Home Family Practice Increase in Out-of-Pocket Costs Could Increase Abandonment of HIV PrEP Meds

Increase in Out-of-Pocket Costs Could Increase Abandonment of HIV PrEP Meds

Two to three times higher HIV diagnosis rates seen for patients who abandoned versus filled their PrEP prescriptions

By Elana Gotkine HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, Jan. 8, 2024 (HealthDay News) — An increase in out-of-pocket costs for HIV preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) medications could increase abandonment of PrEP, leading to an increase in HIV diagnoses, according to a study published in the January issue of Health Affairs.

Lorraine T. Dean, Sc.D., from Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, and colleagues estimated the risk-adjusted percentages of patients who abandoned their initial PrEP prescription across six out-of-pocket spending categories in a sample of 58,529 people with a new insurer-approved PrEP prescription. The percentage of patients who would abandon PrEP under hypothetical changes to out-of-pocket spending ranging from $0 to $500 was then simulated.

The researchers found that abandonment rates increased from 5.5 percent at $0 to 42.6 percent at >$500; there was a doubling in abandonment observed with a small increase from $0 to $10. Conversely, a decrease in abandonment rates was seen from 48.0 percent at >$500 to 7.3 percent at $0. Patients who abandoned versus filled PrEP prescriptions had a two to three times higher rate of HIV diagnoses.

“Our findings suggest that out-of-pocket cost increases for PrEP could upend the progress that has been made towards ending the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the United States,” senior author Jalpa Doshi, Ph.D., from the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, said in a statement.

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