| Literature DB >> 24950778 |
Laure Benjamin1, Valérie Buthion, Gwenaëlle Vidal-Trécan, Pascal Briot.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Oral anticancer drugs (OADs) allow treating a growing range of cancers. Despite their convenience, their acceptance by healthcare professionals and patients may be affected by medical, economical and organizational factors. The way the healthcare payment system (HPS) reimburses OADs or finances hospital activities may impact patients' access to such drugs. We discuss how the HPS in France and USA may generate disincentives to the use of OADs in certain circumstances. DISCUSSION: French public and private hospitals are financed by National Health Insurance (NHI) according to the nature and volume of medical services provided annually. Patients receiving intravenous anticancer drugs (IADs) in a hospital setting generate services, while those receiving OADs shift a part of service provision from the hospital to the community. In 2013, two million outpatient IADs sessions were performed, representing a cost of €815 million to the NHI, but positive contribution margin of €86 million to hospitals. Substitution of IADs by OADs mechanically induces a shortfall in hospital income related to hospitalizations. Such economic constraints may partially contribute to making physicians reluctant to prescribe OADs. In the US healthcare system, coverage for OADs is less favorable than coverage for injectable anticancer drugs. In 2006, a Cancer Drug Coverage Parity Act was adopted by several states in order to provide patients with better coverage for OADs. Nonetheless, the complexity of reimbursement systems and multiple reimbursement channels from private insurance represent real economic barriers which may prevent patients with low income being treated with OADs. From an organizational perspective, in both countries the use of OADs generates additional activities related to physician consultations, therapeutic education and healthcare coordination between hospitals and community settings, which are not considered in the funding of hospitals activities so far.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24950778 PMCID: PMC4082413 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-14-274
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Estimation of the costs induced by outpatient chemotherapy sessions in France
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| 1 511 364 | 396,37 € | 599 059 349 € | |
| 710 500 | 304,72 € | 216 503 560 € | |
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†Public sector includes all public hospitals (university hospital centers, regional hospital centers, hospital centers and local hospitals).
‡Private sector includes clinics and private institutions involved in public service.
#Official unit tariff corresponds to official reimbursement rate applied by the National Health Insurance [17]. The basis for calculation of costs differs between the public sector and the private sector. In the private sector, doctors are self-employed and their fees are paid over and above the per-case mix, while in the public sector, physicians are employees of their institution and their fees are included in the per-case mix.
*Estimations were made from the analysis of the number of outpatient chemotherapy sessions performed in the public and private sectors in France in 2013. The cost supported by the National Health Insurance (NHI) was estimated by multiplying the number of sessions performed in each sector by the corresponding official tariff applied by the NHI. These reimbursement rates are published annually in the Official Journal of the French Republic.
Estimation of the contribution margin accrued by the outpatient chemotherapy sessions in France
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| 1 511 364 | 922€ | 1 393 477 068 € | 546 € | 825 355 880 € | NA | NA | 568 121 728 € | 599 059 349 € | 30 937 621€ | |
| 710 500 | 823€ | 584 741 500 € | 566 € | 401 787 750 € | 31 € | 22 025 500 € | 160 928 250 € | 216 503 560 € | 55 575 310 € | |
NA: Not Applicable.
DRG: Diagnosis Related Group.
#The number of outpatient chemotherapy sessions was obtained from the 2013 National Hospital database (PMSI, 2013) [16].
†The unit hospital cost per DRG represents the average cost of hospital stay for the administration of anticancer treatments during outpatient hospitalization (without overnight hospital stay). Data was obtained from the National Scale of Costs (Etude Nationale des Coûts Complets, ENCC) (ENCC 2012 version v11f [18]) which is a survey conducted in France every two years in order to document cost incurred by hospitals for each Diagnosis Related Group (DRG). For each DRG, a mean hospital cost is calculated from a sample of public and private hospitals which participate to the survey.
*The total cost incurred by hospitals for outpatient chemotherapy sessions (DRG 28Z07Z) was calculated by multiplying the unit hospital cost per DRG (A) by the number of sessions performed in each hospital sector (B).
**The unit hospital cost per DRG ( ) includes the cost associated with expensive drugs for public and private sectors and the costs associated with physician fees for public sector only.
***To estimate the cost only attributable to the administration of a chemotherapy session, the cost attributed to expensive drugs and to physicians fees should be removed. It represents the cost incurred by hospitals for the administration of cancer treatments (excluding the cost for expensive drugs and physicians fees which are paid by National Health Insurance above the DRG).
+It represents the revenue received by hospitals under the activity of outpatient chemotherapy administration (expensive drugs and medical fees excluded).
$See Table 1.
Figure 1Simulation of the financial shortfall for hospitals due to the substitution of intravenous cancer treatments by oral anticancer drugs.
Figure 2States that have adopted the Cancer Drug Coverage Parity Act on May 2014. Note: Map was built by the authors based on a blank map available on http://www.geo-phile.net/IMG/doc/ETATS-UNIS.doc. Legend: Oregon was the first state to require that health insurance carriers offer coverage for oral anticancer drugs equivalent to intravenous chemotherapy.
Figure 3Modalities of oral anticancer drugs reimbursement by the Medicare health insurance system.
Figure 4Conceptual framework of factors influencing patients’ access to oral anticancer drugs.