Consumers should beware of Part D pitfalls, warn experts
December 11th 2006Medicare Part D is still not for wimps, be they health professionals or consumers, any more than it was in early 2006, according to a Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) analyst. Indeed, there is high risk that many beneficiaries are getting into plans, both for 2006 and 2007, that are not good for covering their medications and there could be health consequences, said Patricia Neuman, Sc.D., director of the foundation's Medicare Policy Project.
Pharmacists prepare for 2007 plan shifts
December 11th 2006Previous columns examined the Medicare decisions that plans faced for 2007 and the choices available to enrollees. Pharmacists, too, will be facing some plan adjustments as the new year begins. In some cases pharmacy providers must sign and return a contract to continue their participation in pharmacy networks associated with the plans. Many pharmacies work with a third-party contracting organization that will sign the agreement on their behalf. Although many existing contracts expire on Dec. 31, 2006, CMS is encouraging plans to adopt automatic renewals, or evergreen contracts, for subsequent years.
Public health experts offer ways to reform Part D
December 11th 2006Our current system is not working and needs reform was the take-away message from a three-hour workshop examining both Medicare Part D and the future of drug pricing. Held at the American Public Health Association's 134th Annual Meeting, which convened in Boston in November, the workshop included speakers discussing the various issues surrounding the drug benefit and potential methods for reform.
R.Ph.s chafe under systems that time their dispensing
December 11th 2006As reimbursements for drugs keep falling, chains must fill more prescriptions-and apply even more pressure on their pharmacists to dispense quickly-to make up for their loss. But pharmacists claim this is leading to more drug errors.
Donut hole dunks politicians in latest election
December 11th 2006If there is a lesson from the last election, it may be this: Beware of seniors bearing donuts. Pennsylvania Representative Melissa Hart, a Republican from the southwestern part of the state, certainly should have. Instead, just two weeks before the mid-term elections, Hart called the police to handle a group of 40 Association of Retired Americans (ARA) activists who brought donuts as a demonstration against the donut-hole gap in coverage in the Medicare Part D benefit. Hart, who was leading in polls at the time, went on to lose the election.
Are transdermal patches the way of the future?
December 11th 2006This past April, methylphenidate (Daytrana, Shire) was approved as a transdermal drug delivery system (TD-DDS) for the treatment of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. And many more patches are on the horizon. Novartis is seeking Food & Drug Administration approval for its rivastigmine (Exelon) patch to aid in the treatment of Alzheimer's disease. Researchers in the United Kingdom are working on a TD-DDS to deliver synthetic cannabinoids for use as antiemetics and appetite stimulants in patients with AIDS and cancer.
Drug discovery down, despite quicker approvals
December 11th 2006Despite better tools, decreased time to Food & Drug Administration approval, and an unbelievable figure for 2006 projected pharmaceutical sales-$321.1 billion-the payoff for drug innovation in the United States has been lagging. Over the past 10 years, there has been an annual average of only 10 to 15 new molecular entities (NMEs) to receive a nod from the FDA through fast-track approval, and only five through the regular approval process. This was the news coming from the 2006 Annual Meeting of the American College of Clinical Pharmacy (ACCP), held in St. Louis in October.
Many medical myths should be debunked, say experts
December 11th 2006Peak and trough serum levels should be measured for patients on vancomycin, right? Well, sort of. According to Sharon See, Pharm.D., BCPS, associate clinical professor at St. John's University College of Pharmacy in New York, only trough levels are necessary. And in most cases, no levels are needed at all. That was one medical myth that was exploded at the recent American College of Clinical Pharmacy (ACCP) annual meeting in St. Louis in October.
Osteoporosis drugs in studies face challenges
December 11th 2006New molecular entities on the horizon for the treatment of osteoporosis face a tough row to hoe in their quest for approval from the Food & Drug Administration. That was the subject of a presentation at the 2006 Annual Meeting of the American College of Clinical Pharmacy (ACCP), held in October in St. Louis.
Guidelines updated for treatment of Alzheimer's
December 11th 2006An expert panel convened by the Alzheimer?s Drug Discovery Foundation recently released consensus recommendations on the treatment of Alzheimer?s disease and related dementias (ADRD) in managed care. The guidelines were published as a supplement to the American Journal of Geriatric Pharmacotherapy.
FDA gives nod to new hepatitis B treatment
December 11th 2006The Centers for Disease Control & Prevention (CDC) estimates that 1.25 million Americans are chronically infected with hepatitis B virus (HBV). Now a new, oral, once-daily treatment has been approved by the Food & Drug Administration and is indicated for the treatment of the illness in adult patients with both evidence of viral replication and either persistent elevations in serum aminotransferases or histologically active disease.
At deadline, pedigree law still plagued by questions
December 11th 2006The long-delayed drug pedigree regulations announced by the Food & Drug Administration in mid-November have evoked a storm of criticism and lawsuits. No one is objecting to the FDA's stated goal of reducing drug diversion and counterfeits, but the cure may be worse than the disease.
