Title: The Challenge of Formulary Management in the DoD
1The Challenge of Formulary Management in the DoD
UF 101
- Dr. Dave Bretzke, Dr. Angela Allerman, and Major
Wade Tiller - PEC Conference 2007
2Objectives
- Describe the UF decision making process
- Differentiate the roles and responsibilities of
the DoD PEC and the DoD PT - Explain why UF decisions apply across both the
direct care and purchased care points of service - Discuss the key elements that must be considered
in all Uniform Formulary decisions
3Uniform Formulary
- Intended to provide uniform availability across
DoD dispensing venues - Legislated and published regulation
- Must do
- How to do it
- Introduce 3rd tier (pay for preference)
- Copays governed by law
- Limits ability to increase spread
- Difficult to change
4Uniform Formulary
- Decisions apply across dispensing venues
- Defined role of DoD PT Committee
- Types of decisions
- Formulary status
- PA, QL, MN
- Moved decision from DoD PT Committee to TMA
Executive Director (Dr. Winkenwerder) - Introduced visibility through Beneficiary
Advisory Panel (BAP)
5Uniform Formulary
- Must review all drug classes
- Implement one at a time
- New drugs
- PT defines class complete freedom
- Class set as BCF or ECF
- Within every class, at least one agent must be
BCF / ECF
6Loading the hopper
- Mandate to review every drug class
- Identify drug class candidates
- DoD high spend, high use
- Competition
- New drugs / generics
7Loading the hopper (cont)
- Feasibility
- Current situation
- Likely constituents
- Likely outcomes
- Cover BCF/ECF requirement
- Determine priority
- Staff workload
- Industry considerations
- Put on calendar
8Uniform Formulary Decision Cycle
- Preliminary review (T-180 270)
- PT Committee meets (T-90 180)
- Defines class, BCF or ECF
- Request for Pricing Info (T-75 100)
- Price Quotes Received (T-20 30)
- PT Committee meets (T)
- Final review, recommendations
- BAP meets (T45)
- Comments to TMA
- TMA Director reviews signs minutes (T60)
- Implementation of decisions (no later than T240)
90-Day Decision Cycle
9Everything Happens at Once
Aug 063 Classes
10Why review Statin Class now?
- Statin contract set to expire
- Simvastatin available in a generic version
- Exclusivity?
- 1 MHS drug class
- 1M users
- 550M / year (9 of MHS total)
- How would you define the class?
11Antilipidemic I Class
Generic name Brand name Generic availability?
Statins Statins Statins
Atorvastatin Lipitor No
Fluvastatin Lescol Lescol XL No No
Lovastatin IR Lovastatin ER Mevacor Altoprev (previously Altocor) Yes No
Pravastatin Pravachol Yes except Pravachol 80mg
Rosuvastatin Crestor No
Simvastatin Zocor Yes
Statin Combinations Statin Combinations Statin Combinations
Atorvastatin/Amlodipine Caduet No
Pravastatin/Aspirin Pravigard PAC Discontinued May 13, 2005
Lovastatin/Niacin Advicor No
Simvastatin/Ezetimibe Vytorin No
Add-on therapies Add-on therapies Add-on therapies
Niacin Niaspan, Niacin IR No, yes
Ezetimibe Zetia No
12 Antilipidemics-I Evaluation Strategy
- Developed by the PEC
- Factors considered
- Clinical needs of the DoD population
- Generic availability
- Market competition within the therapeutic class
- Approved by DoD PT Committee
- Develop bidding scenarios
- Put it on the street
13PEC Process for Determining Relative Clinical
Effectiveness
- UF Rule DoD PT Committee considers information
regarding safety, effectiveness, and clinical
outcomes when comparing drugs in the class
14Relative Clinical Effectiveness
ProcessAntilipidemic I agents
- Team approach
- Developed key questions to answer
- Class divided into intensive LDL lowering (gt45 ?
in LDL) and low to moderate LDL lowering (lt45 ?
in LDL) drugs - Efficacy differences
- Surrogate outcomes (LDL ?, HDL ?)
