Abstract
Reference pricing has been shown to reduce drug spending in Europe and has been adopted by some employers and labor unions in the United States. Its association with patient cost sharing depends on whether and how quickly physicians adjust their prescribing patterns to favor the least costly alternatives within each therapeutic class. To examine whether the implementation of reference pricing is associated with physicians and patients shifting to lower-cost drugs, thereby reducing consumer cost sharing and the prices paid by employers. This economic evaluation included employees of Catholic organizations who purchased health insurance through the Reta Trust and a random sample of employees of public sector organizations who purchased insurance through the California Public Employees' Retirement System (CalPERS) as a comparison group between July 1, 2010, and December 31, 2017. Data analysis was performed from January 1, 2019, to September 1, 2019. The Reta Trust implemented reference pricing in July 2013; CalPERS did not adopt reference pricing during the study period. Probability that the drug prescribed was the least costly alternative within its therapeutic class, price paid per prescription, and patient cost sharing per prescription. Multivariable, difference-in-differences regression analysis of drug insurance claims was performed for patients before and after implementation of reference pricing, adjusted for patient characteristics, each drug's therapeutic class, and the month and year of the prescription. During the study period, a total of 1.2 million prescriptions were submitted by 34 319 individuals covered by Reta Trust and 2.1 million prescriptions were submitted by 738 159 individuals covered by CalPERS. In the first 2.5 years after implementation of reference pricing, the percentage of prescriptions made for the low-priced drug within each therapeutic class increased by 5.1 percentage points (95% CI, 1.8 to 8.4 percentage points), patient cost sharing increased by 10.3% (95% CI, -1.6% to -23.6%; this difference was not statistically significant), and prices paid decreased by 19.1% (95% CI, -30.2% to -6.2%) for Reta Trust patients compared with CalPERS patients. During the subsequent 2-year postimplementation period, the percentage of prescriptions made for the low-priced drug increased an additional 6.2 percentage points (95% CI, 2.3 to 10.1 percentage points), patient cost sharing decreased by 21.3% (95% CI, -31.2% to -9.9%), and prices paid increased by 7.2% (95% CI, -12.6% to 31.4%; this difference was not statistically significant). Relative to the change experienced by the CalPERS population, during the study period, the share of prescriptions for lower-priced drugs increased by 6.3 percentage points (8.9% relative increase), the mean prescription drug price decreased by $9.5 (12.1% relative decrease), and the mean patient cost sharing decreased by $1.8 (4.3% relative decrease). In this study, reference pricing was associated with a combination of lower prices paid by employers and lower cost sharing by employees but with a time lag in prescribing habits by physicians.
Highlights
Reference pricing is a strategy developed by European nations and adopted by some US employers that encourages physicians to prescribe and patients to use the least costly medications within therapeutic classes that feature multiple alternatives.[1,2] Under reference pricing, the employer’s or insurer’s payment is limited to the price of the least costly product in each therapeutic class
During the study period, a total of 1.2 million prescriptions were submitted by 34 319 individuals covered by Reta Trust and 2.1 million prescriptions were submitted by 738 159 individuals covered by California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS)
In the first 2.5 years after implementation of reference pricing, the percentage of prescriptions made for the low-priced drug within each therapeutic class increased by 5.1 percentage points, patient cost sharing increased by 10.3%, and prices paid decreased by 19.1% for Reta Trust patients compared with CalPERS patients
Summary
Reference pricing is a strategy developed by European nations and adopted by some US employers that encourages physicians to prescribe and patients to use the least costly medications within therapeutic classes that feature multiple alternatives.[1,2] Under reference pricing, the employer’s or insurer’s payment is limited to the price of the least costly product in each therapeutic class. Patients using higher-priced drugs within the class must pay the full difference themselves, unless the prescribing physician requests an exemption on clinical grounds. This approach creates incentives for physicians to switch their prescriptions to lower-priced products on behalf of their patients, in turn generating savings for the employer or insurer. We extended the postimplementation period from 18 to 54 months to examine whether the pattern of physician prescription and patient use adjusted over time and whether this pattern was associated with reduced patient cost sharing without loss of savings for employers
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