• J R Soc Med · Sep 2020

    Comparative Study

    Projected spending for brand-name drugs in English primary care given US prices: a cross-sectional study.

    • Michael Liu, Brian MacKenna, William B Feldman, Alex J Walker, Jerry Avorn, Aaron S Kesselheim, and Ben Goldacre.
    • The DataLab, Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford OX2 6GG, UK.
    • J R Soc Med. 2020 Sep 1; 113 (9): 350-359.

    ObjectivesTo estimate additional spending if NHS England paid the same prices as US Medicare Part D for the 50 single-source brand-name drugs with the highest expenditure in English primary care in 2018.DesignRetrospective analysis of 2018 drug prescribing and spending in the NHS England prescribing data and the Medicare Part D Drug Spending Dashboard and Data. We examined the 50 costliest drugs in English primary care available as brand-name-only in the US and England. We performed cost projections of NHS England spending with US Medicare Part D prices. We estimated average 2018 US rebates as 1 minus the quotient of net divided by gross Medicare Part D spending.SettingEngland and US.ParticipantsNHS England and US Medicare systems.Main Outcome MeasuresTotal spending, prescriptions and claims in NHS England and Medicare Part D. All spending and cost measures were reported in 2018 British pounds.ResultsNHS England spent £1.39 billion on drugs in the cohort. All drugs were more expensive under US Medicare Part D than NHS England. The US-England price ratios ranged from 1.3 to 9.9 (mean ratio 4.8). Accounting for prescribing volume, if NHS England had paid US Medicare Part D prices after adjusting for estimated US rebates, it would have spent 4.6 times as much in 2018 on drugs in the cohort (£6.42 billion).ConclusionsSpending by NHS England would be substantially higher if it paid US Medicare Part D prices. This could result in decreased access to medicines and other health services.

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