I just called! And I think I come back with good news! So, the Vertex representative told me that we can have access to Kalydeco through our Named Patient Program, which here is called "Special Access Programme".
Quoting Health Canada :
"The Special Access Programme (SAP) provides access to nonmarketed drugs for practitioners treating patients with serious or life-threatening conditions when conventional therapies have failed, are unsuitable, or unavailable. The SAP authorizes a manufacturer to sell a drug that cannot otherwise be sold or distributed in Canada. Drugs considered for release by the SAP include pharmaceutical, biologic, and radio-pharmaceutical products not approved for sale in Canada."
Source :
http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/dhp-mps/acces/drugs-drogues/index-eng.php
So your doctor has to initiate the process and you should be good to have it. Hopefully, they won't check for mutations...
Reading the fact sheet, they do say :
"Can SAP be considered a fast-track approval process for drugs?
No. SAP is not intended to be a mechanism to promote or encourage the early use of drugs or to circumvent the clinical trials review and approval process or the new drug approval process, but rather to provide compassionate access to drugs on a patient by patient basis.
What types of drugs and for what conditions could be authorized under the SAP?
These range from pharmaceutical, biologic, and radiopharmaceutical products that are not approved for sale in Canada. Most of these drugs treat patients with life threatening diseases or serious conditions such as intractable depression, epilepsy, transplant rejection, hemophilia and other blood disorders, terminal cancer, and AIDS. The SAP can also respond to specific health crises, such as an outbreak of a communicable disease, by providing access to nonmarketed drugs."
So maybe you would have to be very sick in order to have early access to it. I hope not... but it's a strong possibility.
Now as of the price, I don't know yet. The fact sheet says :
"Who pays for the drugs being released though SAP?
While there is no requirement for manufacturers to provide drugs released through the SAP free of charge, many do. When manufacturers do charge, the cost is covered by either the patient, the patient's family, the hospital, a public and/or private insurance plan."
I am personally not sure my pneumologist would agree to initiate a process for me considering that I don't have the right mutation. Someone with the right mutations should definitely try though and give us some news about it (and maybe ask their doctor to tell them whether they were asked about the mutations).
I made a new thread about it to attract more attention to the possibility of getting it in Canada :
http://forums.cysticfibrosis.com/messageview.cfm?catid=4136&threadid=619431&enterthread=y