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Drug Shortages

Drug Shortages. A Public Health Crisis. Background. U.S Healthcare System is experiencing an alarming increase in number of drug shortages causing a major public health threat Increased > 200% between 2006 and 2010 ASA DRUG Shortage Survey—2011 1,373 Anesthesiologists

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Drug Shortages

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  1. Drug Shortages A Public Health Crisis

  2. Background • U.S Healthcare System is experiencing an alarming increase in number of drug shortages causing a major public health threat • Increased > 200% between 2006 and 2010 • ASA DRUG Shortage Survey—2011 • 1,373 Anesthesiologists • 90% reported a shortage of one or more anesthetics • 10% postponed or cancelled cases • 48% reported longer recovery times

  3. IMPACT • Interruptions in pt’s daily regimen can lead to dangerous effects/withdrawal symptoms (ex. Rebound HTN) • Decreased pt satisfaction, prolonged awakening, delayed discharge, nausea • Longer procedure times and recovery times drive up healthcare costs • When shortages occur, drugs can be obtained through a non-contracted supplier aka. “gray market” resulting in significantly increased prices and compromised safety • Ethical issues

  4. background • AANA Drug Shortage Survey • 94.7% indicated they experienced a drug shortage affecting their practice in the last year. • 6.1% have had to cancel cases due to shortages • Top recommendation for stakeholders regarding shortages: Increase regulations of drug manufacturers/provide more incentives for or “force” companies to produce drugs in shortage

  5. How do I know what drugs are on shortage? • American Society of Health System Pharmacists (ashp.org) • each manufacturer gives reason for shortage • estimated resupply dates • alternate agents • usually lists more drugs • CDER Drug Shortage website—thru FDA site • encourage manufacturers to report shortages but not mandatory

  6. Reasons for shortages • Drug companies decrease the supply which increases the demand and cost • Many drug companies will stop producing a drug if the profitability is less than 6% above cost. • Medicare reimburses sterile injectables at 6% above average sales price under Part B • Only 7 Pharm manufacturers produce a majority of sterile injectables • Any given sterile injectable is produced by 3 or less manufacturers • Distributors tend to provide the best prices and most stable supply to high volume purchasers

  7. Reasons for shortages • In 2009, 2 out of 3 U.S. Manufacturers of Propofol stopped production which led to increases in use of other induction drugs which led to a shortage of those as well • Several manufacturers are expanding capacity but won’t be ready for several years • QUALITY PROBLEMS or Scarcity of an active pharmaceutical ingredient can lead to cascading and persistent shortages • 54% of shortage attributed to quality problems—leading to temporary closure or renovations of facilities • Asymmetry of incentives: little cost of producing too little of a drug but a potentially high cost of producing too much of that drug

  8. Anesthesia related shortages • Alfentanil Injection • Acetylcysteine Inhalation Solution • Alcohol Dehydrated (Ethanol > 98 Percent) • Atracurium Besylate • Atropine Sulfate Injection • Bupivacaine Hydrochloride Injection • Buprenorphine Injection • Butorphanol Injection • Calcium Chloride Injection • Cocaine Topical Solution

  9. Anesthesia related shortages • Desmopressin Injection • Dexamethasone Injection • Diazepam Injection • Diltiazem Injection • Diphenhydramine Hydrochloride Injection • Etomidate Injection • Fentanyl Citrate Injection • Fosphenytoin Sodium Injection • Furosemide Injection • Hydromorphone Hydrochloride Injection (New) • Indigo Carmine Injection • Ketorolac Injection

  10. Anesthesia related shortages • Opana ER (oxymorphone hydrochloride) • Pancuronium Bromide Injection • Phentolamine Mesylate for Injection • Potassium Phosphate • Procainamide HCl Injection • Prochlorperazine Injection • Promethazine Injection • Sodium Acetate Injection • Sodium Chloride 23.4 Percent • Sodium Phosphate Injection • Sufentanil Injection • Vasopressin Injection • Vecuronium Injection

