* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download An Introduction to Dominion Diagnostics, LLC
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Dominion Diagnostics Medication Monitoring Presented to: National Council of Self-Insurers May 18, 2009 Frank A. Fornari, Ph.D Chief Executive Officer (877) 734-9600 [email protected] About Dominion • National medical laboratory accredited by the College of American Pathologists (CAP), the Clinical Laboratory Amendments Act (CLIA) and other appropriate state specific governing bodies • Provides clinical pharmacological/ toxicological and molecular diagnostic services • Invents, develops, validates and performs state-of-the-art quantitative medication monitoring • Provides pharmacokinetic and pharmacogenomic data regarding drug usage, drug-drug Interactions, elimination, and prescription adherence Mission and Goals • Create a personalized diagnostic-based model for pharmacotherapy (every patient is an individual clinical trial) • Improve patient care and clinical efficiency • Objective patient outcomes analyses through quantitative drug testing integrated with traditional clinical metrics • Establish diagnostic guidelines and a financial model for the development, management and monitoring of pharmacotherapeutic agents Targeted Market Segments • Drug Treatment and Mental Health Clinics • State and Private Worker’s Compensation Systems • Pain Management Practices • Primary Care Physicians • Hospital Systems and Self-Insured Corporations • Pharmaceutical Companies • Pharmacy Benefits Management Companies • Commercial Healthcare Insurance Payers Testing Rationale • Clinical Pharmacotherapeutic and Pharmacokinetic Issues • Substance Abuse, Misuse, Diversion and Addiction Issues • Medico-Legal Concerns Laboratory Medicine • Laboratory medicine accounts for less than 5% of the national healthcare expenditure, while greater than 85% of all medical decisions involve laboratory results • The healthcare system must have a sufficient understanding of, and have access to the laboratory and its processes • The laboratory is held accountable for issues involving medical necessity, ordering procedures and reimbursement • There must be an efficient, fair, and functioning reimbursement system that can create new and upgraded CPT codes as technology develops and the cost of analyses increases Healthcare Concerns 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Medicare is experiencing financial difficulty Over 35% of Americans have limited access to medical care Pharmacy and related costs are nearly 50% of the overall healthcare expenditure and are spiraling out of control 50% of all medications do not demonstrate efficacy, are toxic or fatal (ADR is the 6th leading cause of death 137,000 reported deaths last year) Healthcare professionals are leaving the field and are not being replaced Decision makers are require more training to understand the system’s problems It is becoming a political rather than a scientific issue Business Model and Opportunity 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Hundreds of millions of prescriptions filled for pain medications each year. 50 Million pain patients per year and growing. “Life truly is Pain”. Particularly when paying for these medications Very little basic understanding of the biochemical and neurogenetic mechanisms of pain. If the pain is controlled recovery is expedited. We possess a highly evolved endogenous pain relief system. We have not been able to uncouple addiction and nociception nor create a series of truly efficacious non opioid medications. The industry is currently focused upon new drug delivery devices and non traditional compounds (i.e., Cannabinoids etc.) Polymorphic activity at CYP2D6 plays a significant role and is now measurable The Top 10 Drugs Processed by Cost 2007 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Lidoderm 5% patch (anesthetic) OxyContin (pain) Celebrex (anti-inflammatory pain) Oxycodone (pain) Skelaxin (muscle relaxant) Gabapentin (anticonvulsant/pain) ACTIQ (pain) Ambien (insomnia) Lyrica (anticonvulsant/pain) Duragesic patches (pain) Source: 1 Cypress Care Data 2007 Therapeutic Drug Classification – 2007 YTD • Narcotic Analgesics continue to make up a majority (36%) of all prescriptions processed. • Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, such as Celebrex and Ibuprofen represent 12% of all prescription activity. • Generally speaking, “pain” medications continue to make up almost 50% of all processed medications. Source: 1 Cypress Care Data 2007 Current Workers’ Comp Environment • Medical expense is almost 60% total claims cost • Total medical expenses in 2006 were over $35 billion • Pharmacy accounts for more than 14% of the total medical expense • Pharmacy expenses in 2006 were over $5 billion Source: NCCI Workers’ Compensation Market Outlook – 2007 Figure derived by Health Strategy Associates (HSA) from a combination of NCCI statistics trended forward by 10% from 2005, and estimate of medical inflation in workers; compensation, and HAS client data by HSA. Opioid Utilization • • The use of opioids for workers’ compensation claimants with chronic pain became popular after effectiveness in treating acute pain and cancer pain was demonstrated. Chronic pain is not the same as acute or cancer pain. • Using drugs developed for those purposes can lead to addictions that are not often recognized or acknowledged by providers. • • Studies of opioid use for chronic back pain showed no pain-relieving advantage of opioids over placebo or non-opioid control groups. Studies indicated only insignificant drops in pain from the break-through pain baseline with opioid use. Source: “Experts Warn of Wounded Syndrome.” Dr. Susan Novak. July 2007. Presented to Southern Association of Workers’ Compensation Administrators (SAWCA) Annals of Internal Medicine; 2007 Report Patient Prescription Adherence • Unpublished data analyses in our laboratory demonstrate a significant lack of patient adherence in chronic WC cases (approximately 50%), and that the prescribing physician was able to predict overall patient adherence in a little more than 50% of patients but was only correct in approximately 10% of the nonadherent group. • A recently published study involving pain management patients revealed that 45% had abnormal urine drug test results Michna, E., et al. “Urine Toxicology Screening Among Chronic Pain Patients on Opioid Therapy: Frequency and Predictability of Abnormal Findings”. Clin J Pain, Volume 23, Number 2, February 2007. Workers Compensation report, Emerging Trends, Vol. 19, No 2 page 39, 12/18/07 Study Objectives • Objectifying Pharmacotherapy: Integrating Pharmacy Benefits Management and Clinical Medication Monitoring • Overall objective: To examine prescription adherence in a group of chronic worker’s compensation patients using stateof-the-art clinical drug monitoring and identify and stratify these patients based upon pharmacological, clinical, and biopsychosocial parameters. THREE-MONTH SUMMARY, OCT-DEC: Percentage of Patient Adherence to Prescription Regimens (%) 7% 47% Adherence Non-Adherence 46% Further Testing Required Patient Issues • • • • • • Extended treatment times and excess office visits Physical Therapy Issues ER visits, additional physicians and consults Additional diagnostics (MRI, X-ray etc) Lost wages, slow or no return to work Ancillary issues (depression,anxiety, etc) SAMM™ Scientifically Accurate Medication Monitoring™ A New Level of Interpretation The SAMM™ test results report offers a new level of interpretation and clinical support that has not been available to the Pain Medicine field to date. SAMM™, included as part of the Laboratory Detail Report that clients currently receive, provides quantitative information on commonly prescribed pain medications and illicit substances as well as information on potential sources of drugs detected but not prescribed. Scientifically Validated References Dominion is the only laboratory of its kind that provides scientifically validated and published references to support clinical interpretation and enhance individual patient pharmacotherapy. Patient Prescription Correlation The SAMM™ report correlates an individual patient’s prescribed medications with detected drug analytes. The results are displayed in an easy-to-read format, and are referenced with published pharmaceutical literature. The SAMM™ test results report is generated for each laboratory sample for each Pain Management patient. The report is self-explanatory, and is backed by Dominion’s clinical team of Pharmacologists, Physicians, Pharmacists, and PharmDs. Case Study • • • • • • 48 year old male Unsuccessful procedural intervention 18 months + post injury Referred to expert in chronic cases Pharmacotherapy for pain and anxiety Taking hydromorphone prior to first visit Injury Diagnostics Diagnosis IMMAP, Baseline UDM Treatment (ProceduresPharmacotherapy etc.) (PBM) Identifies highest users of prescription medications Group Plan identifies other expenditures, i.e., Med Checks, Office Visits, ER Visits PT Excess diagnostics etc. Acute/Chronic Injury and treatment Pharmacotherapy IMMAP Survey (Clinical observations and metrics) Stratify (Toxicity, Efficacy, Genetic, Psychosocial) Establish testing (change in dose, drug SAMM results)/ IMMAP, Patient feedback) frequency per group Iterations and case management utilization review and evaluation Integrate SAMM, IMMAP (Complete case Mgt. Utilization and Financial reports) Medication Costs Prescription Xanax 0.25mg Percocet 5/325mg Soma 350mg Opana ER - 40 mg Dilaudid - 8mg Prescription Cost 49.00 320.00 737.00 2503.95 322.00 Monthly Quantity Brand Cost 30 49.00 90 320.00 120 737.00 80 2,503.95 120 322.00 Generic Cost 5.33 22.00 57.30 Not Available 139.95 Active Compound Alprazolam Oxycodone Carisoprodol Oxymorphone Hydromorphone Without Urine Drug Monitoring Prescription Cost Costs Event Cost 3,609.95 UDM Cost 150.00 0.00 = Monthly Annual $3,759.95 $45,119.40 Financial Impact Adherence Prescription Cost Event Cost Dec-07 Nov-07 Oct-07 Sep-07 No 0% Yes 0% Events Unknown 100% Alert 0% Aug-07 Jul-07 Jun-07 May-07 Apr-07 Mar-07 Feb-07 Jan-07 3,500.00 3,550.00 3,600.00 3,650.00 Costs 3,700.00 3,750.00 3,800.00 With Urine Drug Monitoring Prescription Cost Cost Event Cost 14,168.85 Adherence Annual $18,718.85 UDM Cost 1,800.00 2,750.00 = Financial Impact Dec-07 Oct-07 Sep-07 Events No 17% Nov-07 Alert 0% Yes 83% Aug-07 Jul-07 Jun-07 May-07 Apr-07 Prescription Cost Event Cost UDM Cost Mar-07 Yes No Alert Feb-07 Jan-07 0.00 500.00 1,000.00 1,500.00 2,000.00 2,500.00 3,000.00 3,500.00 4,000.00 4,500.00 Costs $50,000.00 Financial Impact - Single Patient $45,119.40 $40,000.00 $30,000.00 $18,718.85 $20,000.00 $10,000.00 $0.00 Without Urine Drug Monitoring With Urine Drug Monitoring Pharmacogenomics ● Individualize Medicine Based on Genetic Profiles ● Detect, Monitor and Treat the Molecular Cause(s) of Disease Identify Genetic Variations Affecting Drug Response, Drug Metabolism, Adverse Effects, and/or Disease Progression ● Advance Genomic and Proteomic Technologies, Rational Drug Design, and Laboratory Diagnostics ● Develop and perform Emerging Technologies Utilizing Pharmacogenomic Concepts ● Address Ethical and Regulatory Issues Arising from Genomic Research and Technology ● Anne Bardsley-Elliot, Editor, May 2001 Rationale for Pharmacogenetics • Successful prescription drugs work only part (40-60%) of the time e.g., “Try this and call me in the morning” • But of the 40–60% of patients who respond to a drug, that drug is very (100%) effective • Select the right drug, in the right dose, at the right time, the first time. Weber, SOFT 2003 Bradford LD. CYP2D6 allele frequency in European Caucasians, Asians, Africans and their descendants. Pharmacogenomics. 2002 Mar;3(2):229-43. Review All patients with same diagnosis 1 Remove non-responders and toxic responders 2 Treat Responders and Patients Not Predisposed to Toxicity Evans and McLeod Conclusions • Prescribing drugs to patients who need them and demonstrating pharmacovigilance need not be divergent issues. • Sound monitoring, patient documentation, and adherence with state and federal legal guidelines are essential. • The integration of every aspect of the healthcare system is necessary to ensure patient safety, clinical efficacy, fiscal responsibility, expediency, accuracy, and ethicality. • Making new technologies including UPLC/MS/MS the standard of care is a rational way to move healthcare forward Thank You! 211 Circuit Drive North Kingstown, RI 02852 Toll Free: (877) 734-9600 www.dominiondiagnostics.com