Objective: To compare the use of guideline-recommended prescription medications for diabetes among Medicare beneficiaries enrolled in stand-alone prescription drug plans (PDPs) with Medicare Advantage prescription drug plans (MAPDs) in the presence of potential selection bias.
Data sources/study setting: Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services' Chronic Condition Data Warehouse (2006, 2007).
Study design: Retrospective cross-sectional comparison of drug use and proportion of days covered (PDC) for oral-antidiabetics, ACE-inhibitors/ARBs, and antihyperlipidemics among PDP and MAPD enrollees with diabetes. We estimated "naïve" regression models assuming exogenous plan choice and two-stage residual inclusion (2SRI) models to study endogeneity in choice of Part D plan type.
Data collection/extraction methods: We identified 111,290 diabetics based on ICD-9 codes in Medicare claims from a random 5 percent sample of Medicare beneficiaries in 2005 excluding dual eligibles.
Principal findings: The naïve regression models indicated lower probability of drug use for oral-antidiabetics (-4 percent; p < .001) and ACE-inhibitors/ARBS (-2 percent; p = .004) among PDP enrollees, but their PDC was higher (3-5 percent) for all drug classes (p < .001). 2SRI models produced no significant differences in any-use equations, but significantly higher PDC values for PDP enrollees for oral-antidiabetics and ACE-inhibitors/ARBs.
Conclusions: We found similar overall use of recommended drugs in diabetes treatment and no consistent evidence of favorable or adverse selection into PDPs and MAPDs.
© Health Research and Educational Trust.