The Max Foundation (Max) Expands Collaboration with Novartis to Include Access to Innovative Treatment for Paroxysmal Nocturnal Hemoglobinuria (PNH)

The Max Foundation (Max) Expands Collaboration with Novartis to Include Access to Innovative Treatment for Paroxysmal Nocturnal Hemoglobinuria (PNH)

  • Max to immediately begin process to provide humanitarian access for Fabhalta® (iptacopan) in collaboration with its network of partner hematologists across 53 countries
  • People living with the rare blood disease in low-middle income countries require frequent blood transfusions, experience debilitating symptoms of fatigue and without treatment may progress to more serious life-threatening diseases
  • The Max Foundation and Novartis have collaborated to improve access to medicines in low-resource countries for more than two decades

SEATTLE, Washington – Dec. 6 , 2024 – The Max Foundation (Max), a global nonprofit organization dedicated to accelerating health equity by delivering medication, technology, and supportive services to patients worldwide, today announced it will expand its collaboration with Novartis to include Fabhalta, providing access to innovative treatment in low resource countries for PNH, a rare and debilitating blood disease that causes red blood cells to break apart.

“We are thrilled to expand our reach to include people living with PNH in low-resource countries access to an innovative treatment for this life-threatening condition,” said Pat Garcia-Gonzalez, CEO of Max. “This collaboration reaffirms the deeply shared value of health equity for both organizations by making the latest treatment approved for the disease available at no cost, fulfilling our mission to accelerate health equity and enabling people to live with dignity and hope.”

PNH is caused by a genetic flaw that affects how red blood cells and platelets work. Only about 6 per 1 million people are diagnosed with it each year. People with PNH have sudden symptoms, including fatigue, weakness, increased heart rate, or shortness of breath, triggered by stressors like physical exertion or infection. During these episodes, red blood cells are broken down earlier than they should be, which causes patients to pass dark-colored urine. If PNH isn’t treated, it can cause anemia, chronic kidney disease, or blood clots.

“For more than 20 years, Novartis has successfully partnered with The Max Foundation to advance health equity by providing access to our innovative oncology medicines. Together, we have reached more than 100,000 patients by now, delivering sustainable and profound impact on communities around the globe. Novartis is proud to further expand our strong partnership, thereby accelerating early access for PNH patients in need,” said Lutz Hegemann, President, Global Health at Novartis.

The program will initially focus on identifying partner physicians ready to treat PNH and creating access pathways into 53 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America, the Caribbean, and Southeast Asia and Asia Pacific. In addition to medication access, Max is seeking to collaborate with medical experts to strengthen health systems by providing education and training, identifying other potential collaborators in low- and middle-income countries, building capacity at medical institutions and facilitating conversations and partnership engagement to expand access to treatment. 

Max and Novartis have collaborated to improve access to innovative medicines since 2001.  Starting with access to medicines for chronic myeloid leukemia and gastrointestinal stromal tumors, the collaboration has expanded to include advanced breast cancer and multiple rare diseases.  Novartis is a member of Max’s Humanitarian Partnership for Access to Critical Treatments (Humanitarian PACT), a collaboration among professional, nonprofit, and commercial organizations that share the commitment of the foundation to increase global access to treatment, care, and support for people living with cancer and other critical illnesses. Members of the Humanitarian PACT agree to invest resources and/or their unique organizational knowledge and capabilities to support the expansion of Max’s proven treatment access model.

About The Max Foundation

The Max Foundation is a leading global health nonprofit organization dedicated to accelerating health equity. For 27 years, Max has pioneered practical, scalable, high-quality solutions to bring lifesaving treatments and patient-centered health care to more than 100,000 people living with cancer and critical illness in low- and middle-income countries. Max believes in a world where all people can access high-impact medicines, where geography is not destiny, and where everyone can strive for health with dignity and with hope. Learn more at www.themaxfoundation.org.

The Max Foundation is a leading global health nonprofit organization dedicated to accelerating health equity. For 28 years, Max has pioneered practical, scalable, high-quality solutions to bring life-extending treatments and patient-centered health care to more than 100,000 people living with cancer and critical illness in low- and middle-income countries. Max believes in a world where all people can access high-impact medicines, where geography is not destiny, and where everyone can strive for health with dignity and with hope.

Related Articles

  • Pat Garcia-Gonzalez Named Finalist for UICC’s CEO Award

    Pat Garcia-Gonzalez Named Finalist for UICC’s CEO Award

    The Max Foundation is proud to announce that our Chief Executive Officer Pat Garcia-Gonzalez has been named a finalist for the Union for International Cancer Control (UICC)’s CEO Award!

  • The Max Foundation to Launch Treatment Access for Advanced Breast Cancer in Nine Countries Across Africa, Latin America, and South Asia in Q3 2023

    The Max Foundation to Launch Treatment Access for Advanced Breast Cancer in Nine Countries Across Africa, Latin America, and South Asia in Q3 2023

    The Max Foundation to launch its Max Access Solutions program for patients with HR+/HER2- advanced breast cancer in collaboration with leading oncologists in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) and the ABC Global Alliance, the American Society for Clinical Pathology, Cepheid, and Novartis AG First patients to receive treatment in Bahamas, Benin, Bhutan, Haiti, Jamaica, Mozambique,….

  • The Max Foundation Establishes Unprecedented Network of Leading Cancer Providers in LMIC

    The Max Foundation Establishes Unprecedented Network of Leading Cancer Providers in LMIC

    In an effort to strengthen health outcomes for patients in low resource settings, The Max Foundation and its subsidiary, MaxAid, have signed Collaboration Agreements with 140 individual hematologists and oncologists from leading National Cancer Institutes and clinics in 60 low and middle income countries. With the formal establishment of this network, The Max Foundation completes its validated supply chain into each of the countries, providing a safe environment through which to channel humanitarian donations of cancer treatment with end-to-end controls.