Chen Shih-Yin, Shah Sonali N, Lee Yuan-Chi, Boulanger Luke, Mardekian Jack, Kuznik Andreas
430 Bedford St., Lexington, MA 02420, USA.
J Manag Care Pharm. 2014 Jan;20(1):34-42. doi: 10.18553/jmcp.2014.20.1.34.
Statins are efficacious in reducing the risk of major cardiovascular events for both primary and secondary prevention, yet long-term adherence is poor. Their effectiveness could be compromised in actual practice when patients are not adherent to the treatments. Higher copayments have been shown to be associated with lower adherence to statins.
To assess the effect on patient adherence of moving branded atorvastatin and rosuvastatin from the second to the first tier by a Medicare Part D plan sponsor.
Pharmacy claims and eligibility records between July 1, 2009, and July 31, 2011, of Medicare Part D members not receiving the low-income subsidy were analyzed. New atorvastatin and rosuvastatin users in January 2010 (2010 cohort) were compared with those in January 2011 (2011 cohort) after this formulary tier change (tier-reduction group). Adherence was defined by the proportion of days covered (PDC) over 6 months. The impact of tier reduction on adherence was evaluated via logistic regression for binary outcome (PDC≥0.8) and generalized linear regression for continuous PDC by comparing the 2011 cohort with the 2010 cohort, adjusting for demographic and clinical characteristics. Other statin users (97% on generic statins) were also analyzed, serving as a nontier-reduction comparator group.
We identified 12,437 members in the tier-reduction group. Between the 2010 and 2011 cohorts, mean PDC increased from 0.77 to 0.83, and the proportion of members with high adherence increased from 62.0% to 72.9% (both P < 0.001). After regression adjustment, members in the 2011 cohort were more likely to be adherent (OR=1.68; 95% CI=1.55-1.82) and had a 5.9% increase in PDC (P < 0.05). There was no significant increase in adherence observed in the comparator nontier-reduction group.
Findings from this study suggest that financial incentives may improve medication adherence. Future studies should evaluate whether such formulary strategies improve long-term adherence and patient outcomes.
他汀类药物在一级和二级预防中均能有效降低主要心血管事件的风险,但长期依从性较差。当患者不坚持治疗时,其有效性在实际应用中可能会受到影响。较高的自付费用已被证明与他汀类药物的较低依从性相关。
评估医疗保险D部分计划赞助商将品牌阿托伐他汀和瑞舒伐他汀从第二层调整到第一层对患者依从性的影响。
分析了2009年7月1日至2011年7月31日期间未获得低收入补贴的医疗保险D部分成员的药房报销记录和资格记录。将2010年1月(2010队列)的新阿托伐他汀和瑞舒伐他汀使用者与2011年1月(2011队列)的使用者在这一药品目录层级变更后进行比较(层级降低组)。依从性通过6个月内的覆盖天数比例(PDC)来定义。通过将2011队列与2010队列进行比较,采用逻辑回归分析二元结局(PDC≥0.8),采用广义线性回归分析连续PDC,评估层级降低对依从性的影响,并对人口统计学和临床特征进行调整。还分析了其他他汀类药物使用者(97%使用通用他汀类药物),作为非层级降低的比较组。
我们在层级降低组中识别出12437名成员。在2010队列和2011队列之间,平均PDC从0.77增加到0.83,高依从性成员的比例从62.0%增加到72.9%(均P<0.001)。经过回归调整后,2011队列中的成员更有可能坚持服药(OR=1.68;95%CI=1.55-1.82),且PDC增加了5.9%(P<0.05)。在比较的非层级降低组中未观察到依从性的显著增加。
本研究结果表明,经济激励措施可能会提高药物依从性。未来的研究应评估此类药品目录策略是否能提高长期依从性和患者结局。