Keytruda access in Morocco: the DMP named-patient pathway
How patients in the Kingdom of Morocco legally obtain Keytruda (pembrolizumab) when the locally registered indication, stocked presentation, or payer coverage does not match what the prescribing physician has written.
Last reviewed 2026-05-18 by Reserve Meds clinical and regulatory team.
Quick orientation
Patients in Morocco access Keytruda (pembrolizumab) for broad oncology indications across melanoma, non-small cell lung cancer, head-and-neck cancer, classical Hodgkin lymphoma, urothelial cancer, microsatellite-instability-high solid tumors, and many more, alone or in combination through the DMP named-patient pathway, a the Direction du Medicament et de la Pharmacie of the Moroccan Ministry of Health and Social Protection-administered mechanism that allows a Moroccan-licensed physician at a registered facility to import the FDA-labelled product for a specific named patient. This page details the documentation, approval timeline, and real cost in MAD.
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Why Moroccan patients need Keytruda through the named-patient pathway
The Kingdom of Morocco operates a structured pharmaceutical regulatory environment. Keytruda (pembrolizumab) is regulated through DMP (the Direction du Medicament et de la Pharmacie of the Moroccan Ministry of Health and Social Protection) channels, and a Moroccan family asking for Keytruda is rarely asking for a medicine that does not exist locally. They are usually asking for a precise version of it that the local market has not caught up to.
Four converging patterns drive these cases. First, indication lag. Keytruda's newer FDA-approved indications and dosing expansions often reach local registration 12 to 36 months after the US label. A family whose treating physician has documented a clear FDA-label fit may still find that the local label has not caught up. Second, presentation gaps. The exact strength, weight-banded dose, or pen format the prescriber needs may not be stocked at the local agent even when the medicine is registered. Third, payer denial. The Assurance Maladie Obligatoire (AMO) administered by CNSS and CNOPS, the RAMED scheme for low-income households, and the major private health insurers including Saham Assurance, RMA, AXA Assurance Maroc, and Wafa Assurance employer plans each assess specialty therapies case by case, and step-therapy or formulary rules often produce denials even when the drug is on the local register. Cash-pay families pursue cross-border supply rather than wait through appeals. Fourth, continuity of supply. When a US-stable patient relocates to Morocco or visits family for an extended period, maintaining the original FDA-sourced regimen matters more than switching to a different local presentation.
In each pattern, the DMP named-patient pathway is the mechanism that connects a Moroccan-licensed physician's clinical decision with US-sourced, FDA-labeled product for a specific patient. Clinically, Keytruda is a humanized IgG4 monoclonal antibody against programmed cell death receptor 1 (PD-1) that restores T-cell anti-tumor activity by blocking PD-1 binding to PD-L1 and PD-L2, and the named-patient route preserves that mechanism rather than substituting a non-equivalent local option.
The DMP named-patient pathway for Keytruda
The pathway for a Moroccan-licensed physician to obtain a medicine that is not registered or not stocked locally is the autorisation temporaire d'utilisation (ATU) named-patient pathway administered by the Direction du Medicament et de la Pharmacie (DMP) under Law No. 17-04 (Code du Medicament et de la Pharmacie) and its implementing decrees, which allows a treating physician at a registered tertiary facility to apply to the DMP for the import of an unregistered medicine for a specific named patient where the medicine is approved by a recognised reference authority (typically the US FDA, EMA, or French ANSM) and no clinically equivalent locally registered alternative is suitable. The framework allows registered healthcare facilities to import a specific medicine for a specific patient when the medicine is approved by a recognised reference authority (typically the US FDA, EMA, MHRA, PMDA Japan, or Health Canada) and a clinically equivalent locally registered alternative is not suitable. For Keytruda specifically, the clinical justification typically frames the case around the precise FDA-approved indication and the documented gap in the local route.
A complete application includes a clinical justification letter from the treating physician (diagnosis, severity, prior therapies, why this specific drug, why the locally stocked option is not suitable for this case), the treating physician's Moroccan medical license verification through the Conseil National de l'Ordre des Medecins and the DMP, an anonymised patient identifier where the DMP submission allows, full product details (brand name, generic name, manufacturer, strength, dosage form, pack size, quantity requested, intended treatment duration), the destination dispensing facility name, license number, and pharmacy in charge, and a chain-of-custody plan describing how the medicine will move from the US manufacturer through the importer to the dispensing pharmacy.
