Rheumatoid arthritis patients fulfilling Korean National Health Insurance reimbursement guidelines for anti-tumor necrosis factor-α treatment and comparison to other guidelines
- Author(s)
- Jin‑Wuk Hur; Jung‑Yoon Choe; Dong‑Wook Kim; Hyun Ah Kim; Sang‑Hyon Kim; Wan‑Uk Kim; Yun Sung Kim; Hye‑Soon Lee; Sang‑Heon Lee; Sung‑Hwan Park; Won Park; Yong‑Beom Park; Chang‑Hee Suh; Seung‑Cheol Shim; Yeong‑Wook Song; Bo Young Yoon; Dae Young Yu; Dae Hyun Yoo
- Keimyung Author(s)
- Kim, Sang Hyon
- Department
- Dept. of Internal Medicine (내과학)
- Journal Title
- Rheumatology International
- Issued Date
- 2015
- Volume
- 35
- Issue
- 11
- Keyword
- Rheumatoid arthritis; Treatment; Reimbursement guidelines; Anti-TNFα agents
- Abstract
- The aim of this study was to compare antitumor
necrosis factor-α (TNFα) treatment status in rheumatoid
arthritis (RA) patients with the Korean National
Health Insurance (KNHI) reimbursement eligibility
criteria and with American College of Rheumatology
(ACR) recommendations, Japan College of Rheumatology
(JCR) guidelines and British Society for Rheumatology
(BSR) guidelines. Between December 2011 and
August 2012, outpatients from 17 South Korean general
hospitals diagnosed with RA according to the 1987 ACR
criteria were enrolled into a noninterventional, crosssectional,
observational study. Of 1700 patients (1414
female (83.2 %), mean age of 56.6 ± 12.0, mean disease
duration 97.9 ± 91.8 months), 306 (18.0 %) had
used anti-TNFα agents, and 224 (13.2 %) were currently
using an anti-TNFα agent. Of 1394 anti-TNFα-naive
patients, 32 (2.3 %) met KNHI reimbursement guidelines,
148 (10.6 %) met ACR recommendations, and
127 (9.1 %) and 126 (9.0 %) were considered eligible
for anti-TNFα agents according to JCR and BSR guidelines,
respectively. The main discrepancy was the higher
active joint count required by the KNHI eligibility criteria.
In the opinion of treating rheumatologists, the
KNHI reimbursement criteria ineligibility accounted for
15.3 % (n = 213) of the reasons for not initiating anti-
TNFα agents in anti-TNFα-naive group. The anti-TNFα
user group showed significantly higher disease activity
than the anti-TNFα-naive group based on DAS28
score. In comparison with the ACR recommendations
and JCR and BSR guidelines, fewer patients met KNHI
reimbursement eligibility criteria for anti-TNFα agents.
The current amendment of the KNHI criteria based on
DAS28 score will improve an access to biologic agents
including anti-TNFα treatment for South Korean patients
with active RA.
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