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Cheapest generics could save Medicare billions
In Medicare’s prescription drug benefit, switching to generic and lowest-cost options for common blood-pressure drugs could have saved billions from 2018–2022.
*Retrospective analysis of national spending data; Level 2c (OCEBM).

Citation

Wong JMM, Reiffel JA, Kowey PR. Brand-names and higher-cost generics drive avoidable Medicare Part D expenditures: A quantitative analysis using angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors and angiotensin receptor blockers as a model. The American Journal of Medicine. 2026;139:50–56. doi:10.1016/j.amjmed.2025.07.020.

Background

Drug spending in Medicare’s prescription drug benefit continues to rise, and brand-name and higher-priced generic choices may add avoidable costs. This study examined recent spending patterns and estimated savings if lower-cost options were used more consistently.

Patients

People enrolled in Medicare’s prescription drug benefit, 2018–2022, who received single-ingredient angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers.

Intervention

Modeled substitutions: (1) replace every brand-name fill with its matching generic; (2) replace every fill with the lowest-cost generic within each drug class.

Control

Observed prescribing and spending in Medicare’s public Part D spending dataset.

Outcome

Total spending and estimated avoidable spending (modeled savings).

Follow-up Period

2018–2022 (5 years)

Results

From 2018 to 2022, enrollment grew 13.7%, while total annual spending on these drugs rose modestly (about $1.25 billion to $1.28 billion). Brand-name use was under 1% of fills but accounted for a much larger share of spending, especially for angiotensin receptor blockers.
Modeled strategy Estimated savings
Replace all brand-name fills with matching generics (2018–2022 cumulative) $429 million
Use the lowest-cost generic within each class for all fills (2018–2022 cumulative) $2.66 billion
Use the lowest-cost generic within each class for all fills (2022 only) $457 million

Limitations

Uses aggregated spending data; no patient outcomes. Assumes drugs are interchangeable. Rebate estimates were indirect and outdated. Excludes combination pills and market price changes from increased demand.

Funding

No specific funding; one author reported minor equity in PRM Pharmaceuticals.

Clinical Application

Prefer generics and consider formulary defaults to the lowest-cost generic in these classes, with clinician opt-out when patient-specific reasons require another drug.

