Dusetzina Stacie B, Keating Nancy L
Stacie B. Dusetzina, University of North Carolina Eshelman School of Pharmacy, Gillings School of Global Public Health, and Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center and Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research, Chapel Hill, NC; and Nancy L. Keating, Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA.
J Clin Oncol. 2016 Feb 1;34(4):375-80. doi: 10.1200/JCO.2015.63.7736. Epub 2015 Dec 7.
Orally administered anticancer medications are among the fastest growing components of cancer care. These medications are expensive, and cost-sharing requirements for patients can be a barrier to their use. For Medicare beneficiaries, the Affordable Care Act will close the Part D coverage gap (doughnut hole), which will reduce cost sharing from 100% in 2010 to 25% in 2020 for drug spending above $2,960 until the beneficiary reaches $4,700 in out-of-pocket spending. How much these changes will reduce out-of-pocket costs is unclear.
We used the Medicare July 2014 Prescription Drug Plan Formulary, Pharmacy Network, and Pricing Information Files from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services for 1,114 stand-alone and 2,230 Medicare Advantage prescription drug formularies, which represent all formularies in 2014. We identified orally administered anticancer medications and summarized drug costs, cost-sharing designs used by available plans, and the estimated out-of-pocket costs for beneficiaries without low-income subsidies who take a single drug before and after the doughnut hole closes.
Little variation existed in formulary design across plans and products. The average price per month for included products was $10,060 (range, $5,123 to $16,093). In 2010, median beneficiary annual out-of-pocket costs for a typical treatment duration ranged from $6,456 (interquartile range, $6,433 to $6,482) for dabrafenib to $12,160 (interquartile range, $12,102 to $12,262) for sunitinib. With the assumption that prices remain stable, after the doughnut hole closes, beneficiaries will spend approximately $2,550 less.
Out-of-pocket costs for Medicare beneficiaries taking orally administered anticancer medications are high and will remain so after the doughnut hole closes. Efforts are needed to improve affordability of high-cost cancer drugs for beneficiaries who need them.
口服抗癌药物是癌症治疗中增长最快的组成部分之一。这些药物价格昂贵,患者的费用分摊要求可能成为其使用的障碍。对于医疗保险受益人而言,《平价医疗法案》将填补D部分的覆盖缺口(甜甜圈洞),这将使药物支出超过2960美元时的费用分摊从2010年的100%降至2020年的25%,直至受益人自付费用达到4700美元。这些变化将在多大程度上降低自付费用尚不清楚。
我们使用了医疗保险和医疗补助服务中心2014年7月的医疗保险处方药计划处方集、药房网络及定价信息文件,其中包括1114个独立的和2230个医疗保险优势处方药处方集,代表了2014年的所有处方集。我们确定了口服抗癌药物,并总结了药物成本、现有计划使用的费用分摊设计,以及甜甜圈洞关闭前后服用单一药物且无低收入补贴的受益人的估计自付费用。
各计划和产品的处方集设计差异不大。纳入产品的平均每月价格为10,060美元(范围为5,123美元至16,093美元)。2010年,典型治疗期间受益人的年度自付费用中位数,从达布拉非尼的6,456美元(四分位距为6,433美元至6,482美元)到舒尼替尼的12,160美元(四分位距为12,102美元至12,262美元)不等。假设价格保持稳定,甜甜圈洞关闭后,受益人将少花费约2,550美元。
服用口服抗癌药物的医疗保险受益人的自付费用很高,且在甜甜圈洞关闭后仍将如此。需要努力提高有需求的受益人对高成本抗癌药物的可承受性。