Alia Paavola - Monday, August 19th, 2019
Between 2011 and 2017, Medicare could have
saved $17.7 billion if generic versions of older medicines were prescribed
instead of updated brand-name drugs launched by drugmakers to replace their
older off-patent pills, according to a new study published in the Annals of
Internal Medicine.
In one instance, researchers found that
between 2011 and 2017 Medicare spent $13.4 billion on Nexium, an acid reflux
pill manufactured by AstraZeneca. However, Medicare could have saved $12.7
billion if physicians instead prescribed a generic version of AstraZeneca's
older acid reflux pill called Prilosec. The drugmaker launched Nexium after the
patent expired on Prilosec. While they are chemically similar drugs, Nexium is
considered a new compound protected by patent.
As patents expire on older medicines,
drugmakers often use this tactic known as chiral switching to preserve sales of
a drug.
While the pharmaceutical industry defends the
practice, claiming the newer, updated brand-name drugs are more effective or
safer, other studies have found that these updated medicines offer marginal or
no therapeutic advantages, according to STAT.
Based on their findings, the study authors
suggest that Medicare Part D plan sponsors should encourage the prescribing of
older generic versions of drugs, until drugmakers can demonstrate added
benefits or improved outcomes from their updated brand-name versions.
Access the full study here.
https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/pharmacy/prescribing-older-generics-could-ve-saved-medicare-17-7b-study-finds.html?_lrsc=b0999e74-df15-4e93-b898-2e5d348ff400&utm_source=Elevate&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=Associates
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