1. Impact of health system specialty pharmacies on total cost of care in cancer treatment, a multisite review.
- Author
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Wink, Scott, Schroader, Bridgette Kanz, Giglio, Toni, and Ward, Angela
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COST control , *MEDICAL care use , *RESEARCH funding , *ANTINEOPLASTIC agents , *COST analysis , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *TREATMENT duration , *LONGITUDINAL method , *MEDICAL records , *ACQUISITION of data , *TUMORS , *DRUGSTORES , *MEDICAL care costs , *HOSPITAL pharmacies , *INTEGRATED health care delivery - Abstract
Introduction: Integrated delivery networks can use medically integrated dispensing of oral oncolytics on site through health system specialty pharmacies. There is little published research examining cost savings. Our objective was to demonstrate the financial value of health system specialty pharmacies among patients receiving oral oncolytics dispensed through fully, partially, and non-integrated dispensing strategies. Methods: This was a retrospective cohort study of adult patients from Symphony Health's Integrated Dataverse® repository who filled a prescription for an agent of interest from 7/1/16–6/30/20 that was written within 25 US health systems. Outcomes included costs, healthcare resource utilization, and duration of therapy. Results: In total, 36,816 patients were included; 986 patients (2.7%) integrated, 1,822 (4.9%) partially integrated, and 34,008 (92.4%) non-integrated. Mean 6-month medical charge and oncolytic prescription costs were lower for the integrated group ($36,831; $55,786) than the partially integrated ($46,304, p = 0.053; $63,295, p = 0.071) and non-integrated groups ($54,261, p < 0.001; $65,005, p = 0.004). In most healthcare resource utilization categories, the integrated group had the lowest patient percentage utilizing medical care. Duration of therapy was lower on average by ∼3 months in the integrated vs non-integrated group, which may represent closer monitoring of patient medical records and need for fills vs autoship practices. Conclusions: Patients receiving oral oncolytics through medically integrated dispensing at health system specialty pharmacies may have lower medical and pharmacy costs and decreased healthcare resource utilization. This study adds to the growing body of literature supporting integrated delivery networks and integrated dispensing. Further research is needed to demonstrate the value of medically integrated dispensing through health system specialty pharmacies in the delivery of treatment to patients with cancer and other high-cost diseases. Plain Language Summary: Some health systems fill cancer medication prescriptions on site. Compared to patients who sometimes or never filled their cancer medication prescriptions on site, patients who always filled their cancer medication prescriptions on site had lower costs and less use of healthcare services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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