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Specialty drug coverage varies between health plans’ medical and pharmacy benefit policies

BACKGROUND: In an effort to control drug spending, health plans are increasingly shifting specialty drugs from their medical benefit to the pharmacy benefit. One consequence of this trend is that some health plans have both a medical and a pharmacy coverage policy for the same drug. OBJECTIVE: To ex...

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Autores principales: Levine, A. Alex, Panzer, Ari D, Kauf, Teresa L, O’Sullivan, Amy K, Strand, Lauren, Chambers, James D
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Academy of Managed Care Pharmacy 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10387921/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37276044
http://dx.doi.org/10.18553/jmcp.2023.29.6.607
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author Levine, A. Alex
Panzer, Ari D
Kauf, Teresa L
O’Sullivan, Amy K
Strand, Lauren
Chambers, James D
author_facet Levine, A. Alex
Panzer, Ari D
Kauf, Teresa L
O’Sullivan, Amy K
Strand, Lauren
Chambers, James D
author_sort Levine, A. Alex
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: In an effort to control drug spending, health plans are increasingly shifting specialty drugs from their medical benefit to the pharmacy benefit. One consequence of this trend is that some health plans have both a medical and a pharmacy coverage policy for the same drug. OBJECTIVE: To examine how frequently health plans issue medical and pharmacy benefit policies for the same specialty drug and to evaluate the concordance between plans’ medical and pharmacy policies when plans issue both policy types. METHODS: We identified specialty drug coverage policies from the Tufts Medical Center Specialty Drug Evidence and Coverage Database, which includes policies issued by 17 of the largest US commercial health plans. Policies were current as of August 2020. We determined plans that issued both medical and pharmacy policies. Next, we identified drugs with “medical-pharmacy policy pairs,” ie, drugs for which a plan issued both a medical and a pharmacy policy. For these pairs, we compared the plan’s policies while accounting for the following coverage criteria: patient subgroups (patients must meet certain clinical criteria), prescriber requirements (a specialist must prescribe the drug), and step therapy protocols (patients must first fail alternative treatments). We considered medical-pharmacy policy pairs to be discordant if coverage criteria differed, eg, the medical policy included a prescriber requirement but the pharmacy policy did not. RESULTS: Eight plans issued separate medical and pharmacy benefit coverage policies for the same specialty drug and indication. Among these 8 plans, we identified 1,619 medical-pharmacy policy pairs. Eighty-six percent of pairs were concordant (1,386/1,619), and 14% were discordant (233/1,619). Discordance was most often due to differences in plans’ application of step therapy protocols (184/233), followed by prescriber requirements (52/233) and patient subgroups (25/233). Forty pairs were discordant in multiple ways. Of discordant pairs, medical policies were more restrictive 41% (96/233) of the time; pharmacy policies were more restrictive 54% (125/233) of the time; 5% of the time (12/233), the medical policy was more restrictive in some ways, but the pharmacy policy was more restrictive in others. Overall, plans imposed coverage restrictions in their medical and pharmacy policies with similar frequencies. CONCLUSIONS: Commercial health plans’ medical and pharmacy coverage policies for the same specialty drugs tended to be concordant, although we found coverage criteria to be discordant 14% of the time. Medical and pharmacy policies that are inconsistent in their coverage criteria and restrictions complicate, and potentially hinder, patients’ access to specialty drugs.
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spelling pubmed-103879212023-07-31 Specialty drug coverage varies between health plans’ medical and pharmacy benefit policies Levine, A. Alex Panzer, Ari D Kauf, Teresa L O’Sullivan, Amy K Strand, Lauren Chambers, James D J Manag Care Spec Pharm Research BACKGROUND: In an effort to control drug spending, health plans are increasingly shifting specialty drugs from their medical benefit to the pharmacy benefit. One consequence of this trend is that some health plans have both a medical and a pharmacy coverage policy for the same drug. OBJECTIVE: To examine how frequently health plans issue medical and pharmacy benefit policies for the same specialty drug and to evaluate the concordance between plans’ medical and pharmacy policies when plans issue both policy types. METHODS: We identified specialty drug coverage policies from the Tufts Medical Center Specialty Drug Evidence and Coverage Database, which includes policies issued by 17 of the largest US commercial health plans. Policies were current as of August 2020. We determined plans that issued both medical and pharmacy policies. Next, we identified drugs with “medical-pharmacy policy pairs,” ie, drugs for which a plan issued both a medical and a pharmacy policy. For these pairs, we compared the plan’s policies while accounting for the following coverage criteria: patient subgroups (patients must meet certain clinical criteria), prescriber requirements (a specialist must prescribe the drug), and step therapy protocols (patients must first fail alternative treatments). We considered medical-pharmacy policy pairs to be discordant if coverage criteria differed, eg, the medical policy included a prescriber requirement but the pharmacy policy did not. RESULTS: Eight plans issued separate medical and pharmacy benefit coverage policies for the same specialty drug and indication. Among these 8 plans, we identified 1,619 medical-pharmacy policy pairs. Eighty-six percent of pairs were concordant (1,386/1,619), and 14% were discordant (233/1,619). Discordance was most often due to differences in plans’ application of step therapy protocols (184/233), followed by prescriber requirements (52/233) and patient subgroups (25/233). Forty pairs were discordant in multiple ways. Of discordant pairs, medical policies were more restrictive 41% (96/233) of the time; pharmacy policies were more restrictive 54% (125/233) of the time; 5% of the time (12/233), the medical policy was more restrictive in some ways, but the pharmacy policy was more restrictive in others. Overall, plans imposed coverage restrictions in their medical and pharmacy policies with similar frequencies. CONCLUSIONS: Commercial health plans’ medical and pharmacy coverage policies for the same specialty drugs tended to be concordant, although we found coverage criteria to be discordant 14% of the time. Medical and pharmacy policies that are inconsistent in their coverage criteria and restrictions complicate, and potentially hinder, patients’ access to specialty drugs. Academy of Managed Care Pharmacy 2023-06 /pmc/articles/PMC10387921/ /pubmed/37276044 http://dx.doi.org/10.18553/jmcp.2023.29.6.607 Text en Copyright © 2023, Academy of Managed Care Pharmacy. All rights reserved. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits unrestricted use and redistribution provided that the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research
Levine, A. Alex
Panzer, Ari D
Kauf, Teresa L
O’Sullivan, Amy K
Strand, Lauren
Chambers, James D
Specialty drug coverage varies between health plans’ medical and pharmacy benefit policies
title Specialty drug coverage varies between health plans’ medical and pharmacy benefit policies
title_full Specialty drug coverage varies between health plans’ medical and pharmacy benefit policies
title_fullStr Specialty drug coverage varies between health plans’ medical and pharmacy benefit policies
title_full_unstemmed Specialty drug coverage varies between health plans’ medical and pharmacy benefit policies
title_short Specialty drug coverage varies between health plans’ medical and pharmacy benefit policies
title_sort specialty drug coverage varies between health plans’ medical and pharmacy benefit policies
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10387921/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37276044
http://dx.doi.org/10.18553/jmcp.2023.29.6.607
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