Ophthalmic medication price variation across the United States: Anti-inflammatory medications

Background: Cost-related nonadherence to medication can impact ophthalmic treatment outcomes. We aimed to determine whether medication prices vary between US cities and between different types of pharmacies within one city. Methods: We conducted a phone survey of eight nationwide and five independen...

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Main Authors: Anthony T. Scott, Paula E. Pecen, Alan G. Palestine
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2019-07-01
Series:Therapeutic Advances in Ophthalmology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2515841419863638
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spelling doaj-9b363d5bed164987a6f1268e8a42d3942020-11-25T04:02:41ZengSAGE PublishingTherapeutic Advances in Ophthalmology2515-84142019-07-011110.1177/2515841419863638Ophthalmic medication price variation across the United States: Anti-inflammatory medicationsAnthony T. ScottPaula E. PecenAlan G. PalestineBackground: Cost-related nonadherence to medication can impact ophthalmic treatment outcomes. We aimed to determine whether medication prices vary between US cities and between different types of pharmacies within one city. Methods: We conducted a phone survey of eight nationwide and five independent pharmacies in five cities across the United States: Boston, Massachusetts; Charlotte, North Carolina; Denver, Colorado; Detroit, Michigan; and Seattle, Washington. A researcher called each pharmacy asking for price without insurance for four common anti-inflammatory ophthalmic medications: prednisolone acetate, prednisolone sodium phosphate, difluprednate (Durezol™), and loteprednol etabonate (Lotemax™). Results: Prednisolone sodium phosphate price could only be obtained by a small subset of pharmacies (45.2%) and was excluded from additional analysis; however, preliminary data demonstrated lower cost of prednisolone sodium phosphate over prednisolone acetate. Three-way analysis of variance revealed no interaction between pharmacy type (chain versus independent), city, and drug ( F  = 0.40, p  = 0.92). A significant interaction was identified between pharmacy type and drug ( F  = 5.0, p  = 0.008), but not city and pharmacy type ( F  = 0.66, p  = 0.62) or city and drug ( F  = 0.27, p  = 0.97). Average drug prices were lower at independent pharmacies compared with chain pharmacies for difluprednate (US$211.36 versus US$216.85, F  = 1.09, p  = 0.297) and significantly lower for loteprednol etabonate (US$255.49 versus US$274.86, F  = 14.7, p  < 0.001). Prednisolone acetate was cheaper at chain pharmacies, but not statistically significantly cheaper (US$48.82 versus US$51.61, F  = 0.34, p  = 0.559). Conclusions: Medication prices do not differ significantly between US cities. High variation of drug prices within the same city demonstrates how comparison shopping can provide cost savings for patients and may reduce cost-related nonadherence.https://doi.org/10.1177/2515841419863638
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anthony T. Scott
Paula E. Pecen
Alan G. Palestine
spellingShingle Anthony T. Scott
Paula E. Pecen
Alan G. Palestine
Ophthalmic medication price variation across the United States: Anti-inflammatory medications
Therapeutic Advances in Ophthalmology
author_facet Anthony T. Scott
Paula E. Pecen
Alan G. Palestine
author_sort Anthony T. Scott
title Ophthalmic medication price variation across the United States: Anti-inflammatory medications
title_short Ophthalmic medication price variation across the United States: Anti-inflammatory medications
title_full Ophthalmic medication price variation across the United States: Anti-inflammatory medications
title_fullStr Ophthalmic medication price variation across the United States: Anti-inflammatory medications
title_full_unstemmed Ophthalmic medication price variation across the United States: Anti-inflammatory medications
title_sort ophthalmic medication price variation across the united states: anti-inflammatory medications
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Therapeutic Advances in Ophthalmology
issn 2515-8414
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Background: Cost-related nonadherence to medication can impact ophthalmic treatment outcomes. We aimed to determine whether medication prices vary between US cities and between different types of pharmacies within one city. Methods: We conducted a phone survey of eight nationwide and five independent pharmacies in five cities across the United States: Boston, Massachusetts; Charlotte, North Carolina; Denver, Colorado; Detroit, Michigan; and Seattle, Washington. A researcher called each pharmacy asking for price without insurance for four common anti-inflammatory ophthalmic medications: prednisolone acetate, prednisolone sodium phosphate, difluprednate (Durezol™), and loteprednol etabonate (Lotemax™). Results: Prednisolone sodium phosphate price could only be obtained by a small subset of pharmacies (45.2%) and was excluded from additional analysis; however, preliminary data demonstrated lower cost of prednisolone sodium phosphate over prednisolone acetate. Three-way analysis of variance revealed no interaction between pharmacy type (chain versus independent), city, and drug ( F  = 0.40, p  = 0.92). A significant interaction was identified between pharmacy type and drug ( F  = 5.0, p  = 0.008), but not city and pharmacy type ( F  = 0.66, p  = 0.62) or city and drug ( F  = 0.27, p  = 0.97). Average drug prices were lower at independent pharmacies compared with chain pharmacies for difluprednate (US$211.36 versus US$216.85, F  = 1.09, p  = 0.297) and significantly lower for loteprednol etabonate (US$255.49 versus US$274.86, F  = 14.7, p  < 0.001). Prednisolone acetate was cheaper at chain pharmacies, but not statistically significantly cheaper (US$48.82 versus US$51.61, F  = 0.34, p  = 0.559). Conclusions: Medication prices do not differ significantly between US cities. High variation of drug prices within the same city demonstrates how comparison shopping can provide cost savings for patients and may reduce cost-related nonadherence.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2515841419863638
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