JAMA
1992 Sep 16;268(11):1434-40
Access to recombinant erythropoietin by Medicare-entitled dialysis patients
in the first year after FDA approval.
Powe NR, Griffiths RI, de Lissovoy G, Anderson GF, Watson AJ, Greer JW,
Herbert RJ, Eggers PW, Milam RA, Whelton PK.
Division of Internal Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine,
Baltimore, Md.
OBJECTIVE: Examine access to recombinant human erythropoietin
(rHuEPO) by dialysis-dependent end-stage renal disease (ESRD) patients
during the first year after FDA approval for use in clinical practice
and Medicare coverage.
DESIGN: Longitudinal and cross-sectional claims data
analyses.
SETTING: All US providers of outpatient dialysis treatment.
PATIENTS: 126,201 Medicare-entitled dialysis patients
(approximately 93% of all US dialysis patients).
OUTCOME MEASURES: Percentage of patients who received
rHuEPO, odds of receiving rHuEPO according to patient characteristics,
and cost of rHuEPO to Medicare.
RESULTS: One year after FDA approval, 52% of all dialysis
and 60% of in-center hemodialysis patients who regularly had Medicare-paid
dialysis services received rHuEPO at a monthly cost to Medicare of $19
million (18% of Medicare ESRD outpatient expenditures and 6% of all ESRD
program expenditures). Blacks were less likely than whites to receive
rHuEPO (odds ratio, 0.88; 95% confidence interval, 0.86 to 0.91). Home
peritoneal and hemodialysis patients were less likely than in-center hemodialysis
patients to receive rHuEPO (odds ratios, 0.17 and 0.22, respectively;
95% confidence intervals, 0.16 to 0.17 and 0.20 to 0.24, respectively).
Use of rHuEPO varied across geographic regions. The odds of receiving
rHuEPO were lower for patients of male vs female sex, of ages 35 through
64 years vs less than 35 years and greater than 65 years, with a longer
history of ESRD, with polycystic kidney disease vs other causes of ESRD,
and receiving care in nonprofit vs for-profit facilities. First-month
hematocrits were slightly higher (1.2 percentage points) for patients
starting rHuEPO in the 12th month than in the first month after FDA approval.
CONCLUSIONS: With prompt insurance coverage, the majority
of Medicare-entitled dialysis patients received rHuEPO following widespread
availability. Factors that may not be related to clinical need (race,
setting of care, and geography) possibly influenced early patient access.
More attention should be paid to monitoring the appropriate use of high-cost
biotechnologic therapy.
PMID: 1512912 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]