Journal of managed care & specialty pharmacy
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J Manag Care Spec Pharm · May 2014
Comparative StudyHealth care utilization and costs by site of service for nonmetastatic breast cancer patients treated with trastuzumab.
Adjuvant trastuzumab treatment is administered to early stage breast cancer patients in physician office (POV) or hospital outpatient (HOP) settings. ⋯ Breast cancer patients treated with adjuvant trastuzumab in the HOP setting had a shorter duration of trastuzumab treatment and fewer trastuzumab infusions but incurred higher monthly total costs than patients treated in the POV setting.
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J Manag Care Spec Pharm · May 2014
Implementation of an opioid management initiative by a state Medicaid program.
The utilization of prescription opioids has increased over the last 2 decades. Associated with this is the misuse of prescription opioids for nonmedical purposes. Medicaid programs have struggled with developing strategies that balance best practice models, appropriate utilization, and reduction in costs associated with the opioid medication class. ⋯ Our study successfully demonstrated that a state Medicaid program initiative can result in a significant overall decrease in opioid class utilization specifically for the targeted, more costly agents. This was achieved via the implementation of a Therapeutic Class Management multidisciplinary workgroup that established a prior authorization process implementing limits on dose, as well as identified preferred less costly agents. It further facilitated the direct opportunity for pharmacy-prescriber collaboration for LAOA medication management.
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J Manag Care Spec Pharm · May 2014
ReviewAssessing the present state and potential of Medicaid controlled substance lock-in programs.
Nonmedical use of prescription medications--particularly controlled substances--has risen dramatically in recent decades, resulting in alarming increases in overdose-related health care utilization, costs, and mortality. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate that 80% of abused and misused controlled substances originate as legal prescriptions. As such, policymakers and payers have the opportunity to combat nonmedical use by regulating controlled substance accessibility within legal prescribing and dispensing processes. ⋯ Nearly all outcomes evidence stemmed from publicly accessible internal Medicaid program evaluations, which largely investigated cost savings to the state. Lock-in programs are highly prevalent and poised to play a meaningful role in curbing the prescription drug abuse epidemic. However, achieving these ends requires a concerted effort from the academic and policy communities to rigorously evaluate the effect of lock-in programs on patient outcomes, determine optimal program design, and explore opportunities to enhance lock-in program impact through coordination with parallel controlled substance policy efforts, namely prescription drug-monitoring programs.
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J Manag Care Spec Pharm · May 2014
Comparative StudyThe prevalence of opioid-related major potential drug-drug interactions and their impact on health care costs in chronic pain patients.
Literature has shown that chronic pain patients prescribed opioids are at an increased risk for experiencing drug-drug interactions as a result of polypharmacy. In addition, chronic, noncancer pain patients who experience drug-drug interactions have been shown to have greater health care utilization and costs. However, no study has focused on the health economics of major clinically significant drug-drug interactions associated with long-acting opioids. ⋯ Exposure to potential drug-drug interactions may result in unnecessary and unintended health care costs. Physicians should be made aware of commonly administered cytochrome P450 (CYP450) metabolized drugs in the chronic pain patient and consider prescribing non-CYP450 metabolized opioid and nonopioid analgesics. Managed care's use of utilization management tools to avoid these exposures may reduce costs.