| Literature DB >> 18005403 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: During the last decade, pharmaceutical spending for patients with attention-deficit-hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) has been escalating internationally.Entities:
Year: 2007 PMID: 18005403 PMCID: PMC2216002 DOI: 10.1186/1753-2000-1-13
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Child Adolesc Psychiatry Ment Health ISSN: 1753-2000 Impact factor: 3.033
Figure 1ADHD-related prescriptions and expenditures in England, 1998 – 2005. a: Prescription items dispensed in the community; b: Expenditures by category p.a.; DEX: dexamphetamine (DexedrineR and others); MPH: methylphenidate; IR: immediate-release formulations (RitalinR and generics); MR: modified-release formulations (ConcertaR XL, EquasymR XL; RitalinR SR imports); MOD: modafinil (ProvigilR, licensed for daytime sleepiness); ATX: atomoxetine (StratteraR); PEM: pemoline (VolitalR, before 2002 only, not shown due to small volume); data source: NHS Prescription Cost Analysis 1999–2006 [19]. Note that these data include prescriptions for adults with ADHD and also for other indications (narcolepsy).
Figure 2Methylphenidate prescriptions trend in Germany, 1992 – 2005. Methylphenidate prescriptions grew 47-fold from 1992 to 2005. During the same period, total prescriptions in Germany declined by 41 percent. Data source: Wissenschaftliches Institut der AOK, Schwabe and Paffrath, 1993 – 2006 [20]; note change of database for year 2001/2002. All data refer to prescriptions reimbursed by statutory health insurance (SHI, "GKV", covering approximately 90 percent of German population); excluding parallel imports. Note that these data include prescriptions for adults with ADHD and also for other indications (narcolepsy).
Treatment options for ADHD in children and adolescents in Germany (D) and the United Kingdom (UK): product availability and acquisition cost
| UK/D | UK | D | Assumption | |||||
| Dexamphetamine sulphate | Tablets (5 mg) | DEX | DexedrineR | UCB (Celltech) | ≤ 2000 | £ 0.43 | n.a. | 20 mg/d |
| Methylphenidate hydrochloride | Immediate-release tablets (10 mg) | MPH-IR-o | RitalinR | UK: Cephalon; D: Novartis | ≤ 2000 | £ 0.56 | €1.58 | 30 mg/d (DDD), divided in three daily doses |
| Methylphenidate hydrochloride | Immediate-release tablets (5, 10, 20 mg) | MPH-IR-b | Branded Generics: EquasymRMedikinetR | UCB (previously Celltech); Medice (D only) | ≤ 2000 | £ 0.52 | €1.41 | 30 mg/d (DDD), divided in three daily doses |
| Methylphenidate hydrochloride | Immediate-release tablets (5, 10, 20 mg) | MPH-IR-g | Generics (misc. non-proprietary) | 1A, TAD, et al. | £ 0.38 | €1.13 | 30 mg/d (DDD), divided in three daily doses | |
| Methylphenidate hydrochloride | Modified-release tablets (18, 36, 54 mg) | MPH-MR12 | ConcertaR XL (OROS delivery system) | Janssen-Cilag | UK: 2002 (Feb., 19) | £ 1.23 | €2.94 | 36 mg/d (administered once daily) |
| Methylphenidate hydrochloride | Modified-release capsules (10, 20, 30, 40 mg) | MPH-MR08 (note different formulations) | EquasymR XL (biphasic Diffucaps delivery system); | UCB (previously Celltech); | UK: 2005 (Feb., 11); D: mutual recognition May 2006 | £ 1.17 | 30 mg/d (administered once daily) | |
| MedikinetR retard | Medice (D only) | D: January 2005 | €2.46 | |||||
| Atomoxetine hydrochloride | Hard capsules (10, 18, 25, 40, 60 mg) | ATX | StratteraR | Eli Lilly | UK: 2004 (May, 27); | £ 1.95 | €3.88 | (once daily. administration) |
1First authorization in UK, from electronic Medicines Compendium, available online at , accessed August 12, 2005.