  11. Anesthesia related shortages • Labetalol Hydrochloride Injection • Lidocaine Hydrochloride Injection • Lorazepam Injection • Magnesium Sulfate Injection • Metoclopramide Injection • Midazolam Injection • Morphine Sulfate Injection • Nalbuphine Injection • Naloxone • Ondansetron Injection 2mg/mL • Ondansetron Injection 32 mg/50 mL premixed bags

  12. The gray market: putting profits before patients • What is the Gray Market??? • A supply channel that is unofficial, unauthorized or unintended by the original manufacturer • In markets where the products are scarce or in short supply gray markets evolve to sell the item at any price the market will bear • Price gouging • Average of 650% markup of drugs needed to treat critically ill pts • Highest single markup was 4,533% • Normally priced at $25.90 offered price was $1200!!! • Not just a cost concern. Myriad of SAFETY issues • Pose risks to your patients and the facility—drugs can be counterfeit, stolen, mishandled, diverted • Not regulated, no standards for storage and handling

  13. Gray market: Price gouging • Of the markups… • 96% were at least double normal price (100%) • 45% were at least 10 X normal price (1000%) • 27% were at least 20 x normal price (2000%)

  14. What drugs are being affected by the gray market??? • The highest markups… • 3980% for chemotherapy drugs to treat leukemia and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma • 3170% for drugs for cancer patients receiving bone marrow transplants • 3161% for sedatives/anesthetics • A supply of Propofol that usually cost $1500 now being sold for $25,000!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! • 2979% for certain blood pressure medications • 2692% for meds to prevent damage during a heart attack

  15. Where does my hospital get the drugs I use??? • Drugs moving thru the gray market can be bought and sold across state lines multiple times, moved in whole or partial lots, repackaged or relabeled • Complex web of transactions making it impossible to determine the product’s origin, the supply source, or authenticity • Temperature and climate conditions required for maintaining efficacy cannot be ensured—may cause drugs to be inadequate or harmful

  16. Stuck between a rock and a hard place! • Record number of drug shortages • Drug scarcity forcing pharmacists to search for new sources of supply • Puts the pharmacist/buyer between a rock and a hard place • Results of a recent survey of purchasing agents and pharmacists at 549 hospitals… • Stockpiling and hoarding • “You are hesitant to tell gray market vendors what you need because they will buy it all up if they find it, and then harass you to buy it for months afterwards.” • More than half of all respondents were solicited daily from up to 10 different gray market vendors by phone, email, or fax • Contain language such as “we only have 20% left” and “quantities are going fast” • Most frequent solicitations at university hospitals

  17. “I would like to know why hospitals can’t get these products but the scalpers can. It is unreal to have to deal with scalpers in healthcare.” • They watch the wholesaler’s supply and if they sense an impending shortage they buy the entire supply • “Our physicians DO NOT want to hear that a drug is unavailable.” • 52% reported purchasing one or more drugs from gray market during past 2 years • Feeling pressured by physicians and hospital administrators to purchase from gray market vendors

  18. Reasons to avoid the gray market • ETHICAL concerns • Concerns with authenticity • Cost • Concerns about storage conditions

  19. What needs to be done to stop gray market vendors??? • Legislative action is needed to give the FDA the authority to better manage drug shortages • Requiring manufacturers to stop deliveries to wholesalers/distributors when the company knows their products are soon to be in short supply • This way only direct accounts with hospitals, clinics, pharmacies, and other direct patient care to have access to the products at the contracted rate • With better control of drug shortages the gray market can’t thrive! • Stronger regulations needed for distribution of pharmaceutical products • National pedigree law—limits distribution to authorized dealers and appropriately licensed distributors • Pricing of products should be standardized in a way that prohibits unfair price gouging

  20. What needs to be done to stop the gray market vendors • Healthcare provider organizations need to take steps to minimize the need for purchasing products from gray market vendors • Local affiliations forming that identify shortages and determine appropriate limitations on use, and cooperatively borrow from each other to avoid using gray market vendors • Pharmacy and committees seeking out alternatives for drugs in short supply and implemented safety strategies to avoid errors with these alternative drugs • Regulatory and law enforcement action against counterfeiting and theft

