Washington University in St Louis School of Law, St Louis, Missouri.
Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut.
JAMA Health Forum. 2021 Oct 8;2(10):e213177. doi: 10.1001/jamahealthforum.2021.3177. eCollection 2021 Oct.
State Medicaid programs have reported concerns about rising drug prices and spending, particularly regarding drugs entering the market through the accelerated approval program under the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The accelerated approval program enables the FDA to approve drugs on the basis of unverified surrogate end points, meaning that clinical benefits for these products are uncertain at the time of approval. However, state Medicaid programs are legally required to cover these drugs. Little is known about the set of products with accelerated approval over time, their use among Medicaid beneficiaries, or the magnitude of their financial influence on state Medicaid programs.
To identify the number and class of drugs approved through the FDA's accelerated approval pathway and analyze state Medicaid programs' use and spending on these drugs from 2015 through 2019.
In this cross-sectional study, biannual FDA reports were used to identify products granted accelerated approval and their associated indications approved between December 1992 and December 2020. State Medicaid Drug Utilization Data files available for 1992 through 2019 were used to estimate national totals for spending and use of outpatient drugs.
National Medicaid use and gross and net spending on drugs with accelerated approval from 2015 through 2019.
Since the inception of the FDA's accelerated approval pathway in 1992 through 2020, 216 product-indication pairs granted accelerated approval were identified, comprising 149 unique products. The composition of drugs approved through the pathway has changed over time, with 28 of 30 (93.3%) product-indication pairs receiving accelerated approval in 2020 being indicated for cancer. Relative to all outpatient prescription drugs paid for by Medicaid, products with accelerated approval ranged from 0.2% to 0.4% of use (1.3-2.4 million prescriptions annually). Despite their infrequent use, drugs with accelerated approval represented a minimum annual net spending on all drugs covered by Medicaid of 6.4% ($2.2 billion of $34.6 billion) in 2015 and a maximum of 9.1% ($2.5 billion of $27.6 billion) in 2018. Estimated annual gross spending on drugs with accelerated approval ranged from $4.2 billion to $4.9 billion over 2015 through 2019, and estimated net spending from $2.2 billion to $2.6 billion.
In this cross-sectional study of 216 drugs granted accelerated approval, state spending on drugs approved through the FDA's growing accelerated approval program represented an outsized amount of spending relative to use. Because drugs with accelerated approval have come to market on the basis of trials using surrogate end points, considerable amounts of this spending may have been attributable to products with unproven clinical benefits.
州医疗补助计划报告对不断上涨的药品价格和支出表示担忧,特别是涉及通过美国食品和药物管理局 (FDA) 的加速审批程序进入市场的药品。加速审批程序使 FDA 能够根据未经证实的替代终点来批准药品,这意味着这些产品在获得批准时其临床效益尚不确定。然而,州医疗补助计划在法律上有义务覆盖这些药品。关于随着时间的推移通过加速审批程序批准的产品的种类、在医疗补助受益人群中的使用情况,以及它们对州医疗补助计划的财务影响的程度,人们知之甚少。
确定通过 FDA 加速审批途径批准的药品数量和类别,并分析 2015 年至 2019 年期间州医疗补助计划对这些药品的使用和支出情况。
设计、设置和参与者:在这项横断面研究中,使用 FDA 的半年期报告来确定自 1992 年 12 月至 2020 年 12 月期间获得加速审批的产品及其相关适应证。利用 1992 年至 2019 年的州医疗补助药物使用数据文件,估计全国门诊药物使用和支出的总金额。
2015 年至 2019 年,州医疗补助计划中加速审批药品的使用和总支出及净支出。
自 1992 年 FDA 加速审批途径启动以来,截至 2020 年,共确定了 216 对产品-适应证组合获得了加速审批,包括 149 种不同的产品。通过该途径批准的药物的组成随时间发生了变化,2020 年获得加速审批的 30 对产品-适应证组合中有 28 对(93.3%)用于癌症。相对于所有由医疗补助支付的门诊处方药,获得加速审批的药品的使用量占比为 0.2%至 0.4%(每年 130 万至 240 万张处方)。尽管使用频率较低,但获得加速审批的药品在 2015 年占所有受医疗补助覆盖药品净支出的最低值为 6.4%(22 亿美元,占 346 亿美元的 2.2%),在 2018 年占最高值为 9.1%(25 亿美元,占 276 亿美元的 2.5%)。2015 年至 2019 年,获得加速审批的药品的估计年总支出为 42 亿美元至 49 亿美元,估计净支出为 22 亿美元至 26 亿美元。
在这项针对 216 种获得加速审批的药物的横断面研究中,州政府在 FDA 不断扩大的加速审批计划中批准的药品支出与使用量相比占比过大。由于获得加速审批的药品是基于使用替代终点的试验上市的,因此相当一部分支出可能是由于未经证实临床效益的产品。