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Pharmaceutical industry influences and practices (including lobbying ... they are the 'leading communications company serving the pharmaceutical industry' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Title from previous


1
Title from previous
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Learning Objectives
  • Understand the formulary background, concept,
    structure, and ways formularies can facilitate
    better prescribing decision-making.  
  • Understand the concept of drugs of choice
  • Critically discuss specific examples of local
    formulary decisions, and launch student projects
    for in-depth study of a formulary drug
    application case study.
  • Analyze controversies and issues surrounding
    formulary implementation and current practices

3
Outline - Hour 1
  • Exercise Formulary culture survey
  • Background history of formularies
  • How formularies work
  • Examples from Cook County
  • Selective COX2 2. Specific criteria
    ??
  • Global perspectives/examples
  • CDC Drugs of Choice 2. WHO Essential Drugs

BREAK
4
Outline Hour 2
  • FLIP and formularies FLIP tools
  • Audience Response Lab
  • Culture survey discussion
  • Project development
  • Assessment

5
An International Battleground
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Baghdad
Basra
9
Baghdad
Basra
10
Ancient Formulary Sumerian Cuneiform Tablet from
Nippur 3000 BC
11
Early U.S. Formularies
  • Lititz Pharmacopoeia published in 1778 for use by
    the Continental forces
  • Costes Compendium Pharmaceuticum of 1780 used by
    French forces during the American Revolution
  • United States Pharmacopeia Convention meets in
    Old Senate Chamber Jan 1, 1820
  • Selects drugs for the Pharmacopeia of the United
    States
  • Oldest non-profit organization in the U.S.

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Balu PT 11/04
14
  • Drug Formulary
  • A continually updated list of medications and
    related information, representing the clinical
    judgment of physicians, pharmacists and other
    experts in the diagnosis and/or treatment of
    disease and promotion of health.
  • Drug Formulary System
  • Ongoing process
  • Collaboration of physicians, pharmacists, and
    other health care professionals
  • Establishes policies on the use of drug products
    and therapies most medically appropriate and
    cost-effective to best serve the health interests
    of a given patient population.
  • http//www.amcp.org/amcp.ark?cstuscglossary

15
Types of Formularies in U.S.
Outpatient
Public Sector Medicaid National VA (
regional/local) Privatized-Public
Sector Medicare Part D (2801 private plans)
Private Sector PBMs Other HMO/Insurer Retail
pharmacy chains
Inpatient
Hospital Formularies Nursing Homes
16
UIC vs. County
UIC 2006 County
690 Number of drugs 1000
Inpatient only Type of formulary Inpatient outpatient
22 Drugs reviewed 59
12 Drugs approved 25
7 Drugs rejected 0
2 Drugs removed due to review 15
Generally Stocked Non-formulary process Restrictive (non-stock)
17
Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committee
18
Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committee
Formulary Management
Drug Usage Monitoring
Drug Use Policy-making
Drug Use
Drug Use
Drug Use
Drug Use
Drug Use
Drug Use
Drug Use
19
Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committee
Formulary Management
Drug Usage Monitoring
Drug Use Policy-making
  • Additions
  • Deletions
  • Restrictions
  • Ensure Availability
  • Periodic Reviews
  • Publish Formulary
  • Communicate
  • Restrictions
  • Guidelines
  • Therapeutic Interchange
  • Lab Monitoring
  • Education
  • Alerts
  • Drug rep policies
  • Adverse Reactions
  • Med Error Safety
  • Overall Utilization
  • Non-formulary Usage
  • Criteria-Based Monitoring

20
New Drug Requests by M.D.s
Formulary Process
Fill Out Application
Formal Pharmacists Review
Discuss at DF Meeting
Approved /- Restrictions
Approval by Exec Med Staff
Not Approved
Formulary Inclusion
21
Cook County COX2 Approval Mechanism (via Pharm
HELP Desk)
  • GI Assessment Tool Scoring
  • Age (1-18)
  • Health Status (0-4)
  • RA (2)
  • Prednisone (5)
  • Ever GI Bleeding (8)
  • GI Side effects (2)
  • Score
  • gt 20 Automatic OK 16-20 Trial Salcylate

22
Trends in the Use of NSAIDs and Spending for
Coxibs by Medicaid from 1999 through 2003
Fischer M et al. N Engl J Med 20043512187-2194
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COX2NSAIDs s Cook County vs. Medicaid
2001 N431/17,259
25
Percentage of Defined Daily Doses of NSAIDs
Accounted for by Coxibs in the Fourth Quarter of
2003, According to Whether a Prior-Authorization
Program Had Been Implemented
Fischer M et al. N Engl J Med 20043512187-2194
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from Cook County Formulary New Drug Application
Form
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New Drug D F Application 4 Roles of Specific
Criteria
  • Organize evidence-based DF review of value,
    indications, role for new drug
  • Educate, once drug approved
  • Guide real-time utilization of drug, ideally
    computer delivered at time of order
  • Retrospective review of appropriateness

