Abstract

The affordability of pharmaceuticals has been a major challenge in US health care. Generic substitution has been proposed as an important tool to reduce the costs, yet little is known how the prices of more expensive brand-name drugs would be affected by an increased utilization of generics. We aimed to examine the trend of overall utilization and the total costs of brand-name oral contraceptive pills (OCPs), the most widely used form of contraception, and its association with the pharmaceutical market concentration among the OCPs. Data from the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS) 2011–2014, a nationally representative survey of healthcare utilization, were extracted on the utilization of generic and brand-name OCPs. A multiple logit regression analysis was conducted to assess the trend in utilization of brand-name OCPs over time. Total costs, including the costs to the payers and consumers, were synthesized. The Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI), an index describing market concentration, was constructed, and a multiple regression analysis was conducted to evaluate the association between the brand-name OCP prices and the market share of individual brand-name drugs. The odds of utilizing brand-name drugs decreased steadily in 2012, 2013, and 2014 compared to 2012 (AOR 0.87, 0.73, 0.55, respectively, p<0.05) controlling for patient mix. Despite significant decline in total utilization, there was a 90% increase in the price of brand-name OCPs, resulting an 18% increase in revenue from 2011 to 2014 for the industry. During this time, pharmaceutical market concentration for OCPs increased (HHI increased from 1105 in 2011 to 2415 in 2014). Each percentage point increase in the market share by a brand-name OCPs was associated with a $3.12 increase in its price. Market mechanisms matter. Practitioners and policy makers need to take market mechanisms into account in order to realize the benefits of generic substitutions.

Highlights

  • Rising pharmaceutical prices are a persistent and serious challenge in the US healthcare system [1]

  • This study focused on the utilization and price trend of the oral contraceptive pills (OCPs), the most widely used form of contraception [5, 6]

  • The brand-name OCPs were identified through the RXNAME field which identifies the drug names in the Prescribed Medicine file and the field of FDA approval, i.e., New Drug Application (NDA) and Abbreviated New Drug Application (ANDA) for the generic drugs [9]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Rising pharmaceutical prices are a persistent and serious challenge in the US healthcare system [1]. The hope is that this will be translated into lower costs to the consumers and society and that the utilization of branded equivalent drugs will be reduced It is unclear, if the brandname drug prices decrease when faced with increasing utilization of generic drugs in order to be competitive. Even with a reduction in utilization of brand-name drugs, society may not receive the benefit of a reduction of total costs, if the brand-name drugs increase their prices in the market. These are important practice and policy questions because, without a clear answer, the benefits of generic substitution will be in question

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call