Arcalyst: how international patients access US-sourced specialty supply

Arcalyst (rilonacept) is coordinated by Reserve Meds for international patients via physician-led, US-sourced, named-patient cross-border supply.

This page is informational, not medical advice. Always work with a licensed treating physician on prescribing decisions. Reserve Meds does not make insurance or pharmacy-assistance-program promises.

Quick orientation

Arcalyst (rilonacept) is sponsored by Kiniksa Pharmaceuticals (originally Regeneron) and received first US FDA approval in 2008. It is delivered as subcutaneous injection, once weekly. The US label covers recurrent pericarditis and reduction in risk of recurrence in adult and pediatric patients 12 years and older; cryopyrin-associated periodic syndromes (CAPS) including familial cold auto-inflammatory syndrome and Muckle-Wells syndrome in adults and pediatric patients 12 years and older; maintenance of remission of deficiency of the interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (DIRA) in adult and pediatric patients weighing 10 kg or more. Mechanistically, Rilonacept is an IL-1 cytokine trap: a fusion protein of the extracellular domains of the IL-1 receptor and IL-1 receptor accessory protein fused to the Fc portion of human IgG1.

Case active and ready to skip the regulatory walkthrough? Start your case or WhatsApp us.

US wholesale acquisition cost (WAC) is the published US specialty-distribution list price and is not the same as a single-payer negotiated price. US WAC for Arcalyst commonly produces an annual drug-only cost around USD 200,000. Patient out-of-pocket via cross-border supply is the US WAC plus logistics, IOR / customs, translation, and a Reserve Meds concierge fee; it is not a route to local-formulary pricing.

Mechanism of action

Rilonacept is an IL-1 cytokine trap: a fusion protein of the extracellular domains of the IL-1 receptor and IL-1 receptor accessory protein fused to the Fc portion of human IgG1. It binds both IL-1 alpha and IL-1 beta, neutralizing them before they can activate the IL-1 receptor and drive the auto-inflammatory cascade behind recurrent pericarditis, CAPS, and DIRA.

Why Arcalyst routes via cross-border NPP internationally

Recurrent pericarditis is the highest-volume Arcalyst indication, and the 2021 FDA expansion put a precise mechanistic option in front of patients who used to cycle through NSAIDs, colchicine, and steroids. Outside the US, regional formularies in MENA and South Asia rarely stock rilonacept, and adult or adolescent patients with steroid-dependent or colchicine-refractory recurrent pericarditis routinely route to Arcalyst via named-patient import. CAPS and DIRA add small but meaningful additional populations.

The patterns that produce cross-border demand for Arcalyst are consistent across destination countries: meaningful registration lag relative to the US label, indication-specific dosing complexity that makes substitution clinically risky, payer denial patterns that exclude newer or expanded indications, and the global specialty distribution model in which the originator manufacturer routes specialty supply through a small number of authorized US wholesalers. Reserve Meds sits inside that authorized supply lane, not outside it.

How Reserve Meds coordinates supply

Every Arcalyst case follows the same physician-led, document-first workflow:

  1. The treating physician issues a prescription and clinical justification letter.
  2. Reserve Meds clinical and regulatory review assesses indication fit and destination-country pathway eligibility.
  3. Country-specific named-patient or personal-import documentation is prepared, translated where required, and submitted to the destination-country regulator under the local lawful import framework.
  4. Supply is sourced from a DSCSA-compliant US specialty wholesaler with full serial traceability (a federal track-and-trace requirement) and unbroken chain of custody from US warehouse forward.
  5. Cold-chain handling is validated where applicable; temperature is monitored end-to-end with audit logs.
  6. Shipment is coordinated to the patient's treating physician or hospital pharmacy, not directly to consumers.

Reserve Meds does not handle controlled substances. We do not promise pharmacy assistance program enrollment, manufacturer copay support, or insurance reimbursement; those are different commercial frameworks aimed at US-domiciled patients.

Common cross-border destinations

Arcalyst cross-border demand concentrates in markets where US specialty supply is the most reliable path to the labeled indication. We publish destination-country deep-dives where local matrix cells exist; the rest are coordinated case-by-case on the same physician-led workflow.

Arcalyst in UAECoordinated case-by-case via named-patient pathway
Arcalyst in Saudi ArabiaCoordinated case-by-case via named-patient pathway
Arcalyst in IndiaCoordinated case-by-case via named-patient pathway
Arcalyst in EgyptCoordinated case-by-case via named-patient pathway
Arcalyst in PakistanCoordinated case-by-case via named-patient pathway
Arcalyst in United KingdomCoordinated case-by-case via named-patient pathway

Across each of these destinations, three structural patterns repeat. First, the local regulator maintains a named-patient or personal-import framework precisely so clinicians can reach a labeled US therapy for individual patients whose case cannot wait for full local registration. Second, that framework is document-driven, which means the work of cross-border access is the work of preparing a defensible clinical and regulatory dossier rather than chasing inventory. Third, the destination-country specialist (the treating physician) signs the case in; Reserve Meds operates on top of that signature, not in place of it.