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Leading Challenges to CCH/UIC Formulary
Committees
  • MDs circumventing formulary and formulary
    application process for new drugs by using
    non-formulary ordering route
  • Inadequacies of the studies on which to base
    decisions
  • Lack of dedicated time of members to fully and
    critically digest literature and deliberate at
    the meetings
  • Wrestling with extremely costly (10k/yr) new
    agents that appear to be effective, but pose
    major stain on institutions drug budget
    resources
  • Pharmaceutical industry influences and practices
    (including lobbying members, pricing schemes)

32
CDC Drugs of Choice
  • Methodology
  • This report was produced through a
    multistage process. Beginning in 2004, CDC
    personnel and professionals knowledgeable in the
    field of STDs systematically reviewed evidence,
    including published abstracts and peer-reviewed
    journal articles concerning each of the major
    STDs, focusing on information that had become
    available since publication of the Sexually
    Transmitted Diseases Treatment Guidelines, 2002
    (1). Background papers were written and tables of
    evidence were constructed summarizing the type of
    study (e.g., randomized controlled trial or case
    series), study population and setting, treatments
    or other interventions, outcome measures
    assessed, reported findings, and weaknesses and
    biases in study design and analysis. A draft
    document was developed on the basis of the
    reviews.

33
WHO Essential Drugs List
  • In 1977, WHO published the first Model List of
    Essential Medicines containing 208 individual
    drugs which together could provide safe,
    effective treatment for the majority of
    communicable and non-communicable diseases

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Hogerzeil BMJ 2004
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Bangladesh Essential Drugs Program-1982
  • With these models, and inspired by WHOs HFA
    program, in 1982 Bangladesh implemented its
    National Drug Policy (NDP). An expert committee
    assembled a list of recommendations based on
    WHOs EDC, and the NDP aimed to ensure that
    procurement, local production, quality control,
    distribution, and use of pharmaceuticals came
    under the control of a single government body.
    This was to be a major part of national health
    policy.

41
  • No sooner had a form of the NDP been implemented
    than foreign-owned drug companies mobilized a
    campaign of misinformation, threats, and
    intimidation. For example, on June 1, 1982, the
    Bangladesh Times publicized the NDP. That same
    morning, the U.S. ambassador made an unscheduled
    call on the government to deliver the message
    that the policy was not acceptable to the U.S.
    government. Although the U.S. government had no
    overt interest in the NDP, drug companies, which
    had made considerable donations to the election
    campaigns of members of the U.S. government,
    assuredly did. They mobilized the influence their
    money had purchased against the NDP, which is why
    a superpower became involved in the internal
    health affairs of a small country on the other
    side of the globe

42
Break?Downstairs
  • Audience Response (30 minutes)
  • Formulary Myths
  • ISMP Data (Myths are still true)
  • Projects Tools and drugs

43
Leveraging Formularies for Improved Prescribing
  1. Venue for critical review of new drug claims
  2. Evaluation of comparative efficacy
  3. Less bias and conflict in decision-making
  4. Cumulative expertise in reviewing new drugs
  5. Experience with pitfalls and biases
  6. Identify and weigh potentials for overuse/misuse
  7. Weighing of cost benefit  (for individual
    drug/indication)
  8. Weigh institutional resource allocation (this
    drug vs. alternatives)
  9. Raise/highlight safety concerns
  10. Dissemination vehicles and tools (guidance and
    warnings)
  1. More rational prescribing
  2. Enhanced appropriateness and safety
  3. Cost Effectiveness

44
Formulary Leveraged Curriculum Development
Dissemination Model
Drug Info Specialists
12 ModulesPrinciples
Advanced Seminar
Critical Knowledge
Recommendations Drugs of Choice Why
Enhanced Input
Restrictions/Guidelines for Appropriate Use
Marketing Claims
Formulary Decisionmaking
Distillation of Drug Specific Generic Issues
Enhanced Output
OtherLeaders
Specialists
? Credibility
Buy-in
AttgMDs
Residents
Pharmacists
Own Drug
Delivery
Use Criteria
45
Formulary Leveraged Curriculum Development
Dissemination Model
Drug Info Specialists
14 ModulesPrinciples
Advanced Seminar
Critical Knowledge
Recommendations Drugs of Choice Why
Enhanced Input
Restrictions/Guidelines for Appropriate Use
Formulary Decisionmaking
Marketing Claims
Distillation of Drug Specific Generic Issues
Enhanced Output
OtherLeaders
Specialists
? Credibility
Buy-in
AttgMDs
Residents
Pharmcsts
Own Drug
Delivery
Use Criteria
46
Formulary Myths
  1. Causal empiricism
  2. FDA approval implies everyday use for all
  3. Interferes with clinical freedom
  4. Every patient is unique
  5. Specialist knows best
  6. Education requires experience with multiple drugs
  1. Widespread use drug of choice
  2. Newer is better/safer
  3. Sicker patients need more drugs
  4. Formulary sacrifices patient care to cost
  5. Redundant with drug utilization review

