Fleischman William, Agrawal Shantanu, King Marissa, Venkatesh Arjun K, Krumholz Harlan M, McKee Douglas, Brown Douglas, Ross Joseph S
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Clinical Scholars Program, Yale School of Medicine, SHM-IE61, New Haven, CT 06510, USA
Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services, Department of Health and Human Services, Washington, DC, USA.
BMJ. 2016 Aug 18;354:i4189. doi: 10.1136/bmj.i4189.
To examine the association between payments made by the manufacturers of pharmaceuticals to physicians and prescribing by physicians within hospital referral regions.
Cross sectional analysis of 2013 and 2014 Open Payments and Medicare Part D prescribing data for two classes of commonly prescribed, commonly marketed drugs: oral anticoagulants and non-insulin diabetes drugs, overall and stratified by physician and payment type.
306 hospital referral regions, United States.
45 949 454 Medicare Part D prescriptions written by 623 886 physicians to 10 513 173 patients for two drug classes: oral anticoagulants and non-insulin diabetes drugs.
Proportion, or market share, of marketed oral anticoagulants and non-insulin diabetes drugs prescribed by physicians among all drugs in each class and within hospital referral regions.
Among 306 hospital referral regions, there were 977 407 payments to physicians totaling $61 026 140 (£46 174 600; €54 632 500) related to oral anticoagulants, and 1 787 884 payments totaling $108 417 616 related to non-insulin diabetes drugs. The median market share of the hospital referral regions was 21.6% for marketed oral anticoagulants and 12.6% for marketed non-insulin diabetes drugs. Among hospital referral regions, one additional payment (median value $13, interquartile range, $10-$18) was associated with 94 (95% confidence interval 76 to 112) additional days filled of marketed oral anticoagulants and 107 (89 to 125) additional days filled of marketed non-insulin diabetes drugs (P<0.001). Payments to specialists were associated with greater prescribing of marketed drugs than payments to non-specialists (212 v 100 additional days filled per payment of marketed oral anticoagulants, 331 v 114 for marketed non-insulin diabetes drugs, P<0.001). Payments for speaker and consulting fees for non-insulin diabetes drugs were associated with greater prescribing of marketed drugs than payments for food and beverages or educational materials (484 v 110, P<0.001).
Payments by the manufacturers of pharmaceuticals to physicians were associated with greater regional prescribing of marketed drugs among Medicare Part D beneficiaries. Payments to specialists and payments for speaker and consulting fees were predominantly associated with greater regional prescribing of marketed drugs than payments to non-specialists or payments for food and beverages, gifts, or educational materials. As a cross sectional, ecological study, we cannot prove causation between payments to physicians and increased prescribing. Furthermore, our findings should be interpreted only at the regional level. Our study is limited to prescribing by physicians and the two drug classes studied.
研究药品制造商向医生支付的费用与医院转诊区域内医生的处方行为之间的关联。
对2013年和2014年公开支付数据以及医疗保险D部分针对两类常用处方药(口服抗凝剂和非胰岛素类糖尿病药物)的处方数据进行横断面分析,分析整体情况以及按医生和支付类型分层的情况。
美国306个医院转诊区域。
623886名医生为10513173名患者开具的45949454份医疗保险D部分针对口服抗凝剂和非胰岛素类糖尿病药物这两类药物的处方。
在各药物类别及医院转诊区域内,医生开具的已上市口服抗凝剂和非胰岛素类糖尿病药物在所有药物中所占的比例或市场份额。
在306个医院转诊区域中,与口服抗凝剂相关的向医生支付的费用有977407笔,总计61026140美元(46174600英镑;54632500欧元),与非胰岛素类糖尿病药物相关的支付有1787884笔,总计108417616美元。医院转诊区域中,已上市口服抗凝剂的市场份额中位数为21.6%,已上市非胰岛素类糖尿病药物的市场份额中位数为12.6%。在医院转诊区域中,每增加一笔支付(中位数为13美元,四分位间距为10 - 18美元),已上市口服抗凝剂的用药天数会增加94天(95%置信区间为76至112天),已上市非胰岛素类糖尿病药物的用药天数会增加107天(89至125天)(P<0.001)。向专科医生支付费用与已上市药物的处方量增加之间的关联比向非专科医生支付费用时更强(每笔已上市口服抗凝剂支付对应的用药天数增加量分别为212天和100天,已上市非胰岛素类糖尿病药物分别为331天和114天,P<0.001)。与非胰岛素类糖尿病药物的演讲和咨询费支付相比,食品和饮料或教育材料支付与已上市药物的处方量增加之间的关联更强(分别为484天和110天,P<0.001)。
药品制造商向医生支付费用与医疗保险D部分受益人中已上市药物在区域内的处方量增加有关。与向非专科医生支付费用或食品和饮料、礼品或教育材料支付相比,向专科医生支付费用以及演讲和咨询费支付主要与已上市药物在区域内的处方量增加有关。作为一项横断面生态研究,我们无法证明向医生支付费用与处方量增加之间存在因果关系。此外,我们的研究结果仅应在区域层面进行解读。我们的研究仅限于医生的处方行为以及所研究的两类药物。