The gain in expected overall Mangafodipir (trisodium) web survival be proportionately greater as well? If, for example, the cost for an initial combination were 200,000 would it be just and reasonable to expect two-year survival in order to justify social coverage of these costs? If so, should we be doing research aimed at determining and identifying whether there are sub-groups of, for example, non-small cell lung cancer patients who would meet this survival goal and others who might fall far short? If these others fall short because of the more rapid development of drug resistance and cancer progression, does health care justice really require that we then try an alternative combination of these targeted therapies, and do the research that would inform us of the alternate combinations of drugs that are likely to achieve additional progression free survival or overall survival? If so, how many such combinations are metastatic cancer patients entitled to as a matter of health care justice? Are they, for example, entitled to any combination, no matter how many combinations, that yield at least three additional months of predicted survival? The obvious problem I am calling attention to is that a strategy such as this might be able to achieve five years of survival that these patients would otherwise not have, which is a substantial gain in life expectancy. But the cost of such an achievement at current drug costs might easily C.I. 75535 msds exceed a million dollars per case. This is a cost that might be socially affordable for relatively small cohorts of patients. But the 580,000 cancer patients who currently die each year in the US (or the 1.3 million in the EU) would all be candidates for such life-prolonging efforts [53]. The aggregate annual costs for just these cohorts of metastatic cancer patients would readily exceed 100 billion per year in the US, and would threaten to crowd out many other health care needs with less social visibility by making such large demands on health care resources [54]. What sorts of limits and trade-offs are fair in these circumstances, all things considered? We noted earlier that cancer is primarily a disease of the elderly. We also noted that a growing proportion of the populations of both the US and the EU are aging, and that the elderly in the US consume three times as much health care per capita as the non-elderly. Costly advances in cancer treatment would further skew that proportion to the potential disadvantage of the non-elderly. This is another problem of health care justice if we believe that all in our society ought to have a fair opportunity to achieve a normal life expectancy if that is medically possible. But then that raises an additional ragged edge question. Should we permit the non-elderly with metastatic cancer greater access to these future combinations of targeted therapies, even at a substantially greater per capita cost, simply because we ought to accord them an opportunity to achieve as close to a normal life expectancy as medically possible?J. Pers. Med. 2013, 3 4.3. Assumptions and LimitationsAs noted earlier, our ethical judgments in medical ethics and health care policy are fact-sensitive. If the facts on which certain judgments of health care justice are based are substantially altered, it will be necessary to alter those judgments. One reviewer has noted that if the costs of these targeted therapies are very substantially reduced, perhaps as they go off-patent, then the problems of health care justice outlined in thi.The gain in expected overall survival be proportionately greater as well? If, for example, the cost for an initial combination were 200,000 would it be just and reasonable to expect two-year survival in order to justify social coverage of these costs? If so, should we be doing research aimed at determining and identifying whether there are sub-groups of, for example, non-small cell lung cancer patients who would meet this survival goal and others who might fall far short? If these others fall short because of the more rapid development of drug resistance and cancer progression, does health care justice really require that we then try an alternative combination of these targeted therapies, and do the research that would inform us of the alternate combinations of drugs that are likely to achieve additional progression free survival or overall survival? If so, how many such combinations are metastatic cancer patients entitled to as a matter of health care justice? Are they, for example, entitled to any combination, no matter how many combinations, that yield at least three additional months of predicted survival? The obvious problem I am calling attention to is that a strategy such as this might be able to achieve five years of survival that these patients would otherwise not have, which is a substantial gain in life expectancy. But the cost of such an achievement at current drug costs might easily exceed a million dollars per case. This is a cost that might be socially affordable for relatively small cohorts of patients. But the 580,000 cancer patients who currently die each year in the US (or the 1.3 million in the EU) would all be candidates for such life-prolonging efforts [53]. The aggregate annual costs for just these cohorts of metastatic cancer patients would readily exceed 100 billion per year in the US, and would threaten to crowd out many other health care needs with less social visibility by making such large demands on health care resources [54]. What sorts of limits and trade-offs are fair in these circumstances, all things considered? We noted earlier that cancer is primarily a disease of the elderly. We also noted that a growing proportion of the populations of both the US and the EU are aging, and that the elderly in the US consume three times as much health care per capita as the non-elderly. Costly advances in cancer treatment would further skew that proportion to the potential disadvantage of the non-elderly. This is another problem of health care justice if we believe that all in our society ought to have a fair opportunity to achieve a normal life expectancy if that is medically possible. But then that raises an additional ragged edge question. Should we permit the non-elderly with metastatic cancer greater access to these future combinations of targeted therapies, even at a substantially greater per capita cost, simply because we ought to accord them an opportunity to achieve as close to a normal life expectancy as medically possible?J. Pers. Med. 2013, 3 4.3. Assumptions and LimitationsAs noted earlier, our ethical judgments in medical ethics and health care policy are fact-sensitive. If the facts on which certain judgments of health care justice are based are substantially altered, it will be necessary to alter those judgments. One reviewer has noted that if the costs of these targeted therapies are very substantially reduced, perhaps as they go off-patent, then the problems of health care justice outlined in thi.