For Keytruda, the clinical justification angle typically rests on one or more of three documented elements: a pediatric or weight-banded request that fits the FDA label but not the local label, a denied biologic or specialty claim where prior step-therapy has been documented, or a continuity-of-supply request for a patient previously stabilised on the US-sourced presentation. The treating physician documents the relevant clinical criteria for the prescribed indication: severity scores, biomarker levels, prior therapy failures, and the rationale for Keytruda versus the next-in-line local alternative.
Approval timelines for routine cases are typically 14 to 30 business days. Complex cases (rare indication, larger quantities, first import of a given pediatric or weight-banded format) can extend to 6 to 10 weeks. DMP retains discretion on timing, and we do not promise specific durations.
Where Keytruda gets dispensed in Morocco
A small group of Moroccan institutions handle named-patient imports as established workflow, with in-house import pharmacy infrastructure and physicians experienced with the application set. Tertiary and major private hospitals that meet this profile include Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Ibn Rochd in Casablanca, Sheikh Khalifa Hospital in Casablanca, and Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Ibn Sina in Rabat. Each maintains pharmacy infrastructure appropriate to the storage requirements of the imported medicine (2 to 8 degrees Celsius cold-chain for biologics, ambient storage for oral therapies, ultra-cold or specialised handling where the FDA label requires it).
For physicians at smaller hospitals without internal import infrastructure, the common pattern is to route through a specialty importer that holds a pharmaceutical establishment license and files the DMP application on the prescribing physician's behalf. The medicine then moves into the prescribing hospital's outpatient or specialty pharmacy under chain-of-custody documentation.
Real cost picture for Keytruda in Morocco
US WAC for Keytruda runs in the range of USD 174,800 to USD 205,200 per year at the standard FDA-labelled regimen for broad oncology indications across melanoma, non-small cell lung cancer, head-and-neck cancer, classical Hodgkin lymphoma, urothelial cancer, microsatellite-instability-high solid tumors, and many more, alone or in combination. MAD is trading at approximately 10 MAD to 1 USD, so the annual reference range converts to roughly MAD 1,748,000 to MAD 2,052,000 for the drug itself at US WAC equivalents.
International logistics for shipment to Morocco typically runs USD 400 to USD 1300 depending on destination city, urgency, and presentation (cold-chain biologics carry the higher end of the range; ambient oral solids the lower). The Kingdom of Morocco customs and DMP permit fees are nominal relative to drug cost. Reserve Meds' concierge fee is itemised separately on every firm quote.
On the insurance side, the Assurance Maladie Obligatoire (AMO) administered by CNSS and CNOPS, the RAMED scheme for low-income households, and the major private health insurers including Saham Assurance, RMA, AXA Assurance Maroc, and Wafa Assurance employer plans each assess named-patient imports case by case. Some reimburse fully when the medicine is on their formulary even if not stocked, some reimburse a percentage subject to copay, and many require pre-authorisation. We do not promise coverage from any insurer. US manufacturer copay cards and patient assistance programs do not extend internationally; cross-border patients pay cash or rely on local payer coverage.
Typical timeline for Keytruda in Morocco
DMP routine processing is typically 14 to 30 business days from a complete filing. International logistics adds 2 to 5 additional days depending on whether the presentation is ambient or cold-chain, the dispensing city, and customs clearance. End-to-end, most routine adult cases complete within 3 to 6 weeks from first complete documentation. Pediatric, weight-banded, or first-import cases can run slightly longer because presentation selection and first-import scrutiny can extend DMP review.
For temperature-sensitive products, the dispensing facility must maintain validated storage with continuous monitoring; the manufacturer's room-temperature excursion runway on the FDA label informs how we plan the shipping lane, and the cold chain is broken only at the dispensing pharmacy under documented control.
When a case is on a clinical clock (a flare, a new diagnosis with an active disease, or a treatment cycle scheduled at the dispensing centre), the practical question is which step controls the timeline. In our experience the binding step is rarely the DMP review itself when the application is filed clean; it is usually documentation completeness on the prescriber's side or, for cold-chain biologics, the dispensing facility's storage and monitoring confirmation. The intake is where we lock the case-team contact, gather the documents in parallel, and start the US sourcing clock so that approval and product land in the same week rather than serially.
