Weekly SCD Practice Update

A retrospective analysis of Medicaid-insured children with sickle cell disease (SCD) found that those with longer continuous coverage had significantly better adherence to oral Hydroxyurea (HU), underscoring the role of stable insurance and continuity in optimizing SCD therapy.

Key Findings

  • Purpose
    To investigate whether the length of continuous Medicaid enrollment (12- vs. 24-month coverage) affects adherence to hydroxyurea among children with SCD.
  • Population
    Pediatric patients aged 2–16 years with SCD (HbSS and/or Sβ⁰ genotypes) enrolled in North Carolina Medicaid. Adherence was assessed in two cohorts based on duration of continuous Medicaid enrollment.
  • Headline Result
    Children with 24-month continuous Medicaid enrollment had higher rates of “good” HU adherence, defined as ≥ 80% proportion of days covered (PDC), compared with those in the 12-month cohort. The study establishes a clear positive association between uninterrupted insurance coverage and consistent HU use.
  • Why It Matters
    For children with SCD, consistent daily HU dosing is critical to prevent vaso-occlusive crises and long-term complications. Insurance continuity appears to be a key facilitator of medication adherence — meaning that social policy and payor stability may directly influence biomedical outcomes.
  • Evidence Gaps & Limitations
    The analysis is retrospective and based on prescription-fill data, which may not reflect actual medication ingestion. The Medicaid-only cohort may limit generalizability to privately insured or uninsured populations, and caregiver-level factors affecting adherence were not fully explored.

Source: Journal of Sickle Cell Disease“Adherence to and Factors Associated with Hydroxyurea Use in Children Ages 2 to 16 Years Old with Sickle Cell Disease in North Carolina Medicaid.”

Regulatory & Guideline Watch

While clinical guidelines support HU as a foundational therapy in pediatric SCD, real-world adherence remains a barrier to benefit. This study highlights health policy implications: stable insurance may be as important as prescribing the drug. As payor-based disparities persist globally, guideline implementation strategies should include support for continuous coverage and access stability in pediatric SCD populations.