Leonard D. Schaeffer Center for Health Policy and Economics, University of Southern California, 3335 S Figueroa St, Unit A, Los Angeles, CA 90089-7273, USA.
Am J Manag Care. 2012 Nov;18(11 Suppl):S272-8.
This study was designed to assess the effect of tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) use on nonpharmaceutical medical spending for patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), and estimate the association between cost-sharing and the TKI medication possession ratio (MPR).
The retrospective study covered the 13 years from 1997 to 2009.
Analyses were conducted using a large administrative health insurance claims database covering 45 large employers. From this database, 995 unique patients with CML were identified, with 3,765 patient-years; of these patients, 415 (or 1,689 patientyears) were TKI users. We estimated the association of TKI use with total pharmaceutical spending and total non-pharmaceutical medical spending. In addition, we characterized plan-level cost-sharing rules for TKIs and assessed whether these were associated with the MPR for TKI therapy among CML patients.
TKI users averaged $26,406 in annual non-pharmaceutical medical spending, compared with $38,194 for non-users; this was a difference of approximately 30%, which was statistically significant at the 5% level. The median patient out-ofpocket payment was $25, which increased to $63 at the 75th percentile and to $122 at the 95th percentile. MPRs were 94.8 at the median cost-sharing level and 100.0 at the 75th percentile and higher. There was no statistically significant association between cost-sharing and MPR.
Use of TKIs was associated with a 30% reduction in non-pharmaceutical medical spending for CML patients. This difference is approximately equal to 40% of the incremental pharmaceutical cost associated with using TKI therapy. The net annual cost of TKI therapy is roughly $15,000. An informal calculation suggests that this is well within the range of conventional cost-effectiveness thresholds. On balance, coverage of TKIs is relatively generous, with the vast majority of patients exhibiting high levels of adherence to therapy.
本研究旨在评估酪氨酸激酶抑制剂(TKI)的使用对慢性髓性白血病(CML)患者非药物医疗支出的影响,并估计成本分担与 TKI 药物使用量(MPR)之间的关系。
本回顾性研究涵盖了 1997 年至 2009 年的 13 年时间。
使用涵盖 45 家大型雇主的大型行政健康保险索赔数据库进行分析。从该数据库中,确定了 995 名患有 CML 的独特患者,共 3765 患者年;其中 415 名(或 1689 患者年)为 TKI 用户。我们估计了 TKI 使用与总药物支出和总非药物医疗支出之间的关联。此外,我们还描述了 TKI 的计划级成本分担规则,并评估了这些规则是否与 CML 患者 TKI 治疗的 MPR 相关。
TKI 用户的年均非药物医疗支出为 26406 美元,而非使用者为 38194 美元;这是一个约 30%的差异,在 5%的水平上具有统计学意义。患者自付额中位数为 25 美元,第 75 百分位数增加到 63 美元,第 95 百分位数增加到 122 美元。在中位数成本分担水平下,MPR 为 94.8,在第 75 百分位数及以上水平为 100.0。成本分担与 MPR 之间没有统计学上的显著关系。
TKI 的使用与 CML 患者非药物医疗支出减少 30%相关。这一差异约等于使用 TKI 治疗相关药物增量成本的 40%。TKI 治疗的年净成本约为 15000 美元。一个非正式的计算表明,这在常规成本效益阈值范围内。总的来说,TKI 的覆盖范围相对宽松,绝大多数患者对治疗的依从性很高。