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Impact of the healthcare payment system on patient access to oral anticancer drugs: an illustration from the French and United States contexts

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 f...

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Autores principales: Benjamin, Laure, Buthion, Valérie, Vidal-Trécan, Gwenaëlle, Briot, Pascal
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4082413/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24950778
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-14-274
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author Benjamin, Laure
Buthion, Valérie
Vidal-Trécan, Gwenaëlle
Briot, Pascal
author_facet Benjamin, Laure
Buthion, Valérie
Vidal-Trécan, Gwenaëlle
Briot, Pascal
author_sort Benjamin, Laure
collection PubMed
description 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. SUMMARY: Funding of healthcare services is a critical factor influencing in part the choice of cancer treatments and this is expected to become increasingly important as economic constraints grow. Drug reimbursement systems and hospital financing changes, coupled with other accompanying measures, should contribute to improve equal and safe patient access to appropriate anticancer drugs and improve the management and care pathway of cancer patients.
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spelling pubmed-40824132014-07-05 Impact of the healthcare payment system on patient access to oral anticancer drugs: an illustration from the French and United States contexts Benjamin, Laure Buthion, Valérie Vidal-Trécan, Gwenaëlle Briot, Pascal BMC Health Serv Res Debate 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. SUMMARY: Funding of healthcare services is a critical factor influencing in part the choice of cancer treatments and this is expected to become increasingly important as economic constraints grow. Drug reimbursement systems and hospital financing changes, coupled with other accompanying measures, should contribute to improve equal and safe patient access to appropriate anticancer drugs and improve the management and care pathway of cancer patients. BioMed Central 2014-06-20 /pmc/articles/PMC4082413/ /pubmed/24950778 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-14-274 Text en Copyright © 2014 Benjamin et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited.
spellingShingle Debate
Benjamin, Laure
Buthion, Valérie
Vidal-Trécan, Gwenaëlle
Briot, Pascal
Impact of the healthcare payment system on patient access to oral anticancer drugs: an illustration from the French and United States contexts
title Impact of the healthcare payment system on patient access to oral anticancer drugs: an illustration from the French and United States contexts
title_full Impact of the healthcare payment system on patient access to oral anticancer drugs: an illustration from the French and United States contexts
title_fullStr Impact of the healthcare payment system on patient access to oral anticancer drugs: an illustration from the French and United States contexts
title_full_unstemmed Impact of the healthcare payment system on patient access to oral anticancer drugs: an illustration from the French and United States contexts
title_short Impact of the healthcare payment system on patient access to oral anticancer drugs: an illustration from the French and United States contexts
title_sort impact of the healthcare payment system on patient access to oral anticancer drugs: an illustration from the french and united states contexts
topic Debate
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4082413/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24950778
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-14-274
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