TY - JOUR T1 - The impacts of government reimbursement negotiation on targeted anticancer medication price, volume and spending in China JF - BMJ Global Health JO - BMJ Global Health DO - 10.1136/bmjgh-2021-006196 VL - 6 IS - 7 SP - e006196 AU - Yichen Zhang AU - Haishaerjiang Wushouer AU - Sheng Han AU - Mengyuan Fu AU - Xiaodong Guan AU - Luwen Shi AU - Anita Wagner Y1 - 2021/07/01 UR - http://gh.bmj.com/content/6/7/e006196.abstract N2 - Introduction New targeted therapies have changed cancer treatment in the past decades. However, high prices of targeted anticancer medications have increased economic burden for both patients and health insurance systems. In July 2017, China implemented combined medication price negotiation and mandatory reimbursement policies for 15 targeted anticancer medications. This study assesses effects of the policy on hospital procurement prices, volumes and spending.Methods Using a quasi-experimental interrupted time series design, we analysed procurement data from the Chinese Medical Economic Information of 789 public hospitals in 30 provinces between January 2016 and September 2018. The intervention group consisted of 15 targeted anticancer medications with negotiated prices in 2017. The comparison group consisted of six targeted anticancer medications without negotiated prices by 2018. The effective date of the policy was September 2017.Results After the implementation of the 2017 medication price negotiation and reimbursement policy, cost per defined daily dose (DDD) of the 15 targeted anticancer medications dropped US$71.21 on average from an average US$169.24/DDD before (p=0.000). Compared with what would have happened without the intervention, cost/DDD of price-negotiated medications decreased by 48.9% (p=0.000), procurement volumes increased by 143.0% (p=0.000) and hospital medication spending decreased by 6.9% (p=0.146).Conclusions The 2017 medication price negotiation and reimbursement policy decreased targeted medication procurement costs per DDD, increased volumes procured and at least temporarily contained spending. These changes should result in better access to and affordability of targeted anticancer medications in China.Data was obtained from a third party and are not publicly available. ER -