- Clinical outcomes (myocardial infarction, acute
coronary syndromes, mortality, revascularization,
stroke) - Safety / Tolerability differences
- Common adverse effects
- Serious elevated liver enzymes, proteinuria,
myopathy, rhabdomyolysis - Drug interactions, special populations
(pediatric, pregnancy) - Other Factors (pleiotropic effects, dosing
initiation schedules) - Initial assessment of DoD population needs
15 Intensive vs. low to moderate LDL lowering
HMG CoA Reductase Inhibitors (Statins) HMG CoA Reductase Inhibitors (Statins) HMG CoA Reductase Inhibitors (Statins) HMG CoA Reductase Inhibitors (Statins) HMG CoA Reductase Inhibitors (Statins) HMG CoA Reductase Inhibitors (Statins) HMG CoA Reductase Inhibitors (Statins) HMG CoA Reductase Inhibitors (Statins)
Statin LDL reduction Lovastatin (Mevacor) Lovastatin (Altoprev) Pravastatin (Pravachol) Simvastatin (Zocor) Fluvastatin (Lescol, Lescol XL) Atorvastatin (Lipitor) Rosuvastatin (Crestor)
25-30 20mg 20mg 20mg 10mg 40mg
30-40 40-80mg 40mg 40mg 20mg 80mg XL 10mg
40-45 80mg (40mg X 2) 60mg 80mg 40mg or Vytorin 10/10 20mg 5mg
45-50 Note Ezetimibe or Niacin generally decreases LDL up to an additional 15 Note Ezetimibe or Niacin generally decreases LDL up to an additional 15 Note Ezetimibe or Niacin generally decreases LDL up to an additional 15 80mg or Vytorin 10/20 40mg 10mg
50-55 Note Ezetimibe or Niacin generally decreases LDL up to an additional 15 Note Ezetimibe or Niacin generally decreases LDL up to an additional 15 Note Ezetimibe or Niacin generally decreases LDL up to an additional 15 Vytorin 10/40 80mg 20mg
gt55 Note Ezetimibe or Niacin generally decreases LDL up to an additional 15 Note Ezetimibe or Niacin generally decreases LDL up to an additional 15 Note Ezetimibe or Niacin generally decreases LDL up to an additional 15 Vytorin 10/80 40mg
Combination agents follow their parent statin
1685 of the population
85 of the patients Will use simvastatin lt
40mg/day
45 LDL Reduction
Majority of DoD population can meet LDL goals
with simvastatin
17Relative Clinical Effectiveness
ProcessAntilipidemic I agents
- Define search strategy for evidence
- FDA website
- MEDline search for approved and off-label uses
- Evidence Based Medicine (EBM) sites searched
- Existing guidelines (ACC, AHA, NCEP ATP III,
VA/DoD) - Database, retrospective cohort studies (safety)
- Solicit provider opinion
- Survey development
- SG Consultants teleconference
- Survey to providers and pharmacists
- Invited pharmaceutical manufacturer presentations
- Ongoing discussion with cost-effectiveness expert
18Relative Clinical Effectiveness
ProcessAntilipidemic I agents
- Evidence Based Medicine (EBM)
- Integrating best research evidence with needs of
patient/population - EBM principles
- Helps to assess the quality of clinical evidence
- rigorous study design
- appropriate statistical tests
- inclusion of patients similar to DoD
- appropriate inclusion and exclusion criteria
- appropriate objective clinical endpoints
- appropriate definition of adverse events
- valid conclusions based on studied outcomes and
statistical tests - Goal for relative clinical effectiveness section
is to use the best quality evidence when
determining the differences between the class
members
19Relative Clinical Effectiveness
ProcessAntilipidemic I agents
- Systematic process to identify best evidence
available - Hierarchy of levels of evidence
- Systematic reviews
- Condense the results of several trials (10s-100s)
