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© 2013 Vernaz et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited: Vernaz N, Haller G, Girardin F, Huttner B, Combescure C, et al. (2013) Patented Drug Extension Strategies on Healthcare Spending: A Cost-Evaluation Analysis. PLoS Med 10(6): e1001460. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.1001460

Abstract

Background

Drug manufacturers have developed "evergreening" strategies to compete with generic medication after patent termination. These include marketing of slightly modified follow-on drugs. We aimed to estimate the financial impact of these drugs on overall healthcare costs and also to examine the impact of listing these drugs in hospital restrictive drug formularies (RDFs) on the healthcare system as a whole ("spillover effect").

Methods and Findings

We used hospital and community pharmacy invoice office data in the Swiss canton of Geneva to calculate utilisation of eight follow-on drugs in defined daily doses between 2000 and 2008. "Extra costs" were calculated for three different scenarios assuming replacement with the corresponding generic equivalent for prescriptions of (1) all brand (i.e., initially patented) drugs, (2) all follow-on drugs, or (3) brand and follow-on drugs. To examine the financial spillover effect we calculated a monthly follow-on drug market share in defined daily doses for medications prescribed by hospital physicians but dispensed in community pharmacies, in comparison to drugs prescribed by non-hospital physicians in the community.

Estimated "extra costs" over the study period were [euro]15.9 (95% CI 15.5; 16.2) million for scenario 1, [euro]14.4 (95% CI 14.1; 14.7) million for scenario 2, and [euro]30.3 (95% CI 29.8; 30.8) million for scenario 3. The impact of strictly switching all patients using proton-pump inhibitors to esomeprazole at admission resulted in a spillover "extra cost" of [euro]330,300 (95% CI 276,100; 383,800), whereas strictly switching to generic cetirizine resulted in savings of [euro]7,700 (95% CI 4,100; 11,100). Overall we estimated that the RDF resulted in "extra costs" of [euro]503,600 (95% CI 444,500; 563,100).

Conclusions

Evergreening strategies have been successful in maintaining market share in Geneva, offsetting competition by generics and cost containment policies. Hospitals may be contributing to increased overall healthcare costs by listing follow-on drugs in their RDF. Therefore, healthcare providers and policy makers should be aware of the impact of evergreening strategies.

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Details

Title
Patented Drug Extension Strategies on Healthcare Spending: A Cost-Evaluation Analysis
Author
Vernaz, Nathalie; Haller, Guy; Girardin, François; Huttner, Benedikt; Combescure, Christophe; Dayer, Pierre; Muscionico, Daniel; Salomon, Jean-Luc; Bonnabry, Pascal
Pages
e1001460
Section
Research Article
Publication year
2013
Publication date
Jun 2013
Publisher
Public Library of Science
ISSN
15491277
e-ISSN
15491676
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1427360745
Copyright
© 2013 Vernaz et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited: Vernaz N, Haller G, Girardin F, Huttner B, Combescure C, et al. (2013) Patented Drug Extension Strategies on Healthcare Spending: A Cost-Evaluation Analysis. PLoS Med 10(6): e1001460. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.1001460