Top Journal Rankings - February 2026

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14 abstracts scored across 7 criteria. Click any article to expand criterion scores.
1. 6.9
Effect of Continuity of Care on Emergency Care and Hospital Admissions Among Patients Receiving Home-Based Care: A Population-Based Cohort Study.
Overall: A reasonably sized primary-care cohort links higher GP/nurse continuity to fewer urgent visits and admissions, but the observational design and lack of precision/absolute-effect reporting limit confidence about causality and the size of real-world benefit.
View 6 Criterion Scores
Primary-Care Relevance & Applicability 9.0
Directly evaluates continuity with GPs and primary-care nurses in a home-based primary care population, a common primary-care organizational decision point.
Validity, Bias Control & Precision 5.0
Population-based cohort with adjusted mixed models and Cox analyses, but observational design leaves substantial residual confounding/selection bias; precision is hard to judge because confidence intervals and p-values are not reported.
Patient-Oriented Outcomes 8.0
Uses patient-important utilization outcomes (urgent care use and hospital admissions), though it does not report other direct patient outcomes (symptoms, function, quality of life, mortality).
Magnitude of Net Benefit 6.5
Associations are large (reported odds ratios ≤0.45), suggesting potentially meaningful reductions in urgent care and admissions, but absolute risk reductions and any tradeoffs/harms of pursuing high continuity are not provided.
Implementability & Practicality 7.0
A continuity target (≥75% of visits with assigned clinicians) is conceptually actionable, but achieving it may require scheduling/workforce changes that can be challenging in real-world home-care services.
Practice-Changing Potential 6.0
Supports prioritizing relational continuity in home-based care and offers a pragmatic threshold, but as nonrandomized evidence it is more suggestive than definitive for changing policy or staffing models.
2. 5.8
Health problems of people with intellectual disabilities in general practice: dynamic cohort study between 2012 and 2021 with Dutch routine care data.
Overall: A highly primary-care–relevant, large routine-data matched cohort describing distinct morbidity and prescribing patterns in adults with intellectual disabilities, but it is observational and mainly descriptive (limited precision details and no patient-outcome or intervention effects), so its main value is reinforcing awareness rather than directly changing practice.
View 6 Criterion Scores
Primary-Care Relevance & Applicability 9.0
Uses routine data from >80 general practices and focuses on health problems, encounters, diagnoses, and prescribing in GP care for adults with intellectual disabilities—highly aligned with primary-care decision-making.
Validity, Bias Control & Precision 5.0
Retrospective matched cohort using routine care data reduces some confounding via matching, but observational design and limited abstract detail on covariates, missing data, and uncertainty estimates (e.g., CIs) leave substantial residual bias/precision concerns.
Patient-Oriented Outcomes 4.0
Outcomes are mainly utilization and clinical coding patterns (contacts, symptoms/diagnoses, medication prescribing) rather than patient-important endpoints such as function, quality of life, morbidity, or mortality.
Magnitude of Net Benefit 2.0
The study is descriptive and does not test an intervention or report benefits versus harms; increased contacts and prescribing are not inherently beneficial without linked patient outcomes.
Implementability & Practicality 6.0
Findings are easy to absorb and could inform GP awareness and service planning, but the abstract does not specify actionable care processes or interventions to implement.
Practice-Changing Potential 9.0
Concludes patterns largely mirror those from two decades ago, suggesting limited novelty; while it reinforces awareness of higher needs (e.g., depression nearly twice as common), it offers little new guidance likely to change practice on its own.
3. 5.7
Budget Impact Analysis of the Balanced Opioid Initiative: A Cluster Randomized Trial Aimed at Deprescribing Opioids for Chronic Pain in Primary Care Settings.
Overall: A pragmatic, primary-care cluster randomized deimplementation/budget analysis with good applicability but limited reporting of patient outcomes and effect sizes, making the clinical net benefit and practice impact uncertain.
View 6 Criterion Scores
Primary-Care Relevance & Applicability 9.0
Conducted in 32 primary care clinics and targets a common primary-care problem (chronic pain opioid prescribing) with clinic/system workflow strategies.
Validity, Bias Control & Precision 6.0
Cluster randomized design strengthens causal inference, but the abstract provides limited detail on baseline balance, intracluster handling, effect sizes, or uncertainty/precision.
Patient-Oriented Outcomes 2.0
Outcomes reported are mainly prescribing dose (MME) and process metrics (screening, agreements, urine testing), with no direct patient outcomes such as pain, function, overdose, or quality of life reported.
Magnitude of Net Benefit 4.0
States higher-intensity strategies decreased mean MME and increased pain/function screening, but also decreased treatment agreements and urine drug screening; without effect sizes or patient outcomes, net benefit is unclear.
Implementability & Practicality 7.0
Interventions (education with audit/feedback, practice facilitation, peer consulting) are plausible for health systems, with explicit per-clinic costs, though they require organizational resources and coordination.
Practice-Changing Potential 6.0
Could influence how primary care systems structure opioid de-prescribing support and budgeting, but limited clinical outcome data and unclear net benefit temper immediate practice change.
4. 5.7
Patients' experiences of a patient-centred polypharmacy medication review intervention: a mixed-methods study.
Overall: Highly relevant to primary care polypharmacy management, but the abstract mainly reports satisfaction/experience without detailed methods, quantified effects, or clinical outcomes, limiting confidence in net benefit and immediate practice impact.