  21. What is currently being done? • Obama—Oct. 2011 executive order for FDA to investigate price gouging • Government is now requiring drug manufacturers to report production interruptions in drugs that have no generic equivalent or those that are critical to maintaining life to the FDA • In 2009, the ASA worked with the FDA to allow importation of Propofol from European drug companies • Several leading manufacturers of generic sterile injectables are upgrading facilities or building new facilities—will take time • Producing a new drug will often require manufacturers to reduce or stop production of another drug

  22. Profitability of generic drugs: an ethical issue • Many drug companies will stop producing a drug if it brings in less than 6% profit above cost. • Medicare reimburses sterile injectables at 6% above average sales price under Part B • Many of the current drug shortages are sterile injectable GENERIC drugs. • This is an ethical issue: • Should drug companies continue to make drugs that they profit little from out of an ethical obligation? • Should we create an incentive to keep them making these drugs to prevent shortages?

  23. What can we do? • The FDA does not have the authority to “force” drug companies to continue makinga drug or to increase production of a drug • We can write letters to drug companies pleading with them to continue to make drugs that may not profit them and include specific pt stories. • Drug companies are businesses whose goal is to be profitable • Updating Medicare’s generic drug reimbursement methods frequently, especially for shortage drugs • Providing tax incentives to encourage makers of generic drugs to upgrade their facilities and continue or begin producing shortage drugs

  24. Tax incentives: the bottom line • It is unfortunate that drug companies are for-profit businesses who will probably show a weak response to our pleads for them to make drugs out of an ethical obligation • Tax incentives for drug companies to continue making lower profit drugs has been suggested by many respondents to a recent questionnaire sent to members of the AANA • Unfortunately, “money talks” and tax incentives may be a logical way to stimulate them

  25. conclusion • The solution to the drug shortage problem must be multi-faceted due to the vast number of causative issues • Many of the solutions thus far have focused on reporting shortages which may encourage rationing and slow the shortage, but this does not “fix” the problem • This advocacy project focuses on two main solutions: • Regulate the gray market • Find ways to get drug companies to manufacture the less profitable generic sterile injectable drugs that are on shortage

  26. references • American Association of Nurse Anesthetists website. (2012). http://www.aana.com/resources2/professionalpractice/Pages/Drug-Shortages.aspx • Drug shortages in the U.S.-An industry prospective [Newsgroup comment]. (2011, October, 11). Retrieved from http://bournepartners.wordpress.com/2011/10/11/drug-shortages-in-the-u-s-%E2%80%93-an-industry-perspective/ • Drug shortages leading to price gouging, possible safety issues, according to research [Newsgroup comment]. (2011, August 16). Retrieved from https://www.premierinc.com/about/news/11-aug/drugshortages081611.jsp

  27. references • Fields, R. (2012, February 9). 7 serious effects of anesthesia drug shortages on surgery centers [ Newsgroup comment]. Retrieved from http://www.beckersasc.com/anesthesia/7-serious-effects-of-anesthesia-drug-shortages-on-surgery-centers.html • Haninger, K., Jessup, A., & Koehler, K. (2011, October). Economic analysis of the causes of drug shortages (Issue Brief ASPE). Washington, DC: Department of Health and Human Resources. • Harris, G. (2011, August 19). U. S. scrambling to ease shortage of vital medicine. New York Times. Retrieved from http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/20/health/policy/20drug.html?_r=1&pagewanted=all

  28. references • Malina, D. P. (2011, December, 23) [Commentary]. Retrieved from http://www.aana.com/resources2/professionalpractice/Documents/20111223%20FDA%20Drug%20Shortage%20Comments.pdf • Senate bill addresses drug shortages. (2011, May). Anesthesiology News. Retrieved from http://www.anesthesiologynews.com/ViewArticle.aspx?d=In+Brief&d_id=220&i=May+2011&i_id=729&a_id=17102 • Stone, K. F. (2012, January, 14). Where has all the Propofol gone? [Newsgroup comment]. Retrieved from http://www.opednews.com/articles/Where-Has-All-the-Propofol-by-Kurt-Stone-120114-156.html?show=votes • U. S. Food and Drug Administration. (2011, October, 31). A review of FDA’s approach to medical product shortages (Executive Summary). Retrieved from FDA Website: http://www.fda.gov/DrugShortageReport

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