Department of Health Policy and Management, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland.
Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics, Baltimore, Maryland.
JAMA Health Forum. 2023 May 5;4(5):e231090. doi: 10.1001/jamahealthforum.2023.1090.
Little is known about how out-of-pocket burden differs between Medicare and commercial insurance for ultra-expensive drugs.
To investigate out-of-pocket spending for ultra-expensive drugs in the Medicare Part D program vs commercial insurance.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This was a retrospective, population-based cohort study of individuals using ultra-expensive drugs included in a 20% nationally random sample of prescription drug claims from Medicare Part D and individuals aged 45 to 64 years using ultra-expensive drugs included in a large national convenience sample of outpatient pharmaceutical claims from commercial insurance plans. Claims data from 2013 through 2019 were used, and data were analyzed in February 2023.
Claims-weighted mean out-of-pocket spending per beneficiary per drug by insurance type, plan, and age.
In 2019, 37 324 and 24 159 individuals using ultra-expensive drugs were identified in the 20% Part D and commercial samples, respectively (mean [SD] age, 66.2 [11.7] years; 54.9% female). A statistically significant higher share of commercial enrollees vs Part D beneficiaries were female (61.0% vs 51.0%; P < .001), and a statistically significantly lower share were using 3 or more branded medications (28.7% vs 42.6%; P < .001). Mean out-of-pocket spending per beneficiary per drug in 2019 was $4478 in Part D (median [IQR], $4169 [$3369-$5947]) compared with $1821 for commercial (median [IQR], $1272 [$703-$1924]); these differences were statistically significant every year. Differences in out-of-pocket spending comparing commercial enrollees aged 60 to 64 years and Part D beneficiaries aged 65 to 69 years exhibited similar magnitudes and trends. By plan, mean out-of-pocket spending per beneficiary per drug in 2019 was $4301 (median [IQR], $4131 [$3000-$6048]) in Medicare Advantage prescription drug (MAPD) plans, $4575 (median [IQR], $4190 [$3305-$5799]) in stand-alone prescription drug plans (PDPs), $1208 (median [IQR], $752 [$317-$1240]) in health maintenance organization plans, $1569 (median [IQR], $838 [$481-$1472]) in preferred provider organization plans, and $4077 (median [IQR], $2882 [$1075-$4226]) in high-deductible health plans. There were no statistically significant differences between MAPD plans and stand-alone PDPs in any study year. Mean out-of-pocket spending was statistically significantly higher in MAPD plans compared with health maintenance organization plans and in stand-alone PDPs compared with preferred provider organization plans in each study year.
This cohort study demonstrated that the $2000 out-of-pocket cap included in the Inflation Reduction Act may substantially moderate the potential increase in spending faced by individuals who use ultra-expensive drugs when moving from commercial insurance to Part D coverage.
对于 Medicare 和商业保险在昂贵药物方面的自付负担差异,人们知之甚少。
调查 Medicare 部分 D 计划与商业保险相比,超昂贵药物的自付支出情况。
设计、地点和参与者:这是一项回顾性、基于人群的队列研究,研究对象为使用纳入 Medicare 部分 D 计划 20%全国随机抽样处方药索赔的超昂贵药物的个人,以及使用纳入大型全国商业保险计划门诊药物索赔的 45 至 64 岁超昂贵药物的个人。使用了 2013 年至 2019 年的数据,并于 2023 年 2 月进行了数据分析。
按保险类型、计划和年龄计算的每位受益人的每种药物的索赔加权平均自付支出。
在 2019 年,20%部分 D 和商业样本中分别确定了 37324 名和 24159 名使用超昂贵药物的个人(平均[标准差]年龄,66.2[11.7]岁;54.9%为女性)。与部分 D 受益相比,商业参保者中女性的比例更高(61.0%对 51.0%;P<.001),使用 3 种或以上品牌药物的比例更低(28.7%对 42.6%;P<.001)。2019 年每位受益人的每种药物的平均自付支出在部分 D 中为 4478 美元(中位数[IQR],4169[3369-5947]),而商业保险为 1821 美元(中位数[IQR],1272[703-1924]);这些差异每年都有统计学意义。比较 60 至 64 岁商业参保者和 65 至 69 岁部分 D 受益人的自付支出差异,其幅度和趋势相似。按计划,2019 年每位受益人的每种药物的平均自付支出在 Medicare 优势处方药(MAPD)计划中为 4301 美元(中位数[IQR],4131[3000-6048]),在独立处方药(PDP)计划中为 4575 美元(中位数[IQR],4190[3305-5799]),在健康维护组织(HMO)计划中为 1208 美元(中位数[IQR],752[317-1240]),在首选供应商组织(PPO)计划中为 1569 美元(中位数[IQR],838[481-1472]),在高免赔额健康计划中为 4077 美元(中位数[IQR],2882[1075-4226])。在任何研究年度,MAPD 计划与独立 PDP 计划之间均无统计学显著差异。与 HMO 计划相比,MAPD 计划的自付支出明显更高,与 PPO 计划相比,独立 PDP 计划的自付支出明显更高。
本队列研究表明,《降低通胀法案》中包含的 2000 美元自付额上限可能会大大减轻个人从商业保险转向部分 D 覆盖范围时面临的潜在费用增加。