
Ranked by total HMO enrollment, January 1, 2001
Spending $1 per member on CRM can reap huge rewards in competitive markets
Dental, vision and hearing programs are surviving the recession, but they might not be out of the woods yet
They say that if you love something, you should set it free. If it comes back to you, it's yours. If it doesn't, it never was.
As health care costs and pharmaceutical expenditures continue to climb, the effect of these trends on health care coverage and economic development is emerging as a central issue for 2002.
Prime Therapeutics, St. Paul, MN-Do quantity limits on abortive migraine medications (ie, triptans) and educational efforts to increase the use of prophylactic therapy reduce total health care costs over the long term?
ValleyCare Health System, Pleasanton, CA-The expansion of decentralized clinical pharmacy services at this health system served as the impetus to improve their clinical intervention documentation process.
Two new real-world comparisons of the tumor necrosis factor (TNF) blockers infliximab (Remicade) and etanercept (Enbrel) show that the two agents are highly comparable treatments for rheumatoid arthritis
While tiered benefit plans aim to spur use of lower-cost alternative drugs, they may leave patients in the dark about what those alternatives are and how much out-of-pocket savings they can bring.
Ranolazine, the first in a new class of antianginal agents called the partialfatty acid oxidation (pFOX) inhibitors, improves exercise performance andreduces angina frequency in patients who still have symptoms despite treatmentwith other antianginal medications, according to Bernard Chaitman, MD. Hereported the results of a Phase III study called the Combination Assessmentof Ranolazine in Stable Angina (CARISA).
An agent developed specifically for the treatment of angina reduces theincidence of major coronary events, reported Henry Dargie, MD, who presentedthe results of a trial known as the Impact of Nicorandil in Angina (IONA).It is believed to be the first large-scale trial to report on the effectsof a specific antianginal drug on clinical outcome.
Anaheim, CA-The largest trial of cholesterol-lowering therapy ever conducted extends the current indications for statin therapy, reported Rory Collins, MD.
The selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) fluoxetine, sertraline,and paroxetine are equally effective and tolerated in depressed patientsacross a broad range of outcome measures. So finds an open-label, randomizedstudy in 573 patients treated for depression for 9 months in a primary caresetting.
A step-down approach from proton pump inhibitor (PPI) therapy is successful in most patients with uncomplicated GERD, reducing costs without compromising quality of life. So concludes a new prospective study.
Differences among oral selective serotonin agonists (triptans) are small but clinically relevant for the individual patient, according to a comprehensive meta-analysis.
Pipeline Preview for January 1, 2002
FDA Actions in Brief as reported January 1, 2002
Although sensitivity analysis is a widely used technique for testing the uncertainty in pharmacoeconomic modeling parameters, it does have limitations. This month's column introduces probabilistic sensitivity analysis as an alternative method for examining uncertainty.
Tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (Viread) recently gained accelerated FDA approval. It is the first member of a new antiretroviral class and also the first antiretroviral approved on the basis of efficacy trials conducted almost exclusively in treatment-experienced patients. This Focus article reviews these studies and considers how other pending and planned trials may refine tenofovir's role.
Like their older counterparts, the newer anticonvulsants gabapentin, lamotrigine, and topiramate show promise for treating various off-label psychiatric and neurologic disorders. This review examines the quality of current evidence for these new uses, identifies where gaps in the evidence lie, and discusses which emerging uses of individual agents appear most justified.
Clinicians at Nebraska Methodist Hospital, a not-for-profit acute care facility, developed and implemented an automatic interchange program for the ACE inhibitor class of drugs. This article presents the ACE inhibitor review upon which the formulary decisions were based as well as the initial clinical and economic results of the interchange program. (This pdf version includes an appendix that was not included in the print issue)
Despite the bad reputation from consumer publications, MCOs should be proud of their successes
Perhaps the greatest criticism leveled at America's healthcare system is the fact that millions of people have no healthcare insurance at all. Our physicians are among the best trained in the world, and the equipment and technology they work with is state of the art. But those things are meaningless to patients who fall between the cracks of the system and can't access that care.
Part 2 follows certain projects through to conclusion while providing more advanced concepts to those considering the application of Six Sigma principles at their organization.
Ranked by consumer response to NRC study, 2001
Fondaparinux, the first in a new class of antithrombotics that selectively target factor Xa, has been deemed approvable by the FDA for prevention of venous thromboembolism following orthopedic surgery. Four phase III trials have suggested that it may be more effective than enoxaparin in this setting with little to no additional bleeding risk. This Focus review examines data from these trials and others in an effort to sketch out this pending agent's likely therapeutic role.
New Formulations/Combinations: Pediatric-specific albuterol formulation; fixed-dose bronchodilator combination
New Indication: Light-activated ophthalmic cleared for CNV due to two additional causes
New Indication: Injectable PPI cleared for hypersecretion due to Zollinger-Ellison syndrome
NMEs/biologics: 5-HT receptor agonist for Tx of migraine