Conclusion. Medicare beneficiaries with prescription drug coverage and multiple myeloma are more likely to receive myeloma therapy and have longer OS compared to those without prescription drug coverage.
Commentary
First-line therapy of multiple myeloma has evolved over the past 2 decades. Parenteral agents such as vincristine, adriamycin, dexamethasone, and cyclophosphamide and oral therapy with melphalan and prednisone were the mainstay of treatment in the past. In the past decade, the arrival of oral therapy using thalidomide or lenalidomide and parenteral therapy using bortezomib has increased OS in patients with myeloma. Most recently, a combination of lenalidomide, bortezomib, and dexamethasone has emerged as one of the frontline therapies of choice.1 Incorporation of bortezomib or an oral immunomodulatory drug is almost universal in first-line therapy.
Oral antineoplastic therapy is increasingly being approved by the FDA and being utilized in the community. During the period 2016-2018, more than half the new FDA-approved oncology drugs were in oral formulation.2 As such, access to these agents is crucial in cancer therapy. The cost of oral therapy in patients without prescription drug coverage is sometimes more than $10,000 per month, which represents a significant impediment to its adoption. Forty-three states and Washington, DC, have enacted drug parity laws that require patients to pay no more for an oral cancer treatment than they would for an infusion. However, currently there is no such federal law, and Medicare beneficiaries must participate either through part D, state Medicaid, or a sponsored program to obtain prescription drug coverage. Despite being enrolled in part D, many beneficiaries fall into the “doughnut hole” (the requirement of Part D beneficiaries with high prescription drug expenses to pay more once the total cost of their medicines reaches a certain threshold) for prescription drugs at the time of need. From 2019 onward, enrollees will see significant, yet sometimes still insufficient, coverage benefits due to ending of the doughnut hole.3 Only a very limited number of oral chemotherapy agents are covered through Medicare part B, and of those covered, only oral melphalan is used for myeloma.
The authors have acknowledged multiple limitations of their investigation, including possible unobserved clinical differences between beneficiaries. SEER-Medicare registry has limitations in obtaining individual level data and may not contain specific results of cytogenetics, laboratory risk markers, and response to therapy, which are important to determine overall outcome. A prospective evaluation may be more suitable to assess these variables independently or through a multivariate analysis in determining receipt of therapy on OS, although such a study is currently not feasible.
The indicator of active myeloma care was defined as 2 or more outpatient physician visits or receipt of parenteral chemotherapy. This definition is somewhat suboptimal, as often patients with myeloma are under surveillance and may not necessarily be receiving active treatment. Moreover, the exact prescription pattern of lenalidomide, the most active first-line oral therapy, could not be captured from this retrospective registry review. Therefore, definitive conclusions regarding use of lenalidomide and thalidomide and receipt of therapy in this population cannot be made.