BACKGROUND: The increasing awareness of cost issues in health care has led to the increasing use of policy-driven substitution of branded for generic medications, particularly relative to statin treatment for cardiovascular diseases. While there are potential short-term health care savings, the consequences for primary care are under-researched. Our objective was to review data on intensive statin therapy and generic substitution in patients at high cardiovascular risk. RESULTS: Current treatment guidelines for the prevention of cardiovascular disease are consistent in their recommendations regarding statin therapy and treatment targets. Clinical trials demonstrate that to reduce cardiovascular events, a statin is more effective than placebo, intensive statin therapy is more effective than moderate statin therapy in patients with established coronary disease, and in patients receiving intensive statin therapy the lowest risk is associated with the lowest low-density lipoprotein levels. However, in clinical practice, patients at high cardiovascular risk are prone to be undertreated. Observational studies suggest that mandatory statin substitution may increase the gap between achieved and recommended therapeutic targets. CONCLUSIONS: Substitution of generic statins may be cost-saving, particularly at the primary prevention level. However, statin substitution policies have not been adequately studied on a population level. Data raise concern that mandated statin substitution may lead to unfavourable treatment choices at the level of the individual high-risk patient.
BACKGROUND: The increasing awareness of cost issues in health care has led to the increasing use of policy-driven substitution of branded for generic medications, particularly relative to statin treatment for cardiovascular diseases. While there are potential short-term health care savings, the consequences for primary care are under-researched. Our objective was to review data on intensive statin therapy and generic substitution in patients at high cardiovascular risk. RESULTS: Current treatment guidelines for the prevention of cardiovascular disease are consistent in their recommendations regarding statin therapy and treatment targets. Clinical trials demonstrate that to reduce cardiovascular events, a statin is more effective than placebo, intensive statin therapy is more effective than moderate statin therapy in patients with established coronary disease, and in patients receiving intensive statin therapy the lowest risk is associated with the lowest low-density lipoprotein levels. However, in clinical practice, patients at high cardiovascular risk are prone to be undertreated. Observational studies suggest that mandatory statin substitution may increase the gap between achieved and recommended therapeutic targets. CONCLUSIONS: Substitution of generic statins may be cost-saving, particularly at the primary prevention level. However, statin substitution policies have not been adequately studied on a population level. Data raise concern that mandated statin substitution may lead to unfavourable treatment choices at the level of the individual high-risk patient.
Authors: Elizabeth Marrett; Changgeng Zhao; Ning Jackie Zhang; Qiaoyi Zhang; Dena R Ramey; Joanne E Tomassini; Andrew M Tershakovec; David R Neff Journal: Vasc Health Risk Manag Date: 2014-04-25
Authors: Luca Degli Esposti; Diego Sangiorgi; Stefano Buda; Ezio Degli Esposti; Francesco Scaglione Journal: BMJ Open Date: 2016-11-02 Impact factor: 2.692
Authors: Giorgio L Colombo; Enrico Agabiti-Rosei; Alberto Margonato; Claudio Mencacci; Carlo Maurizio Montecucco; Roberto Trevisan Journal: PLoS One Date: 2013-12-18 Impact factor: 3.240
Authors: JoAnne M Foody; Peter P Toth; Joanne E Tomassini; Shiva Sajjan; Dena R Ramey; David Neff; Andrew M Tershakovec; Henry Hu; Kaan Tunceli Journal: Vasc Health Risk Manag Date: 2013-11-15