Real cost picture

Annual drug-only cost at US WAC commonly runs around USD 200,000 for weekly SubQ dosing. Cold-chain logistics, IOR, customs, and translation costs apply. Reserve Meds quotes firm pricing post-document review.

A formal Reserve Meds quote breaks out: drug cost at US WAC; cold-chain 3PL handling where applicable; IOR, customs, and destination-country regulatory fees; certified translation of physician documentation; and a tiered Reserve Meds concierge fee layered on the drug cost rather than per-dose. The indicative range above is for orientation; a firm quote is issued after physician documentation is reviewed.

Reserve Meds does not charge intake deposits. Patients pay the firm-quoted amount in full only after accepting the quote, with a defined refund posture for procurement failure or gross negligence as set out in the engagement documentation. Delivery or transit-failure outcomes are handled via insurance and replacement coordination rather than refund, because once a US procurement chain is committed, the drug is committed.

Manufacturer context and global distribution

Arcalyst is manufactured by Kiniksa Pharmaceuticals (originally Regeneron). Like most US specialty therapies, it is routed through a narrow set of authorized specialty wholesalers under DSCSA (Drug Supply Chain Security Act) track-and-trace rules. That is the same supply lane US specialty pharmacies use; cross-border named-patient access works by attaching destination-country regulatory documentation to a shipment that originates inside that authorized lane, not by sourcing outside it. Counterfeit and parallel-trade exposure is concentrated outside that lane, which is precisely why Reserve Meds will not source from secondary or grey-market channels regardless of price.

Serial-number traceability is preserved end-to-end. Every Arcalyst pack or vial carries the US wholesaler's lot and serial-number documentation forward into the destination-country regulatory submission, which is what allows the destination regulator to verify provenance on inspection.

What your physician provides

For Reserve Meds to coordinate Arcalyst, the treating physician provides a treating-cardiologist or rheumatologist prescription, a clinical justification letter documenting the specific labeled indication (recurrent pericarditis episode history, CAPS, or DIRA), baseline infection screening, an infection-surveillance plan (IL-1 blockade elevates certain infection risks), and license verification. Reserve Meds does not substitute for treating-physician judgment, does not prescribe, and does not advise on individual patient suitability; that is the treating physician's role.

Common questions

How quickly does Arcalyst control a pericarditis flare?

Onset is typically within days for symptom control once weekly dosing is established; clinical trial data demonstrated rapid recurrence-risk reduction.

Is it the same as anakinra?

No. Anakinra is an IL-1 receptor antagonist administered daily. Rilonacept is a cytokine trap binding IL-1 alpha and IL-1 beta and is given weekly.

Does Arcalyst require cold chain?

Yes. Refrigerated storage.

Is it appropriate for pediatric recurrent pericarditis?

The label includes pediatric patients 12 years and older for recurrent pericarditis.

What is the infection-surveillance posture?

Routine infection screening pre-treatment plus ongoing vigilance during therapy. Live vaccines are generally avoided on therapy.

Indicative timing

Time-to-first-dose for Arcalyst is dominated by destination-country regulatory turnaround on the named-patient or personal-import submission, not by US procurement (which is typically days, not weeks, for an authorized specialty wholesaler with serialized stock). In faster markets (UAE Ministry of Health and Prevention named-patient track, Saudi SFDA named-patient track), the regulatory clock is commonly under 4 weeks when the dossier is complete on first submission. In slower markets or where translations and additional attestations are required, the regulatory clock can extend to 6 to 10 weeks. Reserve Meds frames every Arcalyst timeline as an indicative range with a defined gating event (regulator acknowledgement), not as a guaranteed delivery date.

Subsequent cycles are materially faster than the first cycle because the regulatory file, physician credentials, and import authorization are already on record. For chronic-use therapies like Arcalyst, the first cycle carries the regulatory overhead; the rest is logistics.

Where Reserve Meds fits in

Reserve Meds is the named cross-border coordinator. A dedicated patient coordinator owns the case from intake through delivery, the clinical and regulatory teams handle the document chain, and a DSCSA-compliant specialty wholesaler is the source of every vial or pack. We work in service of the treating-physician relationship, not around it.

Patients deal with one named coordinator from intake through delivery. Physicians deal with a clinical-and-regulatory contact who speaks the language of the destination regulator and of US specialty pharmacy. That single-point-of-contact structure is deliberate: cross-border specialty access fails most often at the seams between parties, not inside any single step, and Reserve Meds is built to own the seams.

Next step

Submit a 60-second intake. Our clinical team will respond as our first cohort opens with case-specific feasibility, a country pathway, an indicative timeline, and a formal quote.

Start your case Or message us on WhatsApp

For broader disease context, see our Pericarditis overview.

WhatsApp WhatsApp