2NHS acquisition costs (not accounting for negotiated procurement discounts in some settings), taken from British National Formulary 51, March 2006 [75]; note that individual doses and thus costs may vary. German data retrieved from "Gelbe Liste", July 2006 [76]. Note that, at the time of printing this paper, in Germany reference prices have been proposed for products containing methylphenidate as the active ingredient.
Data sources and assumptions
| Information on |
| Data on the |
| An extensive literature and database search was conducted to obtain information on the |
| Data indicating |
New products in development for treatment of ADHD in children and adolescents: overview of compounds not yet available in England and Germany
| Methylphenidate hydrochloride | MPH-MR08 (modified-release preparation) | RitalinR LA (using SODAS delivery system developed by Elan) | Novartis | available in US and Switzerland | |
| Methylphenidate hydrochloride | MPH-TDS Patch for transdermal drug delivery (o.a.d); 12 h duration of action | DaytranaR DOT matrix transdermal technology | Shire (in license from Noven) | US approval (children age 6–12 years) April 2006; 2nd line to oral drugs | Skin sensitization reported in 13–22% of subjects wearing the patch; product had been deemed non-approvable by FDA before (April 2003) |
| Dexmethylphenidate, a non-racemic form of methylphenidate: | d-MPH (the active isomer of methylphenidate) | FocalinR | Novartis (in license from Celgene) | Approved in US | |
| Dexmethylphenidate, a non-racemic form of methylphenidate: | d-MPH-ER (extended release formulation) | FocalinR XR | Novartis (in license from Celgene) | US approval (for "children, adolescents, and adults") May 2005 | |
| Lisdexamphetamine dimesylate | LisDEX; (pharmaceutical preparation with a o.a.d. dosing schedule) | NRP104 | Shire (in license from New River Pharmaceuticals) | US approval (for children age 6–12 years) granted in 2007 | Reduced abuse potential expected because amphetamine is linked to L-lysine and does no become active until metabolized in the gastrointestinal tract |
| Mixed amphetamine salts | MAS (immediate and extended release formulations | AdderallR, AdderallR XR | Shire | Available in US | Unlikely to be approved in Europe |
| Modafinil | MOD; dopamine reuptake inhibitor; effects on neuropetides possible | SparlonR (licensed in US and UK as ProvigilR for narcolepsy) | Cephalon | After receiving a non-approvable letter for modafinil in ADHD from the FDA in August 2006, Cephalon refocused its R&D on armodafinil [61] | Suspected serious adverse events (skin rash/Stevens-Johnson syndrome) in association with modafinil |
Only projects in phase III of clinical development or products already marketed in the United States. DaytranaR was formerly known as "MethypatchR", SparlonR as "AttenaceR". Data source: InnoVal-HC, 2006 [49].
Figure 3Projected prescription drug expenditures for ADHD in children and adolescents, 2001 – 2012 (base case). a, b: Defined daily doses (DDDs) p.a.; c, d: expenditures by category p.a.; e, f: total (cumulated) expenditures p.a.; left: England; right: Germany. MPH: methylphenidate; IR: immediate-release formulations (RitalinR, branded generics [EquasymR, MedikinetR], generics; FocalinR); MR: modified-release formulations (ConcertaR XL, EquasymR XL, MedikinetR retard, FocalinR XR; MPH-Patch: transdermal system (DaytranaR); LisDEX: lisdexamphetamine (NRP104); Nonstimulants: atomoxetine (StratteraR), armodafinil (NuvigilR); DEX: dexamphetamine (England only).
