Assessing Trends in Utilization and Off-Label Prescribing for Ozempic, a Glucagon-like Peptide Receptor Agonist
Author(s)
Muñoz E1, Grant K1, Thelus R2, Secora A3
1IQVIA, Falls Church, VA, USA, 2IQVIA, DC, DC, USA, 3Johns Hopkins University, Charlottesville, VA, USA
Presentation Documents
OBJECTIVES: There has been tremendous public interest in the use of glucagon-like peptide receptor agonists (GLP-1 RAs) given their efficacy in weight loss. Ozempic® (semaglutide), which only has a type 2 diabetes indication, is potentially being used for off-label in several disease areas. Monitoring trends in GLP-1 RA prescribing practices is critical to understand and inform pharmacovigilance efforts on this and similar drug classes, especially as more products gain FDA approval.
METHODS: IQVIA’s syndicated data assets, National Prescription Audit (NPA) and National Medical and Treatment Audit (NMTA), were used to investigate utilization trends for all GLP-1 Ras. Analyses were conducted at the brand and molecule level. NPA was interrogated for national and regional prescriptions dispensed data; NPA – Extended Insights was used for provider specialty data. NMTA was used for diagnosis codes associated with prescriptions written from office-based medical practices.
RESULTS: In 2023 (through November) there were >50 million prescriptions dispensed for GLP-1 RAs, with Ozempic® representing ~39% of the prescriptions. From 2018 to 2023, ~60% of Ozempic® prescriptions were dispensed to female patients, with nearly all dispensed to those 40-59 (~48%) and 60+ years old (~42%). In 2023, nurse practitioners (NPs) were the largest prescribers, followed by primary care providers (PCPs). Ozempic® was the only GLP-1 RA brand in the class with readily identifiable off-label prescribing, increasing from ~22% in 2018 to ~30% in 2023. Nearly all off-label use was for obesity and/or body mass index.
CONCLUSIONS: Ozempic® is currently used off-label more than any other GLP-1 RA, and the proportion has increased, driven largely by NPs and PCPs prescribing to treat obesity-related conditions. However, other off-label uses are emerging, including in alcohol abuse and women’s health. More research is needed on the downstream clinical and public health effects of increased off-label prescribing of Ozempic®.
Conference/Value in Health Info
Value in Health, Volume 27, Issue 6, S1 (June 2024)
Code
EPH202
Topic
Epidemiology & Public Health
Topic Subcategory
Public Health, Safety & Pharmacoepidemiology
Disease
Diabetes/Endocrine/Metabolic Disorders (including obesity)