Baum Charles, Andino Katherine, Wittbrodt Eric, Stewart Shelley, Szymanski Keith, Turpin Robin
U.S. Medical Affairs, Takeda Pharmaceuticals U.S.A., One Takeda Parkway, Deerfield, IL, 60015, USA,
Pharmacoeconomics. 2015 Jul;33(7):643-53. doi: 10.1007/s40273-015-0264-0.
Obesity has become a serious public health problem that has stimulated primordial and primary prevention efforts, and a triad of management options (lifestyle, pharmacotherapy, and surgical interventions). A growing body of evidence supports the need for a multi-pronged, clinic-based approach that leverages the synergy between pharmaceutical and lifestyle modification. Recent US policy changes-namely, the passage of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act coupled with recognition of obesity as a disease by the American Medical Association-suggest that financial incentives and attitudes towards obesity management are changing. This paradigm shift has implications for current and future obesity pharmacotherapy. However, barriers to pharmacotherapy utilization include patient and physician perceptions of modest efficacy, historical safety issues, regulatory obstacles, and lack of reimbursement. The shifting attitudes and challenges associated not only with a multi-payer system, but also the lack of clearly defined cross-payer reimbursement strategies, prompted a survey to determine coverage for obesity treatment. Participants indicated that federal/state mandates and growth of quality-driven healthcare initiatives will eventually drive wider pharmacotherapy reimbursement within 1-5 years. There are signs that federal/state programs are already moving towards reimbursement by improving quality measures to track obesity outcomes and reduce costs. Future research on clinical and economic outcomes of combination weight-management programs coupled with innovative approaches (e.g., eHealth) in the real-world setting that demonstrate value to patients, healthcare providers, payers, and employers will help reshape obesity management by reducing barriers and broadening reimbursement coverage for anti-obesity pharmacotherapy.
肥胖已成为一个严重的公共卫生问题,这促使人们开展了初级预防和一级预防工作,并形成了一套三联管理方案(生活方式干预、药物治疗和手术干预)。越来越多的证据支持需要采取一种基于诊所的多管齐下的方法,利用药物治疗和生活方式改变之间的协同作用。美国最近的政策变化——即《患者保护与平价医疗法案》的通过以及美国医学协会将肥胖认定为一种疾病——表明对肥胖管理的经济激励措施和态度正在发生变化。这种范式转变对当前和未来的肥胖药物治疗具有影响。然而,药物治疗应用的障碍包括患者和医生对疗效一般的认知、历史上的安全问题、监管障碍以及缺乏报销。不仅与多支付方系统相关的态度转变和挑战,还有缺乏明确界定的跨支付方报销策略,促使开展了一项调查以确定肥胖治疗的覆盖范围。参与者表示,联邦/州的强制规定以及以质量为导向的医疗保健举措的增加最终将在1至5年内推动更广泛的药物治疗报销。有迹象表明,联邦/州项目已经在通过改进质量指标以跟踪肥胖治疗结果并降低成本来朝着报销方向迈进。未来关于联合体重管理项目在现实环境中的临床和经济结果以及创新方法(如电子健康)的研究,若能证明对患者、医疗服务提供者、支付方和雇主有价值,将有助于通过减少障碍和扩大抗肥胖药物治疗的报销覆盖范围来重塑肥胖管理。