Pharmacy Assistance Programs for Oral Anticancer Drugs: A Narrative Review

被引:4
|
作者
Ragavan, Meera V. [1 ,5 ]
Swartz, Scott [2 ]
Clark, Mackenzie [3 ]
Chino, Fumiko [4 ]
机构
[1] Kaiser Permanente Northern Calif, Div Res, Oakland, CA USA
[2] Univ Calif San Francisco, Sch Med, San Francisco, CA USA
[3] Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Clin Pharm, San Francisco, CA USA
[4] Mem Sloan Kettering Canc Ctr, Affordabil Working Grp, New York, NY USA
[5] Kaiser Permanente, Div Res, 2000 Broadway, Oakland, CA 94612 USA
关键词
FINANCIAL TOXICITY; PATIENT; CANCER; DISTRESS; ABANDONMENT; NAVIGATORS; MEDICATION; ADHERENCE; BURDEN; COSTS;
D O I
10.1200/OP.23.00295
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
Oral anticancer medications (OAMs) are high priced with a significant cost-sharing burden to patients, which can lead to catastrophic financial, psychosocial, and clinical repercussions. Cost-conscious prescribing and inclusion of low-cost alternatives can help mitigate this burden, but cost transparency at the point of prescribing remains a major barrier to doing so. Pharmacy assistance programs, including co-payment cards and patient assistance programs administered by manufacturers and foundation-based grants, remain an essential resource for patients facing prohibitive co-payments for OAMs. However, access to these programs is fraught with complexities, including lack of trained financial navigators, limited transparency on eligibility criteria, onerous documentation burdens, and limits in available funding. Despite these drawbacks and the potential for such programs to incentivize manufacturers to keep list prices high, assistance programs have been demonstrated to improve financial well-being for patients with cancer. The increasing development of integrated specialty pharmacies with dedicated, trained pharmacy staff can help improve and standardize access to such programs, but these services are disproportionately available to patients seen at tertiary care centers. Multistakeholder interventions are needed to mitigate the burden of cost sharing for OAMs, including increased clinician knowledge of financial resources and novel assistance mechanisms, investment of institutions in trained financial navigation services and centralized platforms to identify assistance programs, and policies to cap out-of-pocket spending and improve transparency of rates charged by pharmacy benefit managers to a health plan.
引用
收藏
页码:472 / 482
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Planning and implementation of certificate programs in pharmacy: A review of six programs in the literature
    Smith, JL
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICAL EDUCATION, 2001, 65 (02) : 155 - 158
  • [42] Impact of a Hospital-Based Specialty Pharmacy in Partnership With a Care Coordination Organization on Time to Delivery and Receipt of Oral Anticancer Drugs
    Beauchemin, Melissa P.
    Lichtenstein, Morgan R. L.
    Raghunathan, Rohit
    Doshi, Sahil D.
    Lee, Shing
    Law, Cynthia
    Accordino, Melissa K.
    Elkin, Elena B.
    Wright, Jason D.
    Hershman, Dawn L.
    JCO ONCOLOGY PRACTICE, 2023, 19 (03) : 137 - +
  • [43] Role of artificial intelligence in pharmacy practice: A narrative review
    Wong, Adrian
    Wentz, Erin
    Palisano, Nicholas
    Dirani, Manar
    Elsamadisi, Pansy
    Qashou, Farah
    Celi, Leo
    Badawi, Omar
    Nazer, Lama
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF CLINICAL PHARMACY, 2023, 6 (11): : 1237 - 1250
  • [44] Educational escape rooms in pharmacy education: A narrative review
    Rahim, Aisyah Saad Abdul
    Abd Wahab, Mohd Shahezwan
    Ali, Aida Azlina
    Hanafiah, Nur Hafzan Md
    PHARMACY EDUCATION, 2022, 22 (01): : 540 - 557
  • [45] Determinants and associated factors influencing medication adherence and persistence to oral anticancer drugs: A systematic review
    Verbrugghe, M.
    Verhaeghe, S.
    Lauwaert, K.
    Beeckman, D.
    Van Hecke, A.
    CANCER TREATMENT REVIEWS, 2013, 39 (06) : 610 - 621
  • [46] Safety of epidural drugs: a narrative review
    van Zuylen, M. L.
    ten Hoope, W.
    Bos, E. M. E.
    Hermanides, J.
    Stevens, M. F.
    Hollmann, M. W.
    EXPERT OPINION ON DRUG SAFETY, 2019, 18 (07) : 591 - 601
  • [47] Drugs for Hypotensive Anesthesia: A Narrative Review
    Prasad, T. Krishna
    Chacko, Robin Sajan
    Priyadharsini, K. Soundarya
    INDIAN JOURNAL OF MEDICAL SPECIALITIES, 2023, 14 (03) : 130 - 133
  • [48] Tilting the Balance of Dose Modification for Oral Anticancer Drugs?
    Bedard, Philippe L.
    Siu, Lillian L.
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY, 2014, 32 (15) : 1537 - 1539
  • [49] Factors associated with failure to receive oral anticancer drugs
    Doshi, Sahil D.
    Lichtenstein, Morgan R. L.
    Beauchemin, Melissa Parsons
    Raghunathan, Rohit R.
    Law, Cynthia
    Accordino, Melissa Kate
    Wright, Jason Dennis
    Elkin, Elena B.
    Hershman, Dawn L.
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY, 2021, 39 (28)
  • [50] Evaluation of the Simple Suspension Method for Oral Anticancer Drugs
    Abe, Tomoya
    Kusakabe, Sanae
    Naoi, Miho
    Suzuki, Takayuki
    Sagara, Atsunobu
    Hiraide, Makoto
    Sano, Motohiko
    Nakayamaa, Toshiaki
    YAKUGAKU ZASSHI-JOURNAL OF THE PHARMACEUTICAL SOCIETY OF JAPAN, 2024, 144 (04): : 441 - 445