into an understandable format - Can help determine differences in efficacy,
safety between drugs - Sources Cochrane, UK, Canada, Oregon
- Some limitations different patient populations,
different background medications - Randomized, double-blind, controlled trials
- Head-to-head trials
- Placebo controlled trials
- Non-randomized trials unequal allocation of drug
treatment - Cohort studies, case control studies no
intervention given - Case reports, anecdotal reports lowest level of
evidence small numbers of patients
20Relative Clinical Effectiveness Process Sections
of class review
- Efficacy
- Discuss key issues in efficacy differences
between class members or limitations in the
available evidence - Safety
- How likely will each drug in the class cause
harm? - Often need evaluation of sources other than
clinical trials - Well-designed retrospective health claims
database study - Published FDA data available
- Required lab monitoring
- Tolerability assessment How likely will patients
take the drug? - Drug discontinuations due to adverse effects
- Other Factors anything else we can think of
- Overall clinical effectiveness conclusion
21Antilipidemics I Clinical Evidence Summary
CHD CHD CHD CHD CHD Stroke
1o Prevention 2o Prevention 2o Prevention 2o Prevention Mixed 1o 2o Prevention Stroke
1o Prevention General Acute Coronary Syndrome Atherosclerotic Progression Mixed 1o 2o Prevention Stroke
Atorva ASCOT CARDS TNT IDEAL GREACE MIRACL PROVE-IT REVERSAL ASAP 4D ASCOT CARDS TNT SPARCL
Fluva LIPS FLORIDA Riegger et al ALERT
Lova AFCAPS Knatterud et al MARS
Prava WOSCOPS LIPID CARE PROVE-IT PACT REVERSAL REGRESS L-CAD ALLHAT PROSPER CARE LIPID
Simva HPS 4S IDEAL A to (Z) MAAS ASAP HPS 4S HPS
Rosuva ASTERIOD
Active control trial
- Most studies compared a statin to placebo
- Update to ATP III NCEP guidelines primarily based
on 5 major clinical trials ALLHAT-LLT,
ASCOT-LLA, HPS, PROSPER, and PROVE-IT
22Antilipidemic I agents Efficacy Conclusion
- No head-to-head trials of equivalent doses of
different statins for reducing coronary events or
mortality - Meta-analysis (Zhou et al) In low to moderate
doses of atorva prava simva in long-term
cardiovascular prevention using adjusted indirect
comparison - Evidence summary
Atorva Fluva Lova Prava Simva Rosuva
1o CHD 1o CHD 1o CHD ?10 mg ?20-40 mg ?40 mg ?40 mg
2o CHD General pop General pop ?10-80 mg ?80 mg(after PTCA) ?40 mg ?20-40 mg
2o CHD ACS ACS ?80 mg X X X
2o CHD Revasc Revasc ?80 mg ?80 mg(after PTCA) ? 40-80 mg(after CABG) ?40 mg ?20-40 mg
Stroke Stroke Stroke ?10-80 mg ?40 mg ?20-40 mg
? statistically significant RRR X available
trials, but no statistically significant
difference shown
23Relative Clinical Effectiveness
ProcessAntilipidemic I agents
- First draft of written class review
- Assess military readiness issues if applicable
- Gather additional clinical information
- Evaluate feasibility of classifying one or more
drugs as non-formulary under the UF - Requires input from PEC management, clinical
staff, economic experts, and procurement experts - Initial consideration of medical necessity
criteria - Final written draft completed, edited by PEC
staff - Revisions completed, slides developed for meeting
- Ongoing process steps are not necessarily
sequential
24Challenges of Relative Clinical
EffectivenessAntilipidemic I agents
- Lack of comparative head-to-head trials overall,
or problems when available - Is the comparison drug inferior?