View 6 Criterion Scores
Primary-Care Relevance & Applicability 9.0
Targets polypharmacy medication reviews delivered in primary care, a common generalist responsibility with clear real-world applicability.
Validity, Bias Control & Precision 4.0
Mixed-methods process evaluation with a survey and purposive interviews/audio-recordings, but the abstract provides minimal methodological detail, no sample size for qualitative components, and limited information to judge bias or precision beyond a 72.5% survey response rate.
Patient-Oriented Outcomes 6.0
Focuses on patient experience, satisfaction, and engagement, which are patient-important, but does not report clinical outcomes (e.g., adverse drug events, hospitalizations) or validated quantitative effects.
Magnitude of Net Benefit 3.0
Concludes participants were satisfied and suggests potential benefit, but provides no quantified improvements, and does not report harms, time/burden, or downstream clinical impact.
Implementability & Practicality 7.0
A person-centred medication review and communication-focused approach is generally feasible in primary care, though the need for preparation/support could add workflow burden not fully described.
Practice-Changing Potential 5.0
Supports the value of communication and shared decision-making in medication reviews, but without demonstrated clinical outcome gains or specific, reproducible components, it is more suggestive than definitively practice-changing.
5. 5.2
General practice consultation patterns and patient factors predicting older patients' use of out-of-hours services: a nationwide register-based cohort study.
Overall: A large, methodologically solid registry cohort study in primary care showing out-of-hours use in older adults is driven more by patient factors than by higher daytime consultation provision, but it reports utilization rather than health outcomes and provides limited direct guidance on what to do instead.
View 6 Criterion Scores
Primary-Care Relevance & Applicability 8.5
Directly addresses general practice organization and older patients’ out-of-hours primary care use, a common primary-care operational and continuity issue.
Validity, Bias Control & Precision 7.0
Nationwide register-based cohort of all citizens ≥75 in multiple Danish regions over several years with multivariable modeling, but observational design leaves residual confounding and causal inference is limited.
Patient-Oriented Outcomes 3.0
Primary outcome is healthcare utilization (out-of-hours service use), not direct patient health outcomes such as morbidity, function, quality of life, or mortality.
Magnitude of Net Benefit 2.5
No intervention with measured benefits/harms; the main finding is essentially null (more daytime consultations were not associated with fewer out-of-hours consultations), and no downstream clinical impact is quantified.
Implementability & Practicality 5.5
Findings could inform practice management and policy discussions, but they do not specify an actionable, tested workflow change or implementation strategy.
Practice-Changing Potential 5.0
May temper expectations that simply increasing daytime consultation volume will reduce out-of-hours use, but applicability may be context-dependent and does not establish a clear alternative approach.
6. 5.2
Evaluating the role of faecal calprotectin in older adults: a retrospective observational study.
Overall: A clinically relevant primary-care diagnostic question, but the retrospective design and sparse accuracy reporting in the abstract limit confidence and make the practical impact and net benefit hard to judge.
View 6 Criterion Scores
Primary-Care Relevance & Applicability 8.0
Directly addresses use of faecal calprotectin in primary care to guide referral decisions for common lower GI symptoms, specifically in adults ≥50 years where uncertainty exists.
Validity, Bias Control & Precision 4.0
Retrospective, single-trust observational design with referral/verification (colonoscopy) selection likely; the abstract provides limited diagnostic accuracy statistics and no confidence intervals, limiting precision and bias assessment.
Patient-Oriented Outcomes 3.0
Focuses on test performance and detection of pathology rather than downstream patient outcomes (e.g., morbidity, cancer stage, quality of life), and outcomes are framed mainly as diagnostic findings.
Magnitude of Net Benefit 4.0
Suggests a potential 'rule-out' role (possibly reducing unnecessary colonoscopies) but provides no explicit sensitivity/specificity, false-negative rates, or harms/burdens to quantify overall benefit-risk.
Implementability & Practicality 8.0
Faecal calprotectin (and FIT when available) are practical, commonly used stool tests in routine outpatient care and could be applied without major new infrastructure.
Practice-Changing Potential 4.0
Could influence interpretation of FC in older adults, but the abstract’s limited quantitative performance data and observational design make it insufficient alone to change established guidance.
7. 5.2
Continuity of primary care and end-of-life care costs in dementia: a retrospective cohort study.
Overall: Highly relevant to primary care, but the abstract lacks key quantitative results and—given the observational design—supports an association rather than clear, practice-changing causal evidence.
View 6 Criterion Scores
Primary-Care Relevance & Applicability 9.0
Directly examines GP continuity in a large, real-world English primary-care population with dementia during the last year of life—highly aligned with generalist care delivery and system outcomes.
Validity, Bias Control & Precision 4.0
Retrospective cohort with multivariable modeling and large sample, but the abstract provides no effect sizes or uncertainty (CIs/p-values), and confounding/selection bias remain major concerns for causal interpretation.
Patient-Oriented Outcomes 5.0
Focuses on healthcare utilization/costs (hospital and GP costs), which are important to systems and indirectly related to patient experience, but does not report patient-centered outcomes (symptoms, function, quality of life) or clear clinical endpoints.
