Marshall Alison D, Saeed Sahar, Barrett Lisa, Cooper Curtis L, Treloar Carla, Bruneau Julie, Feld Jordan J, Gallagher Lesley, Klein Marina B, Krajden Mel, Shoukry Naglaa H, Taylor Lynn E, Grebely Jason
The Kirby Institute (Marshall, Grebely), UNSW Australia, Sydney, Australia; Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Occupational Health (Saeed), McGill University, Montréal, Que.; Faculty of Medicine (Klein), McGill University, Montréal, Que.; Faculty of Medicine (Barrett), Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS; Department of Medicine (Cooper), University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ont.; Centre for Social Research in Health (Treloar), UNSW Australia, Sydney, Australia; Centre de recherche du Centre hospitalier de l'Université de Montréal (Bruneau, Shoukry), Montréal, Que.; Liver Centre (Feld), Toronto Western Hospital, University Health Network/University of Toronto, Toronto, Ont.; Vancouver Coastal Health (Gallagher); BC Centre for Disease Control (Krajden), Vancouver, BC; Department of Medicine (Taylor), Brown University, Providence, RI.
CMAJ Open. 2016 Oct 14;4(4):E605-E614. doi: 10.9778/cmajo.20160008. eCollection 2016 Oct-Dec.
In Canada, interferon-free, direct-acting antiviral hepatitis C virus (HCV) regimens are costly. This presents challenges for universal drug coverage of the estimated 220 000 people with chronic HCV infection nationwide. The study objective was to appraise criteria for reimbursement of 4 HCV direct-acting antivirals in Canada.
We reviewed the reimbursement criteria for simeprevir, sofosbuvir, ledipasvirsofosbuvir and paritaprevirritonavirombitasvir plus dasabuvir in the 10 provinces and 3 territories. Data were extracted from April 2015 to June 2016. The primary outcomes extracted from health ministerial websites were: 1) minimum fibrosis stage required, 2) drug and alcohol use restrictions, 3) HIV coinfection restrictions and 4) prescriber type restrictions.
Overall, 85%-92% of provinces/territories limited access to patients with moderate fibrosis (Meta-Analysis of Histologic Data in Viral Hepatitis stage F2 or greater, or equivalent). There were no drug and alcohol use restrictions; however, several criteria (e.g., active injection drug use) were left to the discretion of the physician. Quebec did not reimburse simeprevir and sofosbuvir for people coinfected with HIV; no restrictions were found in the remaining jurisdictions. Prescriber type was restricted to specialists in up to 42% of provinces/territories.
This review of criteria of reimbursement of HCV direct-acting antivirals in Canada showed substantial interjurisdictional heterogeneity. The findings could inform health policy and support the development and adoption of a national HCV strategy.
在加拿大,不含干扰素的丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)直接抗病毒治疗方案成本高昂。这给全国估计22万慢性HCV感染者的药物普及带来了挑战。本研究的目的是评估加拿大4种HCV直接抗病毒药物的报销标准。
我们审查了10个省和3个地区simeprevir、索非布韦、来迪帕司韦索非布韦、帕利瑞韦利托那韦奥比他韦联合达沙布韦的报销标准。数据提取时间为2015年4月至2016年6月。从各省卫生部长网站提取的主要结果包括:1)所需的最低纤维化阶段;2)药物和酒精使用限制;3)HIV合并感染限制;4)开处方者类型限制。
总体而言,85%-92%的省/地区将治疗对象限制为中度纤维化患者(病毒性肝炎组织学数据荟萃分析F2期或更高,或同等情况)。没有药物和酒精使用限制;然而,一些标准(如当前注射吸毒情况)由医生自行决定。魁北克省不报销HIV合并感染患者的simeprevir和索非布韦;在其他司法管辖区未发现此类限制。在高达42%的省/地区,开处方者类型限制为专科医生。
对加拿大HCV直接抗病毒药物报销标准的审查显示,各司法管辖区存在很大差异。这些研究结果可为卫生政策提供参考,并支持制定和采用全国性HCV战略。