Bispecific antibody oncology drugs - access gaps

Bispecifics face 18-36 month registration lags in most markets. NPP fills the gap.

What this therapy area looks like

This page is about access to bispecific-antibody oncology therapies. Bispecific antibodies engage two targets simultaneously — commonly a tumor antigen and CD3 on T cells — and may require step-up dosing and cytokine-release-syndrome monitoring.

Why cross-border access comes up

Patients and physicians reach out about bispecific-antibody oncology therapies when the therapy is not registered in the destination country, when it is registered but unavailable locally, or when the local list price is materially above the US ex-manufacturer price. In each case, the question is whether a Named Patient Program or personal-import pathway in the destination country permits lawful import of a specific quantity for a specific patient, and whether the supply chain from the US source to the treating physician can be coordinated without compromising DSCSA provenance or cold-chain integrity.

Clinical considerations

Access is necessary but not sufficient. For bispecific-antibody oncology therapies, the treating physician is the accountable decision-maker on appropriateness, dosing, and monitoring. A cross-border sourcing partner should never substitute for that judgment. Where relevant, eligibility screening — for example, mutation confirmation, titer testing, weight or age limits, or prior-therapy requirements — must be complete before a shipment is authorized.

Supply and handling

For bispecific-antibody oncology therapies, the practical handling profile typically requires cold-chain (2-8°C) or frozen (−20 to −70°C) storage with documented temperature logs, specialty-pharmacy dispensing under a US-licensed pharmacist, and DSCSA-compliant chain-of-custody from the wholesaler through the final hand-off. Shipments to the destination country are sent under documented carrier protocols to the treating physician or a hospital pharmacy; we do not ship direct-to-patient for these categories.

Pricing and financing

Many bispecific-antibody oncology therapies therapies carry single-cycle or single-infusion costs that exceed typical out-of-pocket tolerance. Financing options include patient savings, employer health-benefit carve-outs, manufacturer patient-assistance programs, charitable and disease-specific foundations, and in some MENA jurisdictions, sovereign or charitable funds. Reserve Meds can signpost these options; we do not evaluate patient creditworthiness or run financing.

How to start

The fastest path is a short intake at reservemeds.com/request including the drug name, indication, destination country, and a one-line summary of the patient’s clinical status. Our clinical team returns a feasibility note within one business day.

Start a request

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Reviewed 2026-04-22 · Next review: 2026-10-22

AI disclosure & medical review. Content on this page is reviewed by Reserve Meds's AI clinical and regulatory review agents. A US-licensed human pharmacist (sourced through Altima Care, a US-licensed specialty wholesaler) reviews every prescription before dispensing. Regulatory posture is AI-summarized and not legal advice; case-specific questions route to retained outside counsel. Last medically reviewed: .
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