- Comparison of non-equivalent doses of statins
- PROVE-IT trial compared 80 mg atorvastatin with
40 mg pravastatin in ACS patients - What to do in absence of head-to-head trials
- Calculate NNT
- Compare hazard ratios, odds ratios, confidence
intervals - Similar point estimates? Overlapping confidence
intervals - Efficacy vs. Effectiveness
- Strict study conditions may not reflect use of
drug in real world - Co-morbid conditions not represented in RCTs
25Challenges of Relative Clinical
EffectivenessAntilipidemic I agents
- Safety
- Safety data for new market entry is often
incomplete and based on 1,000s of patients,
rather than 1,000,000s of patients - Length of time on the market and provider
experience can determine provider confidence in a
drugs safety profile - Provider opinion
- Past experiences and perceptions play a role
- Degree of therapeutic interchangeability within
the drug class - Difficult to conclusively determine that Drug A
is better than Drug B - Can usually say Drug A is no worse than Drug B
26Introduction Relative Cost-Effectiveness
- The UF final rule states
- If a pharmaceutical agent in a therapeutic class
is not cost-effective relative to other
pharmaceutical agents in that therapeutic class,
it may be classified as a non-formulary agent
(Federal Register / Vol. 69, No. 63 / Thursday,
April 1, 2004 / Rules and Regulations) - Applies to
- Therapeutic class reviews
- New agents in classes already reviewed
27Relative Cost-effectiveness Process
- PEC performs two different types of economic
analyses - Pharmacoeconomic Analysis
- Identifies, measures, and compares the costs
(i.e., resources consumed) and consequences
(clinical, economic, and humanistic) of
pharmaceutical products and services (Bootman,
et al., Principles of Pharmacoeconomics 2nd Ed.,
New York, St. Martins Press,1996) - Budget Impact Analysis
- By definition, a BIA estimates the impact on
annual healthcare use and cost for the first,
second and subsequent years after the
introduction of the new product for a national or
health plan population (Mauskopf, JA et al.)
28Pharmacoeconomic AnalysisProcess
- What type or types of analyses performed?
- Clinical team provides insight as to how the
agents differ in terms of relative clinical
effectiveness and to identify significant
clinical outcomes - The type of pharmacoeconomic analysis performed
is dependent upon the how the outcomes are
measured and the extent that these outcomes
differ between the agents within a therapeutic
class - Scour the literature for every pharmacoeconomic
analysis that has ever been performed on the
agents within the class - Industry for any published or unpublished
pharmacoeconomic models they use to support their
respective agents - Synthesize the information and develop
pharmacoeconomic models to critically evaluate
the cost-effectiveness of the agents within the
class.
29Pharmacoeconomic Analysis ProcessAntilipidemic I
Agents
- Strong intermediate outcome evidence
- Mean LDL reduction by drug and strength
- Total cholesterol/HDL ratios
- Head-to-head RCT
- Long-term clinical outcomes evidence
- There are no head-to-head trials comparing
equivalent doses of statins that evaluate
clinical outcomes for reducing mortality or other
clinical outcomes (e.g., myocardial infarction,
stroke, need for revascularization)
30Pharmacoeconomic AnalysisModels
- The Annual Cost per 1 LDL Decrease decision
analytic model. - The Annual Cost per Patient Treated to Goal Monte
Carlo simulation model - The Medical Cost Offset Model (industry)
- Compared the cost-effectiveness of these agents
based on their predicted outcomes and total
predicted health care expenditures for CHD and
CHD risk-equivalent patients. - The Cost per Event-Free Patient decision analytic
model - Based on the results of the IDEAL Trial, compared
the cost-effectiveness of the agents included in
that trialhigh-dose (80mg) atorvastatin
(Lipitor) vs. low-dose (20-40 mg) simvastatin
(Zocor, generics)
31Pharmacoeconomic AnalysisResults
- Results of the first three cost-effectiveness
analyses showed ezetimibe/simvastatin (Vytorin)
to be the most cost effective high LDL lowering
agent. - Results of the fourth analysis revealed that
high-dose (80 mg) atorvastatin (Lipitor) was more
effective but considerably more costly compared
to low dose (20-40mg) simvastatin (Zocor,
generics).
