing and clunky. There is VERY BIG money pushing Big Pharma to produce. But the easy drugs have been done, and the researchers are under intense pressure to push the envelope for drugs that will give high ROI.

XYWAV is a weird drug with complicated dosage requirements, lots of side effects, minimal benefit, based on shaky research with a huge team of people financially invested in getting patients to take it.

I question the ethics of the Mayo Clinic doctor who cold-called me, suggesting the drug after finding my condition in a medical records search. He was on the research team for XYWAV. He was professionally and financially connected to the success of a questionable drug.

This is a potentially dangerous situation, and I'm not sure the safeguards in place are strong enough.

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