Schiff, Rucker Med Care 1991
47
ISMP 2004 Survey Results Formulary Myths Still
True !!
  • 70 reported causal empiricism comments impacting
    formulary decisions
  • 73 reported specialist knows best comments
    impacting formulary decisions
  • 49 reported never hearing FDA use implies
    everyday use for all comments in formulary
    deliberations

http//www.ismp.org/Survey/surveyresults/Survey200
411R.asp
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MediMedia owns PT
50
MediMedia owns Triple I
http//www.tripleimedimedia.com/about_us/
51
Advanstar owns Formulary
They are a leading provider of integrated
marketing solutions and they are the leading
communications company serving the pharmaceutical
industry
They also own
52
How Ive FLIPPED Bill G
  • Try to treat any complaint or disease
    non-pharmacologically unless truly. Necessary as
    drugs are poisons and our role is to first do no
    harm.
  • New drugs are inherently more risky and likely
    dangerous than old drugs And should be used
    sparingly only when truly necessary.
  • One paper does not always tell the whole story,
    a  thorough review of the Literature is
    important if you plan on changing your treatment
    or begin to use a medication.

53
How Ive FLIPPED Gordy S
  • Realization that no conflict-of-interest voting
    policy, even on my own Committee
  • Different conceptualizations and processes on
    different formulary committees related to PT
    vs. formulary functions
  • -Medicaid- completely separate
  • Outpatient dominates CCH, inpatient rules at UIC
    w/ resulting entirely different framework for
    discussion

54
  • Selected Quotes from Formulary Focus Groups
  • What do Clinicians think of their Formulary and
    the Formulary Process?

55
Selected quotes UIC
  • What works on our committee is that we make
    decisions based on literature.
  • I am generally satisfied with the Drug
    Information Center. Other institutions dont
    have as much detail. The DIC does the best they
    can with the information that is available. For
    new drugs there isnt really that much to work
    with anyway.
  • Non-formulary drug requests and discouraging
    people to avoid non-formulary are continuously a
    problem. People dont understand why they
    shouldnt use non-formulary. Improvement is
    needed to understand what the formulary is there
    for.
  • The committees been almost the same in format
    for 22 years. Its tried and true and very
    standard. It has a survival or Darwinian
    quality.

56
Selected quotes Cook County
  • One strength of the committee is participation
    of clinical pharmacists to give support and do
    good drug evaluations.
  • Many departments are represented and this is
    educational.
  • The studies available for drugs/new drugs are of
    poor quality. For example, drugs for senile
    dementia or diabetic neuropathy.
  • Although the committee communicates what is
    happening in hospital, there are still problems
    with dissemination. Dissemination is not always
    successful.
  • Making people jump through hoops is bad for
    patients because people should have their
    medicine.

57
Selected quotes Cook County
  • We often say we will audit drugs put on the
    formulary but this does not happen. Doctors feel
    more comfortable with this kind of evaluation.
    We put a lot of drugs on which are expensive with
    marginal benefit. Data does not come back to the
    committee about usage or patient outcome.
  • We are trying to treat everything possible when
    we cannot afford to. We make some decisions
    about what to treat and what not to treat, for
    example we stopped doing bone marrow transplants
    but we do give anti-rheumatologics
  • If you have patient experience you typically give
    evidence that is more anecdotal, but it does not
    go unchallenged. Sometimes the committee invites
    specialists to talk to the group but they are
    less open now. Some only show up when there is a
    controversial drug.
  • It is not the formulary committees role to be a
    pharmacy budget organization but we still have to
    make these kinds of decisions. This causes
    schizophrenic decisions. A lot is lacking in
    decision-making.
  • County has an excellent cardiovascular formulary
    which has saved millions of dollars. Not running
    for expensive cures. This restrictiveness is one
    reason we miss some of the major adverse drug
    reactions. By the time treatments become
    cost-effective the ADRs are discovered.
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