Dear Toni, I am turning 65, am covered under my wife’s employer’s health insurance and am fighting liver cancer. I am participating in a clinical trial for a cancer medication which costs over $12,000 per month and am paying $0 for a medication that is curing my cancer.
I am concerned about what to do when I enroll in Medicare and if I will be in Medicare’s “donut hole” since this is a clinical trial. I am not planning on enrolling in Medicare until my wife, Sarah, retires when she turns 65 in 2 years.
Areclinicaltrialprescriptions covered under Medicare’s drug plans? What are my options?
Thanks! Lee from Jackson, Miss.
Hello Lee: What a smart decision you made to stay on Sarah’s employer benefits, because both you and Sarah can enroll in Medicare Parts A and B when she retires in 2 years at 65. At that time, you will be eligible for a Special Enrollment Period (SEP), avoiding the famous Medicare Part B penalty, and will be able to enroll in a Medicare Part D prescription drug plan.
Medicare’sPartDmaximum out of pocket for 2026 which is $2,100, and you would qualify for that when you order the cancer drug costing over $12,000 per month if that prescription is in the formulary for the Medicare Part D plan you enroll in when you are no longer covered by Sarah’s employer health insurance. If that specific cancer drug is not approved for clinical trial and not covered by the Part D plan you enroll in, then you may have to pay the $12,000 per month.
Enroll in the Medicare Part D plan that covers all of your prescriptions, even though the most expensive prescriptions are those covered by a clinical trial program and currently costs you nothing.
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