| Literature DB >> 33573869 |
Renan Tironi Giglio de Oliveira1, Giovana Larissa Prado Leite Agostinho2, Rubens Granja3, Luiza Keiko M Oyafuso2, Paulo Ricardo Criado2.
Abstract
The technological advancement of the pharmaceutical industry, resulting from the techniques of molecular biology and expansion of the knowledge of immunopathogenesis, has modified the therapeutic arsenal used in dermatology. Scientific research and regulatory standards cause drug costs to rise, thus making their use impossible in most public policies. In order to make high-cost drugs viable in the public health network, the Specialized Pharmaceutical Assistance Component was created. However, despite the frequent incorporation of medications, the constant requirement of drugs through lawsuits leads to exorbitant costs to the state budget. The present work analyzed through a descriptive observational study, the current situation of the Specialized Component and the involvement of medicines used in dermatology, through legal reviews, financial analyses, and medical articles, aiming at future incorporations for the specialty. When assessing the legal demands for dermatological drugs in the state of São Paulo, the specialty still has a low participation and psoriasis is the main disease involved in requiring drugs through the judicial system in the state. New methods of access to raw materials must be created to reduce legal issues. Cost-effectiveness and public planning studies are mandatory for incorporating new dermatological therapies.Entities:
Keywords: Dermatology; Legal health issues; Specialized pharmaceuticals
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33573869 PMCID: PMC8007493 DOI: 10.1016/j.abd.2020.08.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: An Bras Dermatol ISSN: 0365-0596 Impact factor: 1.896
List of scenarios that determine legal claims for medicines or supplies in health.
| Absence of a cohesive discourse on public health policies, generating difficulty in understanding their meaning by the Judiciary, and often, financial burden to the public entity not responsible for pharmaceutical assistance. |
| Lack of articulation between healthcare managers and the population, so that the uncertainties generated and the absence of communication channels cause dissatisfaction. Patients are often unaware of where and how they can purchase medications. |
| Distortion of the definitions of constitutional principles by the judges. |
| Lack of delimitation of the concept of integrality: judges grant medicines based on the theory of immediate, complete, and rightful effectiveness of constitutional norms. |
| Ignorance of the official lists by doctors and lawyers, resulting in unnecessary lawsuits. |
| Medical professionals lack of social commitment when prescribing a certain drug without first assessing protocols and public viability |
| Growth of judicial populism: with pro-patient decisions, new requests arise. |
| Carelessness with the patient's itinerary: exaggerated bureaucracy associated with disregard in the conservation and shortage of products in reference centers. |
Figure 1Drugs supplied by SES-SP in the 2017–2018 biennium in compliance with the demands through lawsuits.
Figure 2Immunobiologicals provided by the Health Department of the State of São Paulo in the 2013–2018 biennium in obedience to the demands of lawsuits, whose prescribing doctors are listed as dermatologists.
List of CEAF drugs per dermatological disease.
| Medicine authorized by CEAF | Dermatological disease |
|---|---|
| Hydroxychloroquine | Discoid lupus erythematosus (DLE), subacute cutaneous lupus erythematosus (SCLE), dermatomyositis |
| Chloroquine | DLE, SCLE |
| Cyclophosphamide | DLE, SCLE |
| Danazol | DLE, SCLE |
| Injectable human immunoglobulin G | Dermatomyositis |
| Cyclosporine | DLE, SCLE, dermatomyositis, psoriasis |
| Azathioprine | DLE, SCLE, dermatomyositis |
| Methotrexate (MTX) | DLE, SCLE, dermatomyositis, psoriasis |
| Isotretinoin | Acne |
| Acitretin | Psoriasis, pityriasis rubra pilar, ichthyosis, hereditary lymphedema, xeroderma pigmentosum, mastocytosis, pigmentary incontinence, ectodermal dysplasia and other congenital skin malformations |
| Injectable adalimumab | Psoriasis, hidradenitis |
| Injectable ustekinumab | Psoriasis |
| Injectable secukinumab | Psoriasis |
| Injectable etanercept | Psoriasis |
| Topical calcipotriol | Psoriasis |
| Clobetasol ointment and hair solution | Psoriasis |
Measures and strategies suggested to minimize legal claims for access to medicines and health supplies.
| Define investment priorities: in view of the greater likelihood of patient rehabilitation, severity of the disease, repercussions on society, and pharmacological cost-benefit. |
| Promote mechanisms to enable the financing and transfer of technology to public health institutions. |
| Stimulate free competition in the medicine market, as well as optimize sectors within the departments that deal with negotiation, purchase, and logistics. |
| Establish subsidies for the improvement of institutions and tools such as: the Technical Study Group on Medicines (legitimized by SMS Resolution No. 1,139) NAT and e-NATJUS (digital platform maintained by the CNJ), which assist judges in their decisions. |
| Investing in pre-judicial mediation systems: avoiding the indiscriminate opening of lawsuits and reversing the concession automatism (Example: extraordinary resources 566471 and 657718, reported by Justice Marco Aurélio, of the STF). Measures such as those carried out by SES-SP at the São Paulo Court of Justice, creating the Acessa SUS project, should be encouraged (in 48,000 cases, 74% of the claims were solved in 2018). |
| To write and improve RENAME's editions to make them more comprehensible to the responsible judges. |
| Standardize systems for monitoring legal decisions (such as S-Codes): better tracking and follow-up of deliberations at national level. |
| Develop continuing medical education programs based on the rational use of CEAF medications and compliance with the PCDT. |
| Encourage the opening of administrative processes (example: Resolution SS-54, of 11/05/2012 SES-SP) and require medical examination reports for patients who request CEAF drugs, confirming data on previous treatments, complementary exams, and clinical characteristics. |