Prescription fills for hydroxychloroquine/chloroquine
spiked right after COVID-19 was declared a national emergency in March,
but use of the drugs still remains well above 2019 levels, based on
data from more than 58,000 U.S. pharmacies.
Hydroxychloroquine/chloroquine are also doing better than any of the
prescription drugs in the top 10 based on total claims in 2019, Muthiah
Vaduganathan, MD, MPH, of Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, and
associates reported May 28 in a research letter in JAMA.
Prescription fills for hydroxychloroquine/chloroquine have been above
2019 levels every week since the national emergency was declared on
March 13, with the high occurring during the week of March 15-21, when
fills were 214% higher than the corresponding week in 2019. The lowest
level in that time came during the week of April 12-18, with growth of
14.6% over 2019, the investigators said.
The drugs occupying the top 10 — amlodipine, amoxicillin, atorvastatin, gabapentin, hydrocodone-acetaminophen, levothyroxine, lisinopril, losartan, omeprazole, and sertraline
— have not done as well. Losartan, the only one that hasn’t lost ground
in any week since March 13, rose by almost 49% during March 15-21, but
was down to a 1.7% rise by the end of the study period, they reported.
Meanwhile, the other drug touted as a treatment for COVID-19, azithromycin,
has fallen farther than most of the top 10. By April 19-25, the last
week of the study period, fills for the antibiotic were down 62.7%,
compared with last year, the analysis showed. Only amoxicillin had
dropped more (64.4%).
The modest decline for most common long-term therapies after peak
could represent reduced contact with prescribing clinicians, restricted
access to pharmacies, pharmacist rationing, loss of insurance from
unemployment, or replete supplies from early stockpiling, Dr.
Vaduganathan and associates wrote.
The investigators used all-payer U.S. pharmacy data from 58,332
chain, independent, and mail-order pharmacies across 14,421 zip codes in
50 states, reflecting approximately 17 million deidentified claims, to
estimate national prescription fills, they explained.
https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/931443
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