| Literature DB >> 33684066 |
Heesoo Joo1, Junsoo Lee1,2, Brian A Maskery1, Chanhyun Park3, Jonathan D Alpern4,5, Christina R Phares1, Michelle Weinberg1, William M Stauffer1,5.
Abstract
The price of certain antiparasitic drugs (e.g., albendazole and mebendazole) has dramatically increased since 2010. The effect of these rising prices on treatment costs and use of standard of care (SOC) drugs is unknown. To measure the impact of drug prices on overall outpatient cost and quality of care, we identified outpatient visits associated with ascariasis, hookworm, and trichuriasis infections from the 2010 to 2017 MarketScan Commercial Claims and Encounters and Multi-state Medicaid databases using Truven Health MarketScan Treatment Pathways. Evaluation was limited to members with continuous enrollment in non-capitated plans 30 days prior, and 90 days following, the first diagnosis. The utilization of SOC prescriptions was considered a marker for quality of care. The impact of drug price on the outpatient expenses was measured by comparing the changes in drug and nondrug outpatient payments per patient through Welch's two sample t-tests. The total outpatient payments per patient (drug and nondrug), for the three parasitic infections, increased between 2010 and 2017. The increase was driven primarily by prescription drug payments, which increased 20.6-137.0 times, as compared with nondrug outpatient payments, which increased 0.3-2.2 times. As prices of mebendazole and albendazole increased, a shift to alternative SOC and non-SOC drug utilization was observed. Using parasitic infection treatment as a model, increases in prescription drug prices can act as the primary driver of increasing outpatient care costs. Simultaneously, there was a shift to alternative SOC, but also to non-SOC drug treatment, suggesting a decrease in quality of care.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33684066 PMCID: PMC8103488 DOI: 10.4269/ajtmh.20-1452
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Trop Med Hyg ISSN: 0002-9637 Impact factor: 2.345
Drugs, dosages, and cure rates for treatment of the selected soil-transmitted helminth
| Parasitic diseases | Drug (active ingredient) | Dosage[ | Estimated cure rate (%)[ | Average wholesale price of treatment for a 150-pound (68 kg) adult on January 1, 2010 (US dollar)[ | Average wholesale price of treatment for a 150-pound (68 kg) adult in on December 31, 2017 (US dollar)[ | Standard of care by the CDC |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ascariasis | Albendazole | 400 mg orally once | 96.5 (94.4–97.9) | 3.16 (product name: Albenza) | 438.77 (product name: Albenza) | Yes |
| Mebendazole | 100 mg orally twice daily for 3 days or 500 mg orally once | 96.8 (93.3–98.5) | 31.92 (product name: mebendazole; 600 mg) | 2,656.80 (product name: Emverm; 600 mg) | Yes | |
| Ivermectin | 150–200 mcg/kg orally once | 97.3 (85.7–99.5) | 22.33 (product name: Stromectol; 12 mg) | 21.10 (product name: Stromectol and ivermectin; 12 mg) | Yes | |
| Pyrantel pamoate | Not recommended by the CDC | 93.0 (86.7–96.4) | N/A (average price of 30 mL package: $7.07) | N/A (average price of 30 mL package: $6.30) | No | |
| Hookworm | Albendazole | 400 mg orally once | 78.5 (71.5–84.2) | 3.16 (product name: Albenza) | 438.77 (product name: Albenza) | Yes |
| Mebendazole | 100 mg orally twice a day for 3 days or 500 mg orally once | 41.6 (30.7–53.3) | 31.92 (product name: mebendazole; 600 mg) | 2,656.80 (product name: Emverm; 600 mg) | Yes | |
| Ivermectin | Not recommended by the CDC | 24.3 (11.5–44.3) | N/A ($5.58 per 3 mg tablet; product name: Stromectol) | N/A ($5.28 per 3 mg tablet; Product name: Stromectol and ivermectin) | No | |
| Pyrantel pamoate | 11 mg/kg (up to a maximum of 1 g) orally daily for 3 days | 52.6 (39.4–65.4) | 7.07 (average price of 30 mL package) | 6.30 (average price of 30 mL package) | Yes | |
| Trichuriasis (whipworm infection) | Albendazole | 400 mg orally for 3 days | 83 (73–93)[ | 9.48 (product name: Albenza) | 1,316.31 (product name: Albenza) | Yes |
| Mebendazole | 100 mg orally twice a day for 3 days | 44.4 (30.8–59.0) | 31.92 (product name: mebendazole; 600 mg) | 2,656.80 (product name: Emverm; 600 mg) | Yes | |
| Ivermectin | 200 mcg/kg/day orally for 3 days | 32.1 (16.3–53.5) | 78.16 (product name: Stromectol; 42 mg) | 73.86 (product name: Stromectol and ivermectin; 42 mg) | Yes | |
| Pyrantel pamoate | Not recommended by the CDC | 23.4 (11.7–41.1) | N/A (average price of 30 mL package: $7.07) | N/A (average price of 30 mL package: $6.30) | No |
Notes: We include drugs for oral usage only and excluded repackagers to estimate average wholesale price of each active ingredient. If multiple products are available in the market, we calculated the simple average of average wholesale prices. N/A stands for “not available” because the recommended amount of drug usage for treating a 150-pound (68 kg) adult is not available and the drug is not recommended by the CDC. Thus, we reported average wholesale unit price instead of average wholesale price of treatment for a 150-pound (68 kg) adult.
Figure 1.Overall outpatient payment and percentage of patients treated by prescription SOC or prescription non-SOC drugs by period. SOC = standard of care.
Figure 2.Fraction of patients treated with each prescription drug or with a combination of drugs among those who were treated.