32Budget Impact AnalysisAffordability
Affordability
Cost-Effectiveness
Quality
Efficacy
Safety
33Budget Impact Analysis Overview
- Models the MHS budget impact dynamics of a UF
decision - Factors included in the model
- Market growth
- Market share migration
- Change in utilization among therapeutic class
agents as beneficiaries migrate from NF to UF
agents - Point of Service Migration
- Change in utilization among POS
- Costs associated with migration from NF to UF
agents - Medical necessity processing fees
- Provider costs associated with switching patients
from NF to UF agents - Lab costs
- Cost reduction associated with NF 22.00 copay
34Budget Impact AnalysisMethodology Overview
- Dynamic Markov Model
- Differs from static model in that it incorporates
the element of time - Migration transitions from NF to UF occur
gradually overtimeno longer assumes
instantaneous migration - Open not closedbeneficiaries enter and exit
model over timeallows for market growth - Allows for providers/beneficiaries to change
agents over time (migrate back and forth between
Markov states)
35Budget Impact Analysis Results
- Interesting
- All scenarios that included Lipitor on the UF
were more favorable compared to scenarios without
Lipitor on the UF - Ultimately
- The Uniform Formulary scenario that included
atorvastatin (Lipitor), ezetimibe/simvastatin
(Vytorin), and simvastatin (Zocor, generics) 80
mg as the high LDL lowering agents on the UF
was the most cost effective UF scenario.
36PT Committee DecisionFactors Considered
- Relative Clinical Effectiveness
- Relative Cost Effectiveness
- Pharmacoeconomic Analysis
- Vytorin the most cost-effective agent intensive
dose statin - No economic benefit to exclude any of the low to
moderate LDL lowering agents from the UF - Budget Impact Analysis
- The UF scenario that included Vytorin, Lipitor,
and Simvastatin 80mg along with the low to
moderate LDL lowering agents was the most
cost-effective UF scenario - Market Conditions
- Potential Impact/Disruption to Beneficiaries
37Distribution of Unique Users (UUs) by Agent and
POS
UUs
Source Utilization Data - PDTS BPA -
Manufacturers Current MTF (Prime Vendor),
Retail TMOP from PDTS FSS - VAPBM
38After the PT Meeting
- BAP meeting
- Minutes from DoD PT BAP meetings presented to
TMA Executive Director and signed - Minutes posted
- MTF formulary management (pushout) documents
- Medical Necessity criteria
- Finalize forms and submit to ESI / post
- Real work begins implementation!
39MTF Implementation
- Review decisions
- Develop implementation plan
- Provider education
- New vs. existing patients
- Confirm prices loaded
- Follow-up MUE / DUE
- Execute
40PEC Monitoring
- Develop monitoring plan
- Ongoing
- Specific targets
- Monthly trend analysis
- Combined
- By Point of Service
- Monthly cost per ???? tracking
- Rx, 30-day Eq Rxs, Treatment day, Tab/cap
- Prime Vendor availability
41PEC Monitoring
- Field alerts
- Add to PACER
- Return and Report
- DoD PT Committee
- BAP
- Dr. Winkenwerder
- Conferences
- ??????
42PEC Monitoring - Example
- Statins
- Ongoing analysis
- Trend by drug by month
- Cost per day by month
- Specific targets
- Simvastatin cannibalization
- Equipotent doses (e.g. Lipitor 10 20mg)
- Up prescribing
- Brand over-marketing (e.g. Lipitor Vytorin vs.
class) - Cost effective
- High Potency Use (Crestor vs. Lipitor 40 80mg
vs. Vytorin)
43Summary - Statins
- Extremely important drug class for DoD
- Use Vytorin in patients who need gt 45 reduction
in LDL - Our efforts to sustainthe TRICARE Rx benefit
require that MTF prescribers continue using
simvastatin - I strongly encourage MTF commanders, doctors and
pharmacists to maximize the use of simvastatin - Dr. Winkenwerder, ASD-HA
44Summary - Overall
- The UF process and drug class reviews are
comprehensive and (sometimes painfully) thorough - Best real world application of EBM reviews and
pharmacoeconomic analyses - MTF input is extremely valuable
- Strives to find the best balance of access vs.
costs - Future offers depend on todays performance
45Contact Info
- Major Wade Tiller, RPh, MHA, PhD
- Biomedical Sciences Corp
- Deputy Director, DoD Pharmacoeconomic Center
- kevin.tiller_at_amedd.army.mil
- David R. Bretzke, PharmD
- Procurement / Informatics Pharmacist
- DoD Pharmacoeconomic Center
- david.bretzke_at_amedd.army.mil
- Angela Allerman, PharmD, BCPS
- Clinical Pharmacy Specialist
- DoD Pharmacoeconomic Center
- angela.allerman_at_amedd.army.mil