Literature DB >> 29706103

Topical treatment utilization for patients with atopic dermatitis in the United States, and budget impact analysis of crisaborole ointment, 2.

Ryan Clark1, Duygu Bozkaya1, Mark Levenberg2, Steven Faulkner3, Timothy W Smith3, Robert A Gerber4.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Atopic dermatitis (AD), a chronic inflammatory skin disease, is often treated with topical corticosteroids (TCS) and topical calcineurin inhibitors (TCI). Crisaborole ointment is a non-steroidal, phosphodiesterase 4 inhibitor for the treatment of mild-to-moderate AD. In December 2016, crisaborole was approved in the US for mild-to-moderate AD in patients ≥2 years of age. AIMS: To evaluate real-world utilization and cost of TCS and TCI in the US and estimate the budget impact of crisaborole over 2 years from a third-party payer perspective.
METHODS: TCS and TCI prescriptions in 2015 for patients ≥2 years of age with ≥1 AD diagnosis in the Truven Health Analytics MarketScan Commercial and Medicare Supplemental Research Databases were analyzed for patients receiving TCI or TCS alone or in combination (TCS/TCI population) and patients receiving TCI alone or in combination with TCS (TCI population). A budget impact model used TCS and TCI market shares, annual use, and cost per prescription. Crisaborole uptake rates of 4.7% (TCS) and 20.2% (TCI), with an annual increase of 1% in year 2, were assumed. Budget impact was calculated as total and per-member-per-month (PMPM) cost over 2 years for a health plan of 1 million members.
RESULTS: Annual prescriptions/patient ranged from 1.36-6.41; annual cost/patient was $53-$1,465. The budget impact of crisaborole over 2 years in the TCS/TCI population was $350,946 (PMPM, $0.015), with increases of $162,106 in year 1 (PMPM, $0.014) and $188,841 in year 2 (PMPM, $0.016). The budget impact in the TCI population was -$22,871, with decreases of $11,160 in year 1 and $11,712 in year 2 (each PMPM, -$0.001). For both populations, one-way sensitivity analyses showed that budget impact was most sensitive to changes in crisaborole cost and annual use.
CONCLUSIONS: From US payer perspectives, adoption of crisaborole results in modest pharmacy budget impact/savings.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Crisaborole; E27; I11; atopic dermatitis; budget impact; cost; topical calcineurin inhibitors; topical corticosteroids; topical treatment; treatment utilization

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29706103     DOI: 10.1080/13696998.2018.1470520

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Med Econ        ISSN: 1369-6998            Impact factor:   2.448


  4 in total

1.  Metformin ameliorates animal models of dermatitis.

Authors:  Soo Young Choi; Chanmi Lee; Min-Jeong Heo; Yeong Min Choi; In-Sook An; Seunghee Bae; Sungkwan An; Jin Hyuk Jung
Journal:  Inflammopharmacology       Date:  2020-04-28       Impact factor: 4.473

2.  2-deoxy-d-glucose Ameliorates Animal Models of Dermatitis.

Authors:  Soo Young Choi; Min-Jeong Heo; Chanmi Lee; Yeong Min Choi; In-Sook An; Seunghee Bae; Sungkwan An; Jin Hyuk Jung
Journal:  Biomedicines       Date:  2020-01-24

3.  Nintedanib ameliorates animal model of dermatitis.

Authors:  Min-Jeong Heo; Chanmi Lee; Soo Young Choi; Yeong Min Choi; In-Sook An; Seunghee Bae; Sungkwan An; Jin Hyuk Jung
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2020-03-11       Impact factor: 4.379

Review 4.  The Challenge of Managing Atopic Dermatitis in the United States.

Authors:  Steven R Feldman; Linda S Cox; Lindsay C Strowd; Robert A Gerber; Steven Faulkner; Debra Sierka; Timothy W Smith; Joseph C Cappelleri; Mark E Levenberg
Journal:  Am Health Drug Benefits       Date:  2019-04
  4 in total

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