Doshi Jalpa A, Li Pengxiang, Ladage Vrushabh P, Pettit Amy R, Taylor Erin A
Center for Evidence-based Practice, Director, Value-based Insurance Design Initiatives, Center for Health Incentives and Behavioral Economics, University of Pennsylvania, 1223 Blockley Hall, Philadelphia, PA 19104. E-mail:
Am J Manag Care. 2016 Mar;22(3):188-97.
Specialty drugs often represent major medical advances for patients with few other effective options available, but high costs have attracted the attention of both payers and policy makers. We reviewed the evidence regarding the impact of cost sharing on utilization of specialty drugs indicated for rheumatoid arthritis (RA), multiple sclerosis (MS), and cancer, and on the use of nondrug medical services, health outcomes, and spending.
Systematic review of Medline-indexed studies identified via an OVID search for articles published in English from 1995 to 2014, using combinations of terms for cost sharing and specialty drugs, and/or our 3 conditions of interest. We identified additional studies from reference lists.
We identified 19 articles focusing on specialty drugs indicated for MS (n = 9), cancer (n = 8), and RA (n = 8). Studies examined prescription abandonment (n = 3), initiation or any utilization (n = 8), adherence (n = 9), persistence/discontinuation (n = 7), number of claims (n = 1), and drug spending (n = 1). Findings varied by disease, but generally indicated stronger effects for noninitiation or abandonment of a prescription at the pharmacy and somewhat smaller effects for refill behavior and drug spending once patients initiated therapy. Studies have not examined specialty tier cost sharing seen under Medicare Part D or health insurance exchanges, nor effects on medical utilization, spending, or health outcomes.
Evidence to date generally indicates reductions in specialty drug utilization associated with higher cost sharing; effects have varied by type of disease and specialty drug use outcome. We draw upon our findings and the gaps in evidence to summarize future directions for research and policy.
专科药物通常代表着为几乎没有其他有效选择的患者带来的重大医学进展,但高昂的成本已引起支付方和政策制定者的关注。我们回顾了有关成本分担对类风湿性关节炎(RA)、多发性硬化症(MS)和癌症所适用的专科药物使用情况、非药物医疗服务使用情况、健康结局及支出影响的证据。
通过OVID检索1995年至2014年以英文发表的Medline索引研究进行系统综述,使用成本分担和专科药物的组合术语,以及/或者我们感兴趣的三种疾病状况。我们从参考文献列表中识别出其他研究。
我们识别出19篇聚焦于MS(n = 9)、癌症(n = 8)和RA(n = 8)所适用专科药物的文章。研究考察了处方放弃(n = 3)、起始使用或任何使用情况(n = 8)、依从性(n = 9)、持续性/停药情况(n = 7)、索赔数量(n = 1)和药物支出(n = 1)。研究结果因疾病而异,但总体表明,对于在药房未起始使用或放弃处方的影响更强,而对于患者开始治疗后的续方行为和药物支出影响较小。研究尚未考察医疗保险D部分或健康保险交易所下的专科药品分级成本分担情况,也未考察对医疗使用、支出或健康结局的影响。
迄今为止的证据总体表明,较高的成本分担与专科药物使用减少相关;影响因疾病类型和专科药物使用结果而异。我们利用研究结果和证据空白总结了未来研究和政策的方向。