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How to access Trikafta from the UAE — the named-patient import pathway, 2026

By Reserve Meds · Clinical & regulatory team · Last reviewed 2026-04-23

A UAE patient with cystic fibrosis (CF) whose CFTR genotype includes at least one F508del pathogenic variant, or another CFTR variant responsive to elexacaftor/tezacaftor/ivacaftor per FDA labelling, may receive a prescription for Trikafta (marketed as Kaftrio in some markets) from their treating CF pulmonologist. Trikafta is FDA-approved, developed by Vertex Pharmaceuticals, and is a triple-combination CFTR modulator that has meaningfully changed the disease trajectory for eligible CF patients. Trikafta is available in some UAE tertiary facilities, but formulary coverage is uneven across institutions; where your specific hospital formulary does not stock Trikafta or where supply is inconsistent, the named-patient pathway is a legitimate bridge.

This guide explains how Reserve Meds supports access in that formulary-gap scenario and where we fit in.

The clinical situation

Trikafta corrects and potentiates the defective CFTR chloride channel at the apical membrane of epithelial cells, addressing the molecular lesion driving CF. Dosing is two morning tablets and one evening tablet daily, with fat-containing food for absorption. Eligibility anchors to a confirmed CF diagnosis (sweat chloride, CFTR genotyping, and clinical phenotype), an FDA-responsive CFTR variant, age per current labelling, and baseline hepatic and paediatric ophthalmological assessment. Your pulmonologist will confirm genotype, baseline FEV1, and sweat chloride, and plan the hepatic monitoring cadence.

Is Trikafta legally importable into the UAE?

Yes — via the UAE Ministry of Health and Prevention (MoHAP) named-patient import framework, with DoH Abu Dhabi and DHA Dubai parallel authorities operating analogous processes. The named-patient mechanism permits a UAE-licensed physician to import a medicine not routinely stocked at a given institution when (a) the medicine is approved by a recognised reference authority such as the US FDA, (b) no clinically equivalent alternative is available at that institution for the patient, (c) the physician accepts clinical responsibility, and (d) chain of custody through a licensed importer is documented. For a formulary-gap case, the rationale emphasises the specific institution's unavailability and the patient's clinical need.

How the pathway works, step by step

  1. Consultation with your treating CF pulmonologist. Confirmed CF diagnosis, CFTR genotype, baseline FEV1, sweat chloride, and clinical rationale letter.
  2. Genotype verification. CFTR genotyping report documenting an FDA-responsive variant.
  3. MoHAP named-patient application. Your physician or hospital pharmacy files the dossier including clinical rationale, formulary-gap note where applicable, patient reference, and dosing plan.
  4. US-side sourcing. Reserve Meds coordinates with our US-licensed specialty wholesale partner to secure Trikafta from the manufacturer's authorised distribution chain under DSCSA.
  5. Controlled shipment. Trikafta ships with standard temperature-controlled logistics to the prescribing hospital pharmacy.
  6. Initiation and ongoing refill cadence. Your CF team initiates therapy with baseline liver-function and visual assessment, and monitors per FDA labelling.

What documentation your physician needs

  • Clinical rationale letter confirming CF diagnosis, CFTR genotype with FDA-responsive variant, baseline lung-function status, and Trikafta as the indicated therapy
  • Verification of UAE medical licence (MoHAP / DoH / DHA as applicable)
  • CFTR genotyping report and sweat chloride result
  • Baseline liver-function panel and ophthalmological assessment (paediatric)
  • Institutional note confirming formulary gap (if applicable)
  • Multi-month dosing plan with refill cadence

Reserve Meds provides a physician documentation kit bundling the MoHAP templates reviewers expect to see for CF named-patient files.

Costs and timing

Trikafta's US cash-pay reference cost sits in an indicative 2026 annual range of roughly USD 320,000–340,000. International logistics, MoHAP documentation handling, importer-of-record fees, and concierge coordination add incremental cost. Reserve Meds issues a transparent quote at the start of intake. These figures are indicative, not guaranteed.

Indicative timing — not guaranteed — for first dispensation after cohort intake opens is approximately 14–28 days from the moment a complete MoHAP application is submitted.

Reserve Meds is in pre-launch. Fulfillment availability is limited to our first cohort, and all timelines published on this site are indicative. If your clinical situation is time-sensitive, flag that when you join the waitlist — we triage accordingly.

A culturally-aware note: UAE paediatric CF clinics serve both Emirati families and expatriate CF patients from the wider MENA region; genotype distribution is heterogeneous across these populations. The genotype-based eligibility determination by your pulmonologist is the gating step before the import pathway begins.

Reserve Meds's role

  • Sourcing. Through our US-licensed specialty wholesale partner under DSCSA chain-of-custody.
  • Documentation. Regulatory package for your physician and MoHAP review, keyed to the CFTR-genotype rationale.
  • Logistics. Shipment to the nominated hospital pharmacy.
  • Concierge case lead. A named point of contact supporting ongoing refill cycles over the multi-year treatment horizon.

What we do not do: we are not the prescriber, we do not practise medicine, and we are not the dispensing pharmacy. All clinical decisions remain with your treating pulmonologist. We operate on a waitlist basis during our pre-launch phase.

Frequently asked

My hospital already stocks Kaftrio locally — do I need this pathway? No, if your hospital routinely stocks and dispenses Kaftrio or Trikafta for your indication, use the local pathway. Reserve Meds steps in only where there is a formulary or supply gap.

My child's genotype is not F508del-homozygous — are they eligible? The FDA-responsive variant list includes many non-F508del CFTR variants. Your pulmonologist will check your specific variants against the current label.

What about age cut-offs? FDA labelling has expanded progressively to younger age groups. Your pulmonologist confirms whether your child is currently covered.

Will insurance cover this? Cash-pay is the default for named-patient imports. Some UAE private insurers consider case-by-case reimbursement for CF; we supply documentation but do not process claims directly.

Next step — join the first-cohort waitlist

Reserve Meds is opening to a limited first cohort in 2026. Add your case to the waitlist and our concierge case lead will reach out when we enter intake for Trikafta coordination.

Add me to the Trikafta waitlist

> Examples and timings above are composite illustrations drawn from published sources and typical named-patient patterns. Your individual case is assessed by your physician and our clinical-regulatory team; Reserve Meds does not guarantee outcomes or timelines.


Reserve Meds is a US-based concierge coordinator for cross-border specialty medicine. We are in pre-launch; service availability is limited to our first cohort and published timelines are indicative, not guarantees. Cash-pay. Export-only (US → overseas). Composite case examples. Not medical advice.

Clinical & regulatory review: Reserve Meds clinical team and AI regulatory-counsel review pipeline. Last medically reviewed: 2026-04-23.

Composite-case & review disclosure. Composite case examples; no individual patient is depicted. Reserve Meds is in pre-launch - service availability is limited to our first cohort and published timelines are indicative. Content on this page is reviewed by Reserve Meds's clinical and regulatory team with AI-assisted pharmacist and regulatory-counsel review. A US-licensed pharmacist reviews every prescription before dispensing. Regulatory posture is informational, not legal advice; case-specific questions route to retained outside counsel. Review methodology ›
Last medically reviewed: . Reviewer: Reserve Meds clinical & regulatory team.