SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. — Health care reform may be stalled on Capitol Hill, but states are stepping up to tackle some areas of concern, cancer care advocates said at the annual Community Oncology Conference.
Two key issues gaining traction in state legislatures are parity in payment for oral and intravenous cancer drugs, and a requirement for payers to cover supportive care for patients in clinical trials. In addition, some states are looking for models of what they can do if Congress fails to enact comprehensive reform, experts said at the conference, which was sponsored by the journal Community Oncology. “The momentum toward the states' doing something is increasing,” said Shelagh Foster, government relations director at the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
“We are going to see more of the states taking control of health care reform. … The state reps are a little closer to the people because they are the people. They are concerned; they hear about it more,” agreed John F. Akscin, vice president for government relations at McKesson Specialty Care Solutions of La Vergne, Tenn.
Parity in Payments for Oncolytics
The Community Oncology Alliance lists five states (Hawaii, Indiana, Iowa, Oregon, and Vermont) as requiring payers to cover oral cancer drugs at the same level as intravenous chemotherapy drugs.
Last September, the California legislature passed a parity law (SB 161) that was vetoed by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, noted Mary Kruczynski, director of policy analysis at COA. In his veto message, the governor noted that the bill “limits a plan's ability to control both the appropriateness of the care and the cost by requiring [insurers] to immediately cover every medication as soon as it receives federal approval … placing them at a severe disadvantage when negotiating prices with drug manufacturers.”
In addition, parity measures are under consideration in at least a dozen more states. “Parity bills—they are going to spring up all over the place,” said COA Executive Director Ted A. Okon.
At issue are higher copayments that many insurers require of patients for oral drugs, which tend to be newer and substantially more expensive than intravenous drugs. COA looked at 11 widely used, oral oncology drugs and how they are covered by leading insurers, Ms. Kruczynski said. Three were covered by Medicare Part B; the rest by Medicare Part D. All but one was placed in formulary tiers that require patient copayments as high as 25%-35%. “All had roadblocks, time on the phone to get them approved. All had quantity limits,” she said. “Some had step plans. … To be sure [that the patient] needs that infusible antiemetic, he needs to throw up for 3 days first.”
As part of a project assessing the impact of these policies on cancer care, COA analyzed a database containing information on 5 million prescriptions issued to 500,000 patients from January 2007 to June 2009. It found that 21% of claims for oral oncolytics were rejected and 9% were “reversed,” she said. A reversed claim is one that is approved by the payer and filled by the pharmacy, but not picked up by the patient. The study followed patients for several months after the reversals, she said. Many patients did pick up medicines for heart disease, diabetes, and anxiety. “So we knew they were still alive,” she said. “They were making a conscious decision, or their hand was forced, not to take lifesaving medication.”
When made public, the full parity study will include best practices gleaned from interviews with physicians, nurses, patients, pharmacists, pharmacy benefit managers, medical directors, and staff of copayment assistance foundations that help patients who cannot afford cancer drugs, Ms. Kruczynski added.
Oral cancer drugs are a growing issue, according to Dr. Justin P. Favaro of Oncology Specialists of Charlotte (N.C.), who chaired the study. He counted 34 oral drugs—some off label—that were being used in cancer treatment, and estimated that 25% of new drugs in the pipeline are oral agents. As virtually all are still under patent, prices are high and “all over the map,” Dr. Favaro said, citing the multiple myeloma drug lenalidomide (Revlimid) as a widely used example. The average cost is $74,000 per year, he said; after looking at two different Medicare part D programs, he estimated the average cost to patients to be $8,300 per year. In addition, Revlimid takes a lot of time to prescribe, he said, with a utilization management program for providers, mandatory counseling for patients, extensive paperwork to be filled out, and distribution restricted to specialty pharmacies.