Manufactured by
AstraZeneca,
Zoladex provides pain relief for women with
endometriosis and is a treatment for
breast cancer. Photograph: Olena Malik/Getty Images View image in fullscreen Manufactured by
AstraZeneca,
Zoladex provides pain relief for women with
endometriosis and is a treatment for
breast cancer. Photograph: Olena Malik/Getty Images
breast cancer and
endometriosis drug
Zoladex is being pulled from
Australia. How will women be affected? The vital medicine, made by
AstraZeneca, will not be available from November, possibly leaving thousands of women without treatment Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast Thousands of women could be left without vital
breast cancer and
endometriosis medicine when
AstraZeneca removes its treatment from the
Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS) and the private market, experts warn.
Zoladex will no longer be available in
Australia from November, as the ABC first reported, but some existing patients will still be able to access it for an additional six months.
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breast cancer Network
Australia also says there have been increasing delays to list other critical
breast cancer drugs on the PBS, which they fear is due to policy changes in the US and global uncertainty. What will this mean for women who use
Zoladex, and what happens next? Manufactured by
AstraZeneca, the Goserelin 3.6mg implant, also known as
Zoladex, is a
breast cancer and
endometriosis treatment that suppresses a patient’s ovaries from producing oestrogen. It is also used for fertility preservation in young women receiving chemotherapy, and reducing the risk of the recurrence of early-stage hormone receptor-positive
breast cancer. The treatment (a small pellet) is inserted into the skin once a month.
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breast cancer Network
Australia estimates about 7,000 Australian women with
breast cancer access the medicine every year, but in the last 18 months there were 94,000
Zoladex prescriptions filled. “It is designed to suppress the ovaries or put the ovaries to sleep for those people with hormone positive receptor
breast cancer, so that means we try and reduce the production of oestrogen,” said BCNA’s policy director
Vicki Durston. Dr
Nisha Khot, president of the
Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, said it provides crucial pain relief for women with
endometriosis. It can be used to reduce pain symptoms before
endometriosis surgery, before fertility treatment or for longer term pain relief. “[Removing the medicine] is absolutely life-altering for women who are currently able to carry on with the resemblance of a normal life, to work, participate in the community. Without it perhaps they will not be able to function as they have been.” Nial Wheate, a professor of pharmaceutical chemistry at Macquarie University, said the decision was likely commercial, due to the production of a higher-dose
Zoladex 10.8mg, which is available for prostate cancer patients. The higher-dose pellet, which is administered every three months rather than one month, is currently not available to
breast cancer or
endometriosis patients on the PBS. For price comparison, the Australian PBS pays $213.50 for the 3.6mg implant, while in the US it can cost more than $1,100 per implant. For the 10.8mg implant, the Australian PBS pays $714.89 while the US pays more than $3,100. Wheate said there may not be economic benefit for
AstraZeneca in manufacturing two formulations of the same medicine. “There’s a low dose and the high dose and the former is being pulled from the market and from the PBS. That says to me that it’s not being pulled because of any PBS issue or any political issue,” he said. “Companies run their facilities pretty much 24/7 when they’re manufacturing so they don’t have a lot of capacity to change things up. So if you want to increase the production of a current medicine or new medicine you’ve got to find space to do that.” A spokesperson for the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) told Guardian
Australia that
AstraZeneca stated a lack of commercial viability for its delisting of the medication. But Durston said the pharmaceutical giant was not transparent in its decision. “
AstraZeneca has not been transparent on what those commercial and global reasons are … Australian women have the right to know why they’re doing this.” View image in fullscreen
AstraZeneca said maintaining continuity of care for cancer patients is essential. Photograph: Phil Noble/Reuters Guardian
Australia understands the decision was not directly linked to the Trump administration’s tariffs on pharmaceuticals or the president’s most favoured nation pharmaceutical pricing executive order. What will this mean for existing patients using
Zoladex?
AstraZeneca has applied to the TGA to list its higher-dose
Zoladex treatment for
breast cancer and
endometriosis patients. Once approved it would be eligible to be added to the PBS. In a statement, the company said that maintaining continuity of care for cancer patients is essential, and it would allow eligible patients to continue accessing the medicine for free for six months after it is pulled. “We are committed to supporting access to the
Zoladex monthly implant as a treatment option for eligible patients without alternative treatment pathways,” a spokesperson said. “For these patients
AstraZeneca will provide free access to the
Zoladex monthly implant in
Australia following its discontinuation from 1 November 2026.” Unless the higher dose is available to women on the PBS, women would be left with limited choices, Khot said. “One would be to spend the money for the higher dose, or use some form of other medication or way to control their pain which may or may not work for them,” Khot said. Durston said that the three-month higher-dose treatment would not work for all patients currently on the 3.6mg implant. “A lot of women are confused and angry. We’ve spoken to numerous clinicians around the world and the consensus is that the three-month dose will not be effective in all circumstances for those with
breast cancer,” Durston said. “For women who need to use aromatase inhibitors [a hormone therapy used alongside
Zoladex] there is not sufficient evidence to suggest a three-month dose is effective for them. And right now they won’t have another option once this drug is removed from the Australian market.” The Department of Health said it would work to ensure patients weren’t left without access to treatment. A spokesperson said a company “cannot be compelled by government to continue to list a product on the PBS”. “The Department is continuing to work with
AstraZeneca and other pharmaceutical companies to explore options that would mitigate the impact of the delist on patients as much as possible, including exploring options for patients for whom there are no PBS-listed alternative therapies,” they said. What about other medications not yet listed on the PBS? Durston said she was concerned about the US tariffs on pharmaceuticals and Donald Trump’s most favoured nation pricing policy, which required pharma companies to provide the US with medicines at far lower prices. There are implications for
Australia’s PBS, which negotiates down medicine prices directly with those pharmaceutical companies. “There are a number of other drugs that are being stuck in pricing negotiations that have been [going for] months and months,” Durston said. Companies pushing for higher prices that are not supported by clinical evidence can lead to multiple submissions to the Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee, and delay a listing. At the same time, the government is reviewing recommendations from its health technology assessment review, released in September 2024, to improve access to new medicines. Monique Ryan, an independent MP and former paediatric neurologist, wrote to the health minister calling for alternative arrangements and pointed to the lack of reform after the review. “While the government has taken over two years to work through the recommendations of the review, Australian patients are experiencing the medicine access failures the review was meant to prevent.
Zoladex is a stark example,” she said. “The PBAC has identified unmet need, women with
breast cancer and
endometriosis face losing a critical treatment from November, and the government’s inadequate response is … unfinished reform.” Explore more on these topics Health Pharmaceuticals industry Australian politics Women's health
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