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医疗保险处方药计划处方限制在市场后 FDA 黑框警告之后。

Medicare Prescription Drug Plan Formulary Restrictions After Postmarket FDA Black Box Warnings.

机构信息

School of Medicine, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut.

National Clinician Scholars Program, Department of Internal Medicine, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut; Section of General Internal Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut; Department of Health Policy and Management, Yale School of Public Health, New Haven, Connecticut; and Center for Outcomes Research and Evaluation, Yale-New Haven Hospital, New Haven, Connecticut.

出版信息

J Manag Care Spec Pharm. 2019 Nov;25(11):1201-1217. doi: 10.18553/jmcp.2019.25.11.1201.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

The boxed warning (also known as "black box warning") is one of the FDA's strongest safety actions for pharmaceuticals. After the FDA issues black box warnings for drugs, prescribing changes have been inconsistent. Formulary management may provide an opportunity to restrict access to drugs with serious safety concerns.

OBJECTIVE

To examine Medicare prescription drug plan formulary changes after new FDA postmarket black box warnings and major updates to preexisting black box warnings.

METHODS

In this cohort study, we identified each drug that received a new FDA postmarket black box warning or a major update to a preexisting black box warning from January 2008 through June 2015 and examined its formulary coverage. The main outcome measure was the proportion of Medicare prescription drug plan formularies providing unrestrictive coverage immediately before the black box warning, at least 1 year after the warning and at least 2 years after the warning. Unrestrictive formulary coverage was defined as coverage of a drug without prior authorization or step-therapy requirements.

RESULTS

Of 101 new black box warnings and major updates to preexisting warnings affecting 68 unique drug formulations, the mean percentage of formularies providing unrestrictive coverage changed from 65.4% (95% CI = 59.6%-71.2%) prewarning; 62.6% (95% CI = 56.3%-68.9%, = 0.04) at least 1 year postwarning; and 61.9% (95% CI = 55.4%-68.5%, = 0.10) at least 2 years postwarning.

CONCLUSIONS

The mean percentage of Medicare prescription drug plan formularies providing unrestrictive coverage decreased modestly by approximately 3 percentage points after drugs received postmarket FDA black box warnings. Formulary restrictions may present an underused mechanism to reduce use of potentially unsafe medications.

DISCLOSURES

This study was supported by a student research grant received by Solotke and provided by the Yale School of Medicine Office of Student Research under National Institutes of Health training grant award T35DK104689. Karaca-Mandic, Shah, and Ross acknowledge support from Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) grant R01 HS025164, which studies factors associated with de-adoption of drug therapies shown to be ineffective or unsafe. The content of this study is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health. The authors assume full responsibility for the accuracy and completeness of the ideas presented. Ross has received support from the following: the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) as part of the Centers for Excellence in Regulatory Science and Innovation (CERSI) program; Johnson and Johnson through Yale University to develop methods of clinical trial data sharing; Medtronic and the FDA to develop methods for postmarket surveillance of medical devices; the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association to better understand medical technology evaluation; the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) to develop and maintain performance measures that are used for public reporting; the AHRQ to examine community predictors of health care quality; and the Laura and John Arnold Foundation, which established the Collaboration for Research Integrity and Transparency at Yale University. Shah has received support from the FDA as part of the CERSI program. In addition, he has received support through the Mayo Clinic from CMS, AHRQ, National Science Foundation, and Patient-centered Outcomes Research Institute. Karaca-Mandic has provided consulting services to Precision Health Economics and Tactile Medical for work unrelated to this manuscript. Dhruva and Solotke have no conflicts of interest to report.

摘要

背景

药品的方框警告(也称为“黑框警告”)是 FDA 采取的最严厉的安全措施之一。在 FDA 对药物发布黑框警告后,处方改变一直不一致。处方管理可能是限制严重安全问题药物使用的机会。

目的

检查 FDA 发布新的上市后黑框警告和对现有黑框警告进行重大更新后,医疗保险处方药计划处方的变化。

方法

在这项队列研究中,我们确定了自 2008 年 1 月至 2015 年 6 月期间,每种收到新的 FDA 上市后黑框警告或对现有黑框警告进行重大更新的药物,并检查了其处方覆盖情况。主要观察指标是在黑框警告前、警告后至少 1 年和警告后至少 2 年内,医疗保险处方药计划处方提供无限制覆盖的比例。无限制处方覆盖是指无需事先授权或采用逐步治疗要求即可覆盖药物。

结果

在影响 68 种独特药物制剂的 101 个新的黑框警告和对现有警告的重大更新中,无限制覆盖的处方比例从警告前的 65.4%(95%CI=59.6%-71.2%);至少 1 年后的 62.6%(95%CI=56.3%-68.9%,=0.04);至少 2 年后的 61.9%(95%CI=55.4%-68.5%,=0.10)。

结论

在药物获得 FDA 上市后黑框警告后,医疗保险处方药计划处方提供无限制覆盖的平均百分比略有下降,约为 3 个百分点。处方限制可能是减少使用潜在不安全药物的一种未充分利用的机制。

披露

这项研究得到了 Solotke 获得的学生研究资助的支持,并由耶鲁大学医学院学生研究办公室根据国立卫生研究院培训资助协议 T35DK104689 提供,该协议研究了与药物疗法的不适当使用相关的因素。本研究内容完全由作者负责,不一定代表国立卫生研究院的官方观点。作者对所提出的观点的准确性和完整性承担全部责任。Ross 得到了以下支持:美国食品和药物管理局(FDA)作为卓越监管科学与创新中心(CERSI)计划的一部分;强生公司通过耶鲁大学开发临床试验数据共享方法;美敦力和 FDA 开发医疗器械上市后监测方法;蓝十字蓝盾协会更好地了解医疗技术评估;医疗保险和医疗补助服务中心(CMS)制定和维护用于公开报告的绩效措施;AHRQ 研究社区对医疗保健质量的预测因素;以及劳拉和约翰·阿诺德基金会,该基金会在耶鲁大学设立了研究诚信和透明度合作。Shah 得到了 FDA 作为 CERSI 计划的一部分的支持。此外,他还通过梅奥诊所获得了 CMS、AHRQ、美国国家科学基金会和患者为中心的成果研究所的支持。Karaca-Mandic 曾为 Precision Health Economics 和 Tactile Medical 提供与本手稿无关的咨询服务。Dhruva 和 Solotke 没有利益冲突需要报告。

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