THE US CENTERS for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) on Wednesday said it has finalized a decision to cover expensive cancer cell therapies sold by Gilead Sciences Inc. and Novartis AG.

CMS, which runs Medicare — the federal government’s health plan for Americans 65 and older — said it will cover the US Food and Drug Administration-approved therapies when provided in health care facilities that have programs in place to track patient outcomes.

The nationwide decision clears up “a lot of confusion” about coverage and will help patients get access to the novel therapies, known as CAR-T, CMS Administrator Seema Verma said during a conference call with reporters on Wednesday.

The decision follows the agency’s finalization last week of a proposal to raise its maximum CAR-T payment to 65% of estimated costs from 50%. Some hospitals will also be eligible for supplemental payments in certain cases.

Both Gilead’s Yescarta and Novartis’ Kymriah were approved in 2017 for certain kinds of lymphoma and leukemia. But government and private health plans have balked at their high price of at least $373,000 for a one-time treatment before hospital costs, which can bring the bill for a single patient to over a million dollars.

More than half of lymphoma patients eligible for CAR-T therapy are estimated to be covered by Medicare. — Reuters