Latebreakers: December 11, 2006
December 11th 2006CMS has issued a final rule on four conditions hospitals must satisfy to participate in Medicare and Medicaid. Three of them are drug related. They involve authenticating verbal orders, securing medications, and completing postanesthesia evaluations. The new requirements call for verbal orders to be authenticated promptly by the prescriber or another practitioner responsible for the patient's care, Schedule II through V drugs to be kept locked within a secure area with access by authorized personnel only, and a postanesthesia evaluation to be documented within 48 hours after patient surgery. Published in the Nov. 27 Federal Register, the new rules go into effect on Jan. 26.
Can interventions halt severe sepsis progression?
November 20th 2006Protocolized Care for Early Septic Shock (ProCESS), a new multicenter research consortium, is beginning a large-scale study to determine whether specific interventions can halt the progression to severe sepsis or septic shock. Every year, about 750,000 people in the United States are affected with severe sepsis and about 200,000 people die from it. Sepsis is a syndrome characterized by a systemic response to infection that can rapidly lead to death. It is the leading cause of death in noncoronary intensive care units.
COPD gains first nebulized beta2 agonist
November 20th 2006Arformoterol (Brovana, Sepracor) inhalation solution, 15 mcg, is the first inhaled long-acting beta2-adrenergic agonist to be approved for use with a nebulizer. It was approved for long-term, twice-daily (morning and evening) maintenance treatment of bronchoconstriction in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), including chronic bronchitis and emphysema. The company plans to launch the product during the second quarter of 2007.
Blood test cuts infection risk in transplant patients
November 20th 2006Over the years, long-term use of immunosuppressive medications has shown that they reduce morbidity and mortality in transplant patients. One of physicians' challenges is to balance the risk of organ rejection caused by underimmunosuppression with the risk of drug toxicity, secondary infections, and posttransplant lymphoproliferative disorders caused by overimmunosuppressing the patient.
New software enhances neonatal TPN
November 20th 2006NeoFax recently released an updated version of software for the preparation of total parenteral nutrition solutions for neonatal infants. Named WebApp, the software's data are based on what company officials say is the most widely used neonatal drug manual in the world- NeoFax: A Manual of Drugs Used in Neonatal Care-first published nearly 20 years ago.
Calif. law posts hospital medication errors on-line
November 20th 2006New legislation in California takes hospital reporting of serious medication errors to a new and very public level. Signed by the governor in late September, the law requires all hospital medical errors posing serious harm, including medication errors, to be posted on the state Department of Health Services' Web site. The Web site must include a description of the error, any corrective steps taken by the hospital or the state, and the name of the facility.
Is your hospital on Leapfrog's winner list?
November 20th 2006Suppose you were able to evaluate a hospital based on how well it has implemented quality and safety initiatives. The Leapfrog Group set out to do just that when it commissioned a survey to establish a national rating system that offers a broad assessment of a hospital's quality and safety. Fifty-nine hospitals have been named to Leapfrog's top hospitals list based on data from its survey.
Managing heart failure and transplants: Here's how
November 20th 2006The International Society for Heart & Lung Transplantation (ISHLT) has released the first international guidelines for managing heart failure (HF) patients prior to heart transplantation. HF is a serious condition in which the heart is unable to pump blood at a rate sufficient to meet the needs of the body. "The new guidelines will enhance the effectiveness of patient care, optimize patient outcomes, and improve overall cost by focusing resources on the most effective strategies," said Mariell Jessup, M.D., ISHLT task force chair and professor of medicine at the University of Pennsylvania Medical Center.
Clinical Twisters: Treating asthma/avoiding SVT
November 20th 2006A 20-year-old patient, T.C., managed in your hospital's asthma clinic has recently been diagnosed with paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia (SVT). To control his asthma, T.C. uses a fluticasone 250 mcg/salmeterol 50 mcg inhaler (Advair Diskus, GlaxoSmithKline) regularly plus an albuterol inhaler as needed. T.C.'s physician suspects the beta agonists used to control asthma could be a factor in T.C.'s episodes of SVT. He requests a pharmacist consult about how best to deal with the asthma to prevent episodes of heart arrhythmia. What do you suggest?
Diabetes undertreated among hospital patients
November 20th 2006Diabetes is undertreated among inpatients, especially acute care patients, sometimes with devastating results. "Blood glucose levels are too often not treated as intensively as other medical conditions among floor patients," said Almut G. Winterstein, Ph.D., assistant professor of pharmacy health care administration at the University of Florida College of Pharmacy. "If hospitals made a more aggressive effort, it could save quite a significant number of lives."
Dasatinib added to guideline for CML
November 20th 2006Dasatinib (Sprycel, Bristol-Myers Squibb) is a new tyrosine kinase inhibitor for chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML). The Food & Drug Administration approved the drug in June, and now the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) has added dasatinib to its CML guidelines.