Conference Coverage

VIDEO: Patient vouchers prompt physicians to prescribe top antiplatelet drugs


 

REPORTING FROM ACC 18

– Patients who received vouchers to cover copayments were more likely to receive prescriptions for more effective antiplatelet medication, according to data from a multicenter, randomized trial.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel.

“We know that guidelines are very clear; we need to treat patients with antiplatelet therapy for 12 months,” and that the most potent drug, ticagrelor, should be used, Tracy Wang, MD, of Duke University, Durham, N.C., said in a video interview at the annual meeting of the American College of Cardiology. However, in the United States, clopidogrel, though less effective, is prescribed much more often, and many patients discontinue their P2Y12 inhibitor therapy within the first year because of cost, she added.

“We hypothesized that, by reducing the out of pocket costs, treatment would be more evidence driven, rather than driven by what patients could afford,” she said.

The Affordability and Real-World Antiplatelet Treatment Effectiveness After Myocardial Infarction Study (ARTEMIS) included 11,001 MI patients at 301 hospitals across the United States. Patients in the treatment hospital group received a voucher to use at a pharmacy or through a mail-order pharmacy to reduce out of pocket costs. Randomization occurred at the hospital level, and hospital characteristics were similar between the groups.

Pages

Recommended Reading

VEST: Closer tailoring might boost wearable cardioverter defibrillator’s benefit
MDedge Cardiology
ODYSSEY Outcomes results build on FOURIER
MDedge Cardiology
ODYSSEY Outcomes trial redefines secondary cardiovascular prevention
MDedge Cardiology
Ticagrelor noninferior to clopidogrel in terms of major bleeds in STEMI
MDedge Cardiology
Genotype did not significantly affect evacetrapib response
MDedge Cardiology
CECCY: Carvedilol didn’t curb cardiotoxicity in breast cancer patients
MDedge Cardiology
MDedge Daily News: Improving wearable cardioverter defibrillators
MDedge Cardiology
MOMENTUM 3 HeartMate 3 LVAD ‘practice changing’
MDedge Cardiology
VIDEO: Dabigatran effective for myocardial injury after noncardiac surgery
MDedge Cardiology
Barbershop intervention cuts blood pressure in black men
MDedge Cardiology