Magnitude of Net Benefit 3.0
Concludes costs are lower with higher continuity, but the abstract is missing the actual magnitude of cost differences and does not report potential downsides, tradeoffs, or burdens of achieving higher continuity.
Implementability & Practicality 6.0
Improving continuity is conceptually achievable in primary care, but it often requires scheduling/team redesign and may be constrained by workforce and access pressures; the abstract does not outline actionable implementation strategies.
Practice-Changing Potential 4.0
Findings are suggestive for policy/service design, but because evidence is associative and the effect size is not presented, it is unlikely to change frontline clinical practice on its own.
8. 5.1
Clinical assessment of recurrent cancer: a Danish cohort study in general practice.
Overall: This Danish GP-focused cohort study is highly relevant to primary care and suggests that initial GP suspicion is associated with shorter time to recurrence diagnosis, but response bias and reliance on process outcomes limit confidence in patient benefit and immediate practice change.
View 6 Criterion Scores
Primary-Care Relevance & Applicability 9.0
Focuses directly on GP recognition and referral for suspected cancer recurrence in general practice, a common and high-stakes primary-care decision point.
Validity, Bias Control & Precision 4.5
Retrospective cohort with linked survey/register data, but only 48% GP survey response creates substantial risk of selection/response bias; limited precision reporting (few CIs/p-values).
Patient-Oriented Outcomes 3.0
Main outcomes are diagnostic actions and diagnostic interval (process measures) rather than morbidity, mortality, quality of life, or patient-reported outcomes.
Magnitude of Net Benefit 3.5
Reports a shorter median diagnostic interval when GPs suspected cancer, but this observational association does not demonstrate downstream patient benefit or quantify harms/burdens of referrals.
Implementability & Practicality 6.0
Findings are actionable as awareness/education about recurrence presentations and potential delays by cancer type, but it does not test a concrete, scalable intervention.
Practice-Changing Potential 4.5
May heighten clinician vigilance and support use of fast-track pathways, yet the study is descriptive and unlikely to change practice on its own without interventional evidence.
9. 4.3
Increasing uptake of physical health checks for people living with severe mental illness: a systematic review.
Overall: Highly relevant to primary care, but the abstract reports limited and mostly qualitative evidence focused on process outcomes, with no clear effect sizes or net-benefit data to support practice change.
View 6 Criterion Scores
Primary-Care Relevance & Applicability 8.0
Targets improving uptake of physical health checks for people with severe mental illness, a common and important primary-care quality gap, and includes primary-care settings.
Validity, Bias Control & Precision 6.0
Systematic review with a multi-database search and explicit risk-of-bias tools, but only 12 studies were eligible and results are synthesized qualitatively (effect-direction plot) with no pooled estimates or precision reported.
Patient-Oriented Outcomes 3.0
Primary outcomes are uptake/receipt of checks and screening (process measures), not downstream patient health outcomes such as morbidity, mortality, or quality of life.
Magnitude of Net Benefit 2.0
The abstract provides no absolute effects, comparative effect sizes, or harms/burdens; it only states case management 'shows promise' amid scarce data.
Implementability & Practicality 4.0
The main promising approach mentioned (case management) may be feasible but often requires staffing/workflow changes; the abstract lacks detail on resources, intensity, or scalability.
Practice-Changing Potential 3.0
Concludes evidence is scarce and calls for more robust research, which limits confidence for immediate practice change despite clinical importance.
10. 4.1
Incentives and Equity: A Randomized Controlled Trial to Improve Glycemic Control in Socioeconomically Disadvantaged Patients With Diabetes.
Overall: A relevant RCT question for primary care and health plans, but the abstract lacks key numeric results and reports mainly surrogate outcomes, limiting confidence in benefit size and immediate practice impact.
View 6 Criterion Scores
Primary-Care Relevance & Applicability 7.5
Targets uncontrolled type 2 diabetes in socioeconomically disadvantaged communities—a common primary-care population and a relevant real-world barrier (out-of-pocket costs) that primary care teams and health plans often confront.
Validity, Bias Control & Precision 4.0
Randomized design is a major strength, but the abstract omits key methodological and precision details (baseline HbA1c values cut off, follow-up duration, attrition, and any effect sizes/CI), making the credibility and stability of the estimate hard to judge from the abstract alone.
Patient-Oriented Outcomes 2.5
The outcome described is glycemic control/HbA1c, which is largely a surrogate marker; no patient-important outcomes (quality of life, complications, hospitalizations, mortality) are reported.
Magnitude of Net Benefit 2.0
No numerical results are provided in the abstract (the Results section is truncated), and harms/burdens are not reported; therefore the net benefit cannot be assessed and must be scored low.
Implementability & Practicality 5.0
A voucher-based, conditional discount program could be implemented by insurers/health plans, but it requires administrative infrastructure and monitoring of glycemic improvement; feasibility in routine clinics is plausible but not frictionless.
Practice-Changing Potential 3.5
The concept is potentially actionable for equity-focused diabetes care, but the abstract does not provide quantitative outcomes or safety/burden data needed to justify changing practice or policy based on this report alone.
Score Guide: 9-10 Exceptional 7-8 Strong 5-6 Moderate 3-4 Weak 1-2 Poor
Showing top 10 of 14

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