Karnon Jonathan, Edney Laura, Sorich Michael
School of Public Health, University of Adelaide, Level 7, 178 North Terrace, Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia. Email.
School of Medicine, Flinders University, GPO Box 2100, Adelaide, SA 5001, Australia. Email.
Aust Health Rev. 2017 Mar;41(1):1-6. doi: 10.1071/AH15122.
Objective The aims of the present study were to illustrate and discuss the effects of the non-maintenance of equivalent prices when the comparators of pharmaceuticals listed on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Schedule (PBS) on a cost-minimisation basis come off-patent and are subject to statutory price reductions, as well as further potential price reductions because of the effects of price disclosure. Methods Service use, benefits paid, and price data were analysed for a selected sample of pharmaceuticals recommended for listing on a cost-minimisation basis between 2008 and 2011, and their comparators, to estimate the cost savings to the PBS of maintaining equivalent prices. Results Potential cost savings for 12 pharmaceuticals, including alternative compounds and combination products across nine therapeutic groups, ranged from A$570000 to A$40million to April 2015. Potential savings increased significantly following recent amendments to the price disclosure process. Conclusions Potential savings from maintaining equivalent prices for all pharmaceuticals listed on the PBS on a cost-minimisation basis could be over A$500million per year. Actions to reduce these costs can be taken within existing policy frameworks, but legislative and political barriers may need to be addressed to minimise these costs, which are incurred by the taxpayer for no additional benefit. What is known about the topic? Pharmaceuticals listed on the PBS must provide value for money. Many pharmaceuticals achieve this by demonstrating equal effectiveness to an already listed pharmaceutical and requesting the same price as this comparator; that is, listing on a cost-minimisation basis. When the comparator moves off-patent, the price of the still-patented pharmaceutical is protected, whereas the off-patent drug is subject to price disclosure and often steep price reductions. What does this paper add? This paper adds to recent evidence on the costs to government of paying different prices for two or more pharmaceuticals that are equally effective. Between 2008 and 2011, the direct comparators for 68 pharmaceuticals listed on a cost-minimisation basis have moved onto the price disclosure list. Across 12 of these listings, the potential cost savings in the 10 months to April 2015 were A$73million. What are the implications for practitioners? The PBS costs the Australian government over A$9 billion per year. Annual savings over A$500million per year could be achieved by maintaining cost-minimisation across equally effective pharmaceuticals. This would improve the efficiency of the PBS at no risk to patients. Legislation is required to remove the existing F1 and F2 categorisation of listed pharmaceuticals, but the proposed changes would remove the need for therapeutic group premiums and simplify the pricing of PBS items.
目的 本研究旨在阐述并讨论当《药品福利计划》(PBS)中按成本最小化原则列出的药品对照品专利到期并面临法定降价,以及因价格披露影响而可能进一步降价时,不维持等效价格所产生的影响。方法 对2008年至2011年期间推荐按成本最小化原则列入清单的部分药品及其对照品的服务使用情况、支付的福利和价格数据进行分析,以估算维持等效价格给PBS带来的成本节约。结果 截至2015年4月,12种药品(包括9个治疗组的替代化合物和复方产品)的潜在成本节约在57万澳元至4000万澳元之间。近期价格披露程序修订后,潜在节约显著增加。结论 按成本最小化原则在PBS上列出的所有药品维持等效价格每年可能节省超过5亿澳元。可在现有政策框架内采取行动降低这些成本,但可能需要解决立法和政治障碍,以尽量减少这些由纳税人承担且无额外益处的成本。关于该主题已知的信息有哪些?列入PBS的药品必须物有所值。许多药品通过证明与已列入的药品具有同等疗效并要求与该对照品相同的价格来实现这一点,即按成本最小化原则列入清单。当对照品专利到期时,仍有专利的药品价格受到保护,而专利到期的药品则需进行价格披露,且往往会大幅降价。本文补充了哪些内容?本文补充了近期关于政府为两种或多种同等有效的药品支付不同价格所产生成本的证据。2008年至2011年期间,按成本最小化原则列出的68种药品的直接对照品已进入价格披露清单。在其中12个清单中,截至2015年4月的10个月内潜在成本节约为7300万澳元。对从业者有何影响?PBS每年使澳大利亚政府花费超过90亿澳元。通过在同等有效的药品中维持成本最小化,每年可实现超过5亿澳元的节约。这将提高PBS的效率,且对患者无风险。需要立法取消现行对列入清单药品的F1和F2分类,但提议的更改将消除对治疗组溢价的需求,并简化PBS项目的定价。