The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

BlueCross of Tenn. to stop covering OxyContin

Insurer says 2 other opioid pain relievers are safer.

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NASHVILLE, TENN. — Tennessee’s largest health insurer will stop covering OxyContin prescripti­ons as part of several measures to combat opioid addiction.

BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee will encourage doctors to recommend two alternativ­e opioid pain relievers, Xtampza and Morphabond, which are designed to be more difficult to abuse. The insurer will cease paying for OxyContin on Jan. 1, vice president for pharmacy Natalie Tate told The Tennessean .

The suggested alternativ­es are more expensive than OxyContin, but customers will not have to fork over more money for the copay. Tate said BlueCross will absorb the additional cost.

“We are not telling our physicians ‘you cannot prescribe this.’ We are not telling our members ‘you cannot receive this,’ ” Tate said. “We are just drawing a line that we will not continue to pay for this and we have alternativ­es we have now put into place.”

BlueCross covers around 70 percent of insured Tennessean­s. It’s not the first to drop OxyContin, but it’s among a select few that includes Cigna and Florida Blue. Cancer and hospice patients with approved prescripti­ons will be exempt from this coverage change.

The lawsuits and health concerns have decreased demand for OxyContin, which, coupled with increased confidence in abuse-deterrent drugs led to BlueCross of Tennessee’s “progressiv­e decision,” Tate said.

The opioid overdose epidemic claimed more than 1,200 lives in Tennessee last year. At its core is OxyContin, which can be ground into a powder to destroy its delayed-release quality, therefore unlocking its full potency and making it ripe for abuse. But Xtampza and Morphabond are designed to be less potent when crushed, making the medication­s hard to abuse or resell.

Like OxyContin, Xtampza is oxycodone, manufactur­ed by Collegium Pharmaceut­ical. Morphabond is morphine sulfate manufactur­ed by Daiichi Sankyo Inc.

The beginning of next year will bring additional changes to BlueCross of Tennessee’s opioid prescripti­on coverage.

The insurer will only cover the first seven days of a new opioid prescripti­on on an initial pharmacy visit. Customers will have to return to the pharmacy after a week to receive the rest of the prescripti­on. It will also lower the threshold for the prescripti­on strength it covers by around 40 percent.

But the company predicts that the change that will most affect customers is a new requiremen­t regarding opioid prescripti­ons that last more than 30 days. It will automatica­lly freeze coverage after 30 days, requiring patients to undergo an authorizat­ion process before resuming coverage.

Employee groups with “self-funded” insurance will be allowed to opt out of the coverage changes. The new prescripti­on-strength limit will not apply to Medicare customers or to Tennessean­s who are insured by an out-of-state chapter.

 ?? HEIDI DE MARCO / KHN ?? In addition to dropping OxyContin coverage, BlueCross will change coverage rules for other opioids, including lowering covered prescripti­on strengths.
HEIDI DE MARCO / KHN In addition to dropping OxyContin coverage, BlueCross will change coverage rules for other opioids, including lowering covered prescripti­on strengths.

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