AI Article Synopsis

  • Physical therapy (PT) is crucial for managing low back pain (LBP), but variations in medical management are common despite established guidelines.
  • Researchers aimed to determine how different copayment amounts affect the timing and usage of PT among patients newly diagnosed with LBP.
  • The study found that higher initial copayments for PT are linked to lower PT initiation rates and increased opioid prescriptions, indicating that cost barriers can influence treatment decisions related to both therapies.

Article Abstract

Background Context: Physical therapy (PT) is an important component of low back pain (LBP) management. Despite established guidelines, heterogeneity in medical management remains common.

Purpose: We sought to understand how copayments impact timing and utilization of PT in newly diagnosed LBP.

Study Design/setting: The IBM Watson Health MarketScan claims database was used in a longitudinal setting.

Patient Sample: Adult patients with LBP.

Outcome Measures: The primary outcomes-of-interest were timing and overall utilization of PT services. Additional outcomes-of-interest included timing of opioid prescribing.

Methods: Actual and inferred copayments based on nonnonprimary care provider visit claims were used to evaluate the relationship between PT copayment and incidence of PT initiation. Multivariable regression models were used to evaluate factors influencing PT usage.

Results: Overall, 2,467,389 patients were included. PT initiation, among those with at ≥1 PT service during the year after LBP diagnosis (30.6%), occurred at a median of 8 days postdiagnosis (IQR 1-55). Among those with at least one PT encounter, incidence of subsequent PT visits was significantly lower for those with high initial PT copayments. High initial PT copayments, while inversely correlated with PT utilization, were directly correlated with subsequent opioid use (0.77 prescriptions/patient [$0 PT copayment] versus 1.07 prescriptions/patient [$50-74 PT copayment]; 1.15 prescriptions/patient [$75+ PT copayment]). Among patients with known opioid and PT copayments, higher PT copayments were correlated with faster opioid use while higher opioid copayments were correlated with faster PT use (Spearman p<.05). For multivariable whole-cohort analyses, incidence of PT initiation among patients with inferred copayments in the 50-75th and 75-100th percentiles was significantly lower than those below the 50th percentile (HR=0.893 [95%CI 0.887-0.899] and HR=0.905 [95%CI 0.899-0.912], respectively).

Conclusions: Higher PT copayments correlated with reduced PT utilization; higher PT copayments and lower opioid copayments were independent contributors to delayed PT initiation and higher opioid use. In patients covered by plans charging high PT copayments, opioid use was significantly higher. Copays may impact long-term adherence to PT.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.spinee.2024.01.008DOI Listing

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