What your physician needs to provide
For a Moroccan-licensed specialist prescribing Keytruda through the DMP pathway, the clinical justification letter is the cornerstone of the application. The letter typically documents the patient's confirmed diagnosis for broad oncology indications across melanoma, non-small cell lung cancer, head-and-neck cancer, classical Hodgkin lymphoma, urothelial cancer, microsatellite-instability-high solid tumors, and many more, alone or in combination, severity assessment (scoring instrument, biomarker, imaging, or biopsy as appropriate for the indication), prior therapy history including first-line options tried, and a clinical rationale for why Keytruda is the appropriate next step given a humanized IgG4 monoclonal antibody against programmed cell death receptor 1 (PD-1) that restores T-cell anti-tumor activity by blocking PD-1 binding to PD-L1 and PD-L2.
The letter also specifies the exact dosing plan per the FDA-approved label: starting dose, maintenance dose, route of administration, schedule, and intended duration of therapy. Monitoring plan should reference any baseline laboratory or imaging requirements specific to Keytruda (full blood count, liver function, infection screen, ophthalmology assessment, or pregnancy testing where the FDA label requires it), planned follow-up intervals, and dose-modification criteria for the most common adverse events.
The treating physician's Moroccan license number, the dispensing facility license number, and the pharmacy in charge of dispensing complete the package. For cold-chain or specialty-handling products, the dispensing pharmacy's documented storage protocol and continuous-temperature-monitoring log are part of the chain-of-custody record we share with the importer.
Common questions about Keytruda in Morocco
Will the Assurance Maladie Obligatoire (AMO) administered by CNSS and CNOPS, the RAMED scheme for low-income households, and the major private health insurers including Saham Assurance, RMA, AXA Assurance Maroc, and Wafa Assurance employer plans cover this? Each insurer assesses named-patient imports case by case. Some reimburse fully when Keytruda is on their formulary even if not currently stocked, some reimburse a percentage subject to copay, and many require pre-authorisation. We supply the documentation set that allows your insurer to assess the case; the claim itself sits with you or your hospital.
Is the FDA-approved indication recognised by DMP? The DMP named-patient pathway exists precisely to permit access when the local registration or stocking lags the FDA label. The application documents the FDA indication, the reference-authority approval, and the local gap; DMP review focuses on the clinical justification rather than re-litigating the FDA decision.
My physician is licensed in one region and the hospital is in another. Is that fine? Any Moroccan-licensed physician practicing in good standing in the jurisdiction of the dispensing facility has signing authority on the clinical justification letter. The Conseil National de l'Ordre des Medecins and the DMP verifies the active license; the DMP application records both the prescribing physician and the dispensing facility.
Can I receive Keytruda at home? The dispensing facility must be Moroccan-licensed. The hospital outpatient or specialty pharmacy releases the medicine to you after final verification, and you then administer or self-administer at home where the FDA label permits, after the dispensing pharmacy's training. The cold-chain or controlled-storage handoff ends at the dispensing pharmacy; home storage and any handling protocol are part of your patient onboarding kit.
What about competitors or alternative therapies in the same class? Choice of therapy depends on the patient's full phenotype, prior therapy, and the prescriber's judgment. Reserve Meds coordinates whichever medicine the physician has prescribed; we do not substitute, advise on substitution, or promote one brand over another.
Where Reserve Meds fits in Keytruda cases
Reserve Meds is a US-based concierge coordinator. We do not replace your treating physician, we do not replace DMP, and we do not replace your dispensing pharmacy. For Keytruda specifically, we orchestrate the US-side sourcing through a DSCSA-compliant specialty channel, build the documentation packet your physician submits, coordinate validated logistics (cold-chain with continuous temperature logging where the FDA label requires it) into Morocco, and assign a single named coordinator through the case. Standard named-patient coordination under our specialty playbook applies. Presentation selection, dose-band confirmation, and patient onboarding for self-administration where applicable are the recurring operational fundamentals we expect for this drug.
Operationally, a typical Keytruda case runs across four parallel tracks. The clinical track is the physician's: justification letter, dosing plan, monitoring schedule, and the next patient-facing follow-up. The regulatory track is the DMP application packaged by the importer; we provide the documentation template, the dispensing facility license check, and the chain-of-custody attestation. The logistics track is the US-side sourcing and the validated international shipment with continuous temperature logging and customs broker coordination. The patient-experience track is the named coordinator who keeps everyone aligned on dates, addresses dispensing-pharmacy questions, and confirms the medicine has been received and stored correctly. The four tracks are run in parallel rather than in series; that is the operational difference between a 3-week and a 9-week case.
Next step
If your Moroccan physician has prescribed Keytruda and you are weighing the cross-border route, the next step is a short intake. We confirm eligibility within 24 to 48 hours and send a documentation kit to your physician.
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