Variations in criteria regulating treatment with reimbursed biologic DMARDs across European countries. Are differences related to country's wealth?
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PUTRIK, Polina, RAMIRO, Sofia G., KVIEN, Tore Kristian, DESEATNICOVA, Elena, NOI, Autori. Variations in criteria regulating treatment with reimbursed biologic DMARDs across European countries. Are differences related to country's wealth? In: Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, 2014, vol. 73, pp. 2010-2021. ISSN -. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1136/annrheumdis-2013-203819
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Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases
Volumul 73 / 2014 / ISSN - /ISSNe 0003-4967

Variations in criteria regulating treatment with reimbursed biologic DMARDs across European countries. Are differences related to country's wealth?

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1136/annrheumdis-2013-203819

Pag. 2010-2021

Putrik Polina1, Ramiro Sofia G.23, Kvien Tore Kristian4, Deseatnicova Elena, Noi Autori
 
1 Maastricht University,
2 Hospital Garcia de Orta, Almada,
3 Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam,
4 Diakonhjemmet Hospital
 
 
Disponibil în IBN: 22 iunie 2023


Rezumat

Conclusions: Clinical criteria regulating prescription of bDMARDs in RA differ significantly across Europe. Countries with lower socioeconomic welfare tend to have stricter eligibility criteria, pointing to inequities in access to treatment.Results: In 10 countries (22%), no bDMARD was reimbursed. Among 36 countries with at least one biologic reimbursed, 23(64%) had no requirement for disease duration to initiate a biologic. Half of the countries required a failure of two synthetic DMARDs to qualify for therapy. 31 countries specified a minimum level of disease activity to be fulfilled and in 20 (56%) countries cut-off for disease activity score with 28-joint assessment was higher than 3.2. Four countries (11%) had the maximum composite score (most liberal) and 20 (56%) scored between 0 and 2 (more restrictive). Criteria for initiation of a bDMARD were negatively associated with countries' socioeconomic welfare (-0.34 to -0.64), and a moderate positive correlation was found between the composite score and welfare indicators (0.59-0.72). Only some countries had regulations for stopping (n=14(39%)) or switching (n=19(53%)).Objectives: To explore criteria regulating treatment with reimbursed biologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (bDMARDs) in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) across Europe and to relate criteria to indicators of national socioeconomic welfare.Methods: A cross-sectional study among 46 European countries. One expert from each country completed a questionnaire on criteria regulating the start, maintenance/stop and switch of reimbursed bDMARDs. A composite score was developed to evaluate the level of restrictions in prescription of a first bDMARD (0=highly restricted, 5=most liberal). The level of restrictiveness was correlated with national socioeconomic welfare indicators.

Cuvinte-cheie
MeSH Antirheumatic Agents, arthritis, rheumatoid, biological products, Cross-Sectional Studies, Drug Prescriptions, Drug Utilization, Europe, Health Care Rationing, Healthcare Disparities, Humans, Patient Selection, Physician's Practice Patterns, Reimbursement Mechanisms, Severity of Illness Index, Socioeconomic Factors EMTREE drug terms antirheumatic agent, biological product EMTREE medical terms Arthritis, rheumatoid, Clinical practice, clinical trial, cross-sectional study, Drug Utilization, economics, Europe, health care disparity, health care organization, human, multicenter study, Patient Selection, prescription, reimbursement, Severity of Illness Index, socioeconomics, statistics and numerical data