Transformed migraine exacts a significantly higher economic toll on patients and health care systems compared with other forms of migraine. Our findings support the need to prevent migraine progression and to provide appropriate management and treatment of transformed migraine.
Adherence with concomitant AH and LL therapy is poor, with only 1 in 3 patients adherent with both medications at 6 months. Physicians may be able to significantly improve adherence by initiating AH and LL therapy concomitantly and by reducing pill burden.
Key Points
Question
Among US insurers, what are the coverage and utilization management policies for nonpharmacologic treatments for chronic, noncancer low back pain?
Findings
In this cross-sectional study of 45 Medicaid, commercial, and Medicare Advantage plans, most plans covered at least physical and occupational therapy and chiropractic care for chronic noncancer pain, but there was little evidence of coverage of acupuncture and psychological interventions. Utilization management strategies such as visit limits and prior authorization were common, but criteria varied widely across the plans examined.
Meaning
The lack of consistent coverage and utilization management policies underscores the need for best practices to improve comprehensive, multimodal coverage of treatments for chronic, noncancer low back pain.
Declaration of financial/other relationships WP has served as a paid advisor to Molnlycke Health Care and is a Principal at Monument Analytics, a health care consultancy whose clients include the life sciences industry as well as plaintiffs in opioid litigation. This arrangement has been reviewed and approved by University of Southern California in accordance with its conflict of interest policies. SM is an employee of Monument Analytics. NR is an employee of Monument Analytics. BC is an employee of Monument Analytics FC is an employee of Monument Analytics JB has received consulting fees from Monument Analytics, a healthcare consultancy whose clients include the life sciences industry as well as plaintiffs in opioid litigation. This arrangement has been reviewed and approved by Johns Hopkins University in accordance with its conflict of interest policies. JT is an employee and co-founding Principal at Monument Analytics. GCA is past Chair and a current member of FDA's Peripheral and Central Nervous System Advisory Committee; is a co-founding Principal and equity holder in Monument Analytics, a healthcare consultancy whose clients include the life sciences industry as well as plaintiffs in opioid litigation; and is a past member of OptumRx's National P&T Committee. This arrangement has been reviewed and approved by Johns Hopkins University in accordance with its conflict of interest policies.
The MEDLINE database was searched from 1972 to June 2002 to identify studies of interventions designed to improve compliance with antihypertensive or lipid-lowering medications. Studies were required to employ a controlled design, follow patients for >or=6 months and measure compliance by a method other than patient self-report. The literature review yielded 62 studies describing 79 interventions. Overall, 56% of interventions were reported to improve patient compliance. When only those studies meeting minimum criteria for methodological quality were considered, 22 interventions remained and 12 were recommended, because they demonstrated a significant improvement in compliance. Recommended interventions included fixed-dose combination drugs, once-daily or once-weekly dosing schedules, unit-dose packaging, educational counselling by telephone, case management by pharmacists, treatment in pharmacist- or nurse-operated disease management clinics, mailed refill reminders, self-monitoring, dose-tailoring, rewards and various combination strategies. Personalised, patient-focused programs that involved frequent contact with health professionals or a combination of interventions were the most effective at improving compliance. Less-intensive strategies, such as prescribing products that simplify the medication regimen or sending refill reminders, achieved smaller improvements in compliance but may be cost-effective due to their low cost.
Early and frequent follow-up by physicians--especially lipid testing--was associated with improved adherence to lipid-lowering therapy. A randomised prospective study is needed to determine whether this relationship is causal.
Objective To quantify health care utilization and costs by disease severity for patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) in the United States Methods We conducted descriptive analyses of Humedica electronic health record (EHR) data from 2011 to 2015 (utilization analysis) and integrated Optum administrative claims/Humedica EHR data from 2012 to 2015 (cost analysis) for patients with SLE. All-cause utilization outcomes examined were hospitalizations, outpatient visits, emergency department (ED) visits, and prescription drug use. Analyses of costs stratified by disease severity were limited to patients enrolled in an Optum-participating health insurance plan for ≥1 year after the earliest observed SLE diagnosis date. Costs were converted to 2016 US dollars. Results Health care utilization was evaluated in 17,257 patients with SLE. Averaged over the study period from 2011 to 2015, 13.7% of patients had ≥1 hospitalization per year, 25.7% had ≥1 ED visit, and 94.4% had ≥1 outpatient visit. Utilization patterns were generally similar across each year studied. Annually, 88.0% of patients had ≥1 prescription, including 1.3% who used biologics. Biologic treatment doubled between 2011 (0.7%) and 2015 (1.4%). Cost analyses included 397 patients. During 2012 to 2015, patients with severe SLE had mean annual costs of $52,951, compared with $28,936 and $21,052 for patients with moderate and mild SLE, respectively. Patients with severe SLE had increased costs in all service categories: inpatient, ED, clinic/office visits, and pharmacy. Conclusion US patients with SLE, especially individuals with moderate or severe disease, utilize significant health care resources and incur high medical costs.
Typical adherence with HAART reduces quality-adjusted life expectancy by 12% compared with ideal adherence. Interventions to improve adherence appear to be a highly cost-effective use of resources.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.