Marcum Zachary A, Bellon Johanna E, Li Jie, Gellad Walid F, Donohue Julie M
Department of Pharmacy, School of Pharmacy, University of Washington, 1959 NE Pacific St, Box 357630, Seattle, WA, 98102, USA.
Wolff Center at UPMC, Ross Building, Room 219, 4601 Baum Blvd, Pittsburgh, PA, 15213, USA.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2016 Jul 27;16:312. doi: 10.1186/s12913-016-1569-1.
Medications to treat and prevent chronic disease have substantially reduced morbidity and mortality; however, their diffusion has been uneven. Little is known about prescribing of chronic disease medications by nurse practitioners (NPs) and physician assistants (PAs), despite their increasingly important role as primary care providers. Thus, we sought to conduct an exploratory analysis to examine prescribing of new chronic disease medications by NPs and PAs compared to primary care physicians (PCPs).
We obtained prescribing data from IMS Health's Xponent™ on all NPs, PAs, and PCPs in Pennsylvania regularly prescribing anticoagulants, antihypertensives, oral hypoglycemics, and/or HMG-Co-A reductase inhibitors pre- and post-introduction of five new drugs in these classes that varied in novelty (i.e., dabigatran, aliskiren, sitagliptin or saxagliptin, and pitavastatin). We constructed three measures of prescriber adoption during the 15-month post-FDA approval period: 1) any prescription of the medication, 2) proportion of prescriptions in the class for the medication, and 3) time to adoption (first prescription) of the medication.
From 2007 to 2011, the proportion of antihypertensive prescriptions prescribed by NPs and PAs approximately doubled from 2.0 to 4.2 % and 2.2 to 4.9 %, respectively. Similar trends were found for anticoagulants, oral hypoglycemics, and HMG-Co-A reductase inhibitors. By 2011, more PCPs had prescribed each of the newly approved medications than NPs and PAs (e.g., 44.3 % vs. 18.5 % vs. 20 % for dabigatran among PCPs, NPs, and PAs). Across all medication classes, the newly approved drugs accounted for a larger share of prescriptions in the class for PCPs followed by PAs, followed by NPs (e.g., dabigatran: 4.9 % vs. 3.2 % vs. 2.8 %, respectively). Mean time-to-adoption for the newly approved medications was shorter for PCPs compared to NPs and PAs (e.g., dabigatran, 7.3 vs. 8.2 vs. 8.5 months; P all medications <0.001).
PCPs were more likely to prescribe each of the newly approved medications per each measure of drug adoption, regardless of drug novelty. Differences in the rate and speed of drug adoption between PCPs, NPs, and PAs may have important implications for care and overall costs at the population level as NPs and PAs continue taking on a larger role in prescribing.
用于治疗和预防慢性病的药物已大幅降低了发病率和死亡率;然而,其传播并不均衡。尽管执业护士(NPs)和医师助理(PAs)作为初级保健提供者的作用日益重要,但对于他们开具慢性病药物的情况却知之甚少。因此,我们试图进行一项探索性分析,以研究与初级保健医生(PCPs)相比,NPs和PAs开具新型慢性病药物的情况。
我们从艾美仕市场研究公司(IMS Health)的Xponent™获取了宾夕法尼亚州所有定期开具抗凝剂、抗高血压药、口服降糖药和/或HMG-Co-A还原酶抑制剂的NPs、PAs和PCPs在这几类药物中五种新药引入前后的处方数据,这些新药的新颖性各不相同(即达比加群、阿利吉仑、西他列汀或沙格列汀以及匹伐他汀)。我们构建了FDA批准后15个月内处方者采用情况的三项指标:1)该药物的任何处方;2)该药物在该类药物处方中的比例;3)该药物的采用时间(首次处方)。
2007年至2011年,NPs和PAs开具的抗高血压药处方比例分别从2.0%增至4.2%、从2.2%增至4.9%,几乎翻倍。抗凝剂、口服降糖药和HMG-Co-A还原酶抑制剂也有类似趋势。到2011年,开具每种新批准药物的PCPs比NPs和PAs更多(例如,达比加群在PCPs、NPs和PAs中的处方比例分别为44.