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Insulin Prior Authorization Program Summary

Policy Number: PH-1085

This prior authorization applies to Health Insurance Marketplace formularies.

Insulin Prior Authorization

NON-PREFERRED PRIOR AUTHORIZATION TARGET AGENTS

Rapid, Regular

Admelog® (insulin lispro)

Apidra® (insulin glulisine)

Humalog® (insulin lispro)

Humalog® Junior Kwikpen (insulin lispro)

Humalog® Kwikpen U200 (insulin lispro)

Humulin® R U-100 (regular human insulin)

Insulin Lispro

Insulin Lispro Junior Kwikpen

Insulin Lispro Kwikpen

Lyumjev™ (insulin lispro-aabc)

Mix, NPH

Insulin Lispro Protamine/Insulin Lispro Kwikpen (75/25)

Humalog® Mix 75/25™ (75% insulin lispro protamine suspension/25% insulin lispro)

Humalog® Mix 50/50™ (50% insulin lispro protamine suspension/50% insulin lispro)

Humulin® N (human insulin isophane suspension)

Humulin® 70/30 (70% human insulin isophane suspension/30% human insulin)

Brand (generic)

GPI

Multisource Code

Rapid, Regular

Apidra (insulin glulisine) 100 U/mL

10 mL vial, 3 mL pen/cartridge

27104004******

M, N, O, Y

Admelog, Humalog, Humalog Junior Kwikpen (insulin lispro), Insulin Lispro 100 U/mL, Insulin Lispro Junior Kwikpen 100 U/ml, Insulin Lispro Kwikpen 100U/mL

10 mL vial, 3 mL pen/cartridge

27104005******

M, N, O, Y

Humalog KwikPen (insulin lispro) 200 U/mL

3 mL pen

27104005******

M, N, O, Y

Humulin R, Novolin R, ReliOn R (regular human insulin) 100 U/mL

10 mL vial

27104010002005

M, N, O, Y

Humulin R (regular human insulin) 500 U/mL

20 mL vial

27104010002015

M, N, O, Y

3 mL pen

2710401000D250

M, N, O, Y

Lyumjev (insulin lispro-aabc) 100 U/ml

3 mL/pen, 10 mL vial

27104005******

M, N, O, Y

Lyumjev (insulin lispro-aabc) 200 U/ml

3 mL pen

27104005******

M, N, O, Y

Novolin R (regular human insulin) 100 U/mL

3 mL pen

2710401000D220

M, N, O, Y

Fiasp, NovoLog, Insulin Aspart 100 U/mL

10 mL vial, 3 mL pen/cartridge

27104002******

M, N, O, Y

Mix, NPH

Humalog Mix 75/25 (75% insulin lispro protamine/25% insulin lispro), Insulin Lispro Protamine/Insulin Lispro Kwikpen (75/25) 100 U/mL

10 mL vial, 3 mL pen

27104080******

M, N, O, Y

Humalog Mix 50/50 (50% insulin lispro protamine/50% insulin lispro) 100 U/mL

10 mL vial, 3 mL pen

27104080******

M, N, O, Y

Humulin N, Novolin N

10 mL vial, 3 mL pen

27104020******

M, N, O, Y

Humulin 70/30, Novolin 70/30 (70% human insulin isophane/30% regular human insulin) 100 U/mL

10 mL vial, 3 mL pen

27104090******

M, N, O, Y

NovoLog 70/30, insulin aspart protamine/insulin aspart (insulin mixed) 100 U/mL

10 mL vial, 3 mL pen

27104070******

M, N, O, Y

PRIOR AUTHORIZATION CRITERIA FOR APPROVAL

Non-preferred insulin agents will be approved when ONE of the following is met: 

  1. BOTH of the following:
    1. The requested agent is a rapid insulin

AND

    1. There is information that the patient is currently using an insulin pump that has an incompatibility with the preferred rapid insulin agent that is not expected to occur with the requested agent

OR

  1. The request is for Humalog Mix 50/50 AND ONE of the following
    1. The patient is currently using Humalog Mix 50/50 AND the prescriber states the patient is at risk if switched to a different insulin

OR

    1. The patient has tried and had an inadequate response to a preferred insulin mix

OR

  1. BOTH of the following:
    1. The requested agent is a rapid, regular, mix, or NPH insulin

AND

    1. ONE of the following:
      1. The patient has an  intolerance,  or hypersensitivity to the preferred insulin agents of the same type (rapid or regular, