A prescriber fax program alerting physicians when their diabetic
patients have not had a statin claim demonstrated a statistically significant
boost in statin use and could be a valuable addition to Medicare Advantage
Prescription Drug (MA-PD) plans' efforts to improve both medication adherence
and star ratings, according to a new study from Prime Therapeutics LLC.
Cholesterol-lowering statin drugs began to play a bigger role in
the CMS star ratings in 2019, when the Pharmacy Quality Alliance-developed
Statin Use in Persons with Diabetes (SUPD) measure was added to the Part D
calculations and when the NCQA-developed Statin Therapy for Patients with
Cardiovascular Disease measure was added to the Part C ratings.
With the launch of a prescriber fax program in 2019, Prime
Therapeutics began identifying diabetic members who did not have a statin
pharmacy benefit claim and sending faxes to the member's prescriber
recommending statin therapy. To assess the effectiveness of such a program,
Prime researchers monitored the claims of two member groups comprising
individuals who had one paid claim for a statin during 2018 and 2019 and were continuously
enrolled with one of Prime's owner/client Blue Cross Blue Shield Medicare
plans.
From 2018 to 2019, there was a statistically significant 3.7
percentage-point increase in diabetic members having at least one paid claim
for a statin among those exposed to the fax program and a separate pharmacist
outreach program offered by Prime, according to the study, which was presented
at the Pharmacy Quality Alliance 2021 Online Annual Meeting.
Put another way, researchers found that "78.5% of eligible
diabetes members utilized at least one statin in the pre-period for contracts
that participated in both the pharmacist outreach and SUPD fax program and
82.2% of eligible diabetes members utilized at least one statin in the
post-period for contracts that participated in both the pharmacist outreach and
SUPD fax program," explains Steven Champaloux, principal data scientist
and a study co-author.
The SUPD fax program was also associated with a star measure
improvement, says Champaloux. "Due to the narrow cutoffs within the SUPD
star ratings, a small boost can easily move members into a higher star rating,"
he suggests. "Higher health plan star ratings mean better rates for
members. Prime is focused on better outcomes and lower costs, so improving this
metric is a great way to achieve both."
From
RADAR on Medicare Advantage
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