Price versus clinical guidelines in primary care statin prescribing: a retrospective cohort study and cost simulation model
Author(s) -
Matías Ortiz de Zárate,
Emmanouil Mentzakis,
Simon Fraser,
Paul Roderick,
Paul Rutter,
Carmine Ornaghi
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of the royal society of medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.38
H-Index - 81
eISSN - 1758-1095
pISSN - 0141-0768
DOI - 10.1177/01410768211051713
Subject(s) - medical prescription , formulary , medicine , statin , nice , primary care , retrospective cohort study , cost effectiveness , family medicine , excellence , emergency medicine , computer science , pharmacology , programming language , political science , risk analysis (engineering) , law
Objective To investigate the relative impact of generic entry and National Institute for Health and Care Excellence clinical guidelines on prescribing using statins as an exemplar.Design Retrospective analysis of statin prescribing in primary care and cost simulation model.Setting Royal College of General Practitioners Research and Surveillance Centre (RCGP R&SC) database and Prescription Cost Analysis (PCA) database.Participants New patients prescribed statins for the first time between July 2003 and September 2018.Main outcome measures Shares of new patients prescribed one of the five statins available in the British National Formulary, and cost of prescribing statins to new and existing patients in primary care in England.Results General trends of statin’ prescriptions were largely driven by a decrease in acquisition costs triggered by patent expiration, preceding NICE guidelines which themselves did not seem to affect prescription trends. Significant heterogeneity is observed in the prescription of the most cost-effective statin acrossGPs. A cost simulation shows that, between 2004 and 2018, the NHS could have saved £2.8bn (around 40% of the £6.3bn spent on statins during this time) if all GP practices had prescribed only the most cost-effective treatment.Conclusions There is potential for large savings for the NHS if new and, whenever possible, ongoing patients are promptly switched to the first medicine that becomes available as generic within a therapeutic class as long as it has similar efficacy to still-patented medicines.
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