Key assumptions underlying scenarios (base case and extreme cases)
| Adjustments (all scenarios) | |||
| Peak diagnosis prevalence | England: 3.90% | England: 3.90% | England: 4.20% |
| Peak treatment prevalence | England: 2.54% | England: 2.54% | England: 2.94% |
| New product availability | dMPH (FocalinR) 2007; | dMPH (FocalinR) 2007; | |
| New products, specific notes | ARM/MOD | ARM/MOD comparable to ATX; | ARM comparable to ATX; |
| New product pricing | FocalinR = branded MPH-IR; | Price of dMPH-IR (FocalinR) = branded MPH-IR; | FocalinR = branded MPH-IR; |
| Established products | No price increases (except for DEX in England in "Extremely High Case" scenario). | ||
| Treatment intensity | No change compared to 2005 (current trend ends 2006) | Continuation of current trend, phasing out by 2010 | Continuation of current trend, phasing out by 2012 |
1Abbreviations: MPH: methylphenidate; IR: immediate-release formulations (RitalinR, branded generics [EquasymR, MedikinetR], generics; FocalinR); MR: modified-release formulations (MPH-MR12: ConcertaR XL; MPH-MR08: EquasymR XL, MedikinetR retard, FocalinR XR; MPH-TDS: transdermal system (patch, DaytranaR); LisDEX: lisdexamphetamine (NRP104); Nonstimulants: ATX, atomoxetine (StratteraR), ARM, armodafinil (NuvigilR); DEX: dexamphetamine (England only)
Projected expenditures by scenario: ADHD pharmacotherapy for children and adolescents in England and Germany, 2012
| Increase 2012 over 2002 | +602% | +1,561% | +617% | +1,825% | ||
| Total CNS2 market (2012) | 2,039 mŁ(1,463 mŁ) | 2,107 mŁ(1,531 mŁ) | 2,261 m€(1,585 m€) | 2,547 m€(1,871 m€) | ||
| Share of total2 market (2012) | 2.4% (3.4%) | 5.5% (7.6%) | 7.5% (10.7%) | 17.9% (24.4%) | ||
| DEX | 0.6 m£ | 1.2 m£ | n.a. | n.a. | ||
| MPH-IR | 1.2 m£ | 1.9 m£ | 5 m€ | 8 m€ | ||
| MPH-MR | 22.3 m£ | 24.4 m£ | 90 m€ | 92 m€ | ||
| MPH-TDS | 6.7 m£ | 14.2 m£ | 24 m€ | 58 m€ | ||
| LisDEX | 10 m£ | 49.6 m£ | 22 m€ | 232 m€ | ||
| ATX | 8.6 m£ | 13.7 m£ | 29 m€ | 47 m€ | ||
| ARM | n.a. | 11.8 m£ | n.a. | 20 m€ | ||
1For abbreviations, see legend to Table 4. 2(share of) market for psychotropics (D) or CNS drugs (UK), calculated assuming a growth rate of 5% p.a. (figures in brackets represent one of the sensitivity analyses, indicating market shares assuming no growth of non-ADHD market segment); for comparison: share of market segment in 2002 was 0.77% (NHS, England) and 1.8% (GKV, Germany), respectively.
Figure 4Range of plausible projections: expenditures under extreme case scenarios, 2001–2012. a, b: "High Extreme" Case; c, d: Base Case modified "LisDEX without clinical advantage over MPH-MR"; e, f: "Low Extreme" Case; left: England; right: Germany. MPH: methylphenidate; IR: immediate-release formulations (RitalinR, branded generics [EquasymR, MedikinetR], generics; FocalinR); MR: modified-release formulations (ConcertaR XL, EquasymR XL, MedikinetR retard, FocalinR XR; MPH-Patch: transdermal system (DaytranaR); LisDEX: lisdexamphetamine (NRP104); Nonstimulants: ATX, atomoxetine (StratteraR), ARM, armodafinil (SparlonR); DEX: dexamphetamine (England only).
Figure 5Projected impact of ADHD treatment for children and adolescents on individual physicians' prescription drug expenditures, 2001–2012 (base case). a: Child and adolescent psychiatrists; b: pediatricians in private practice in Germany. Expenditures expressed as €/physician and year; perspective of statutory health insurance (i.e., excluding privately health insured patients). Data represent average values for one of the upper 50% of child and adolescent psychiatrists and one of the upper 20% of pediatricians in terms of relative involvement in care for ADHD patients, respectively. Concentration of care modeled according to Nordbaden data [74]. Abbreviation: Non-ADHD-Rx: expenditures for treatment of conditions other than ADHD.