Jeb E. Brooks School of Public Policy, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York.
Health Analysis Division, Congressional Budget Office, Washington, DC.
JAMA Health Forum. 2023 Sep 1;4(9):e232941. doi: 10.1001/jamahealthforum.2023.2941.
Medicare Part B drug expenditures have increased in recent years. This trend is likely to persist given the increased use and availability of biologics.
To assess the extent to which Medicare Part B spending growth was associated with changes in price vs quantity, and how these trends interacted with entry of new drugs into the marketplace.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This cross-sectional study quantified the degree of spending concentration and the association between price and use of Part B drugs among fee-for-service Medicare beneficiaries. Data on use and spending for separately payable Part B drugs were included. Source data were aggregated to the drug-year level and reported from 2016 to 2020. Descriptive decomposition and index analyses quantified the relative association of price and use changes separately for existing single-source drugs, existing drugs that faced competition, and new drugs that entered the market. Data analysis was performed from June to December 2022.
Part B drug spending by the fee-for-service Medicare program and beneficiaries, as well as use, defined as dosage units and beneficiaries using the drugs.
The study included 535 unique Part B drug products. From 2016 to 2020, 15 or fewer products comprised half of all Part B drug expenditures. The set of 7 drugs that comprised the top 25% of spending was very consistent over time, and all were biologics. Part B drug products that cost $1.85 or less per administration accounted for more than half of the doses administered in 2020. Spending on Part B drugs increased by $15 billion from 2016 to 2020. The entry of new, nonbiosimilar drugs during this period accounted for $12 billion of this increased spending (80%), while shifts in use and price increases among existing single-source brand drugs accounted for the remaining increase in spending. Part B spending decreased among the subset of existing drugs facing generic or biosimilar competition. Among single-source drugs on the market in 2016, the index that varied dosage units exceeded the index that varied price in all years, confirming that changes in use were associated more with spending growth for those drugs.
In this cross-sectional study of Medicare Part B drug expenditures, spending was found to be concentrated among a small number of drugs. The entry of new products was a key factor associated with recent increases in Part B drug spending. These findings suggest that policies targeting top-selling drugs may have greater potential to curb Part B drug spending than those targeting price growth.
近年来,医疗保险 B 部分药物支出增加。鉴于生物制剂的使用和可获得性增加,这种趋势可能会持续下去。
评估医疗保险 B 部分支出增长在多大程度上与价格与数量变化相关,以及这些趋势如何与新药进入市场相互作用。
设计、地点和参与者:这项横断面研究量化了服务付费医疗保险受益人的 B 部分药物支出集中程度以及药物价格和使用之间的关联。单独支付的 B 部分药物的数据包括使用和支出。原始数据汇总到药物年度水平,并报告 2016 年至 2020 年的数据。描述性分解和指数分析分别量化了现有单一来源药物、面临竞争的现有药物和进入市场的新药的价格和使用变化的相对关联。数据分析于 2022 年 6 月至 12 月进行。
服务付费医疗保险计划和受益人的 B 部分药物支出,以及使用情况,定义为剂量单位和使用药物的受益人数。
该研究包括 535 种独特的 B 部分药物产品。从 2016 年到 2020 年,15 种或更少的产品占所有 B 部分药物支出的一半。在这段时间内,构成前 25%支出的 7 种药物非常稳定,而且都是生物制剂。每支药物费用在 1.85 美元或以下的药物占据了 2020 年使用剂量的一半以上。2016 年至 2020 年期间,B 部分药物支出增加了 150 亿美元。在此期间,新的非生物类似药物的进入占这一增长支出的 120 亿美元(80%),而现有单一来源品牌药物的使用和价格上涨的变化则导致了剩余的支出增长。在面临通用或生物类似物竞争的现有药物中,B 部分支出有所减少。在 2016 年市场上的单一来源药物中,在所有年份,变化剂量单位的指数都超过了变化价格的指数,这证实了这些药物的使用变化与支出增长更为相关。
在这项对医疗保险 B 部分药物支出的横断面研究中,发现支出集中在少数几种药物上。新产品的进入是与 B 部分药物支出最近增长相关的一个关键因素。这些发现表明,针对畅销药物的政策可能比针对价格增长的政策更有潜力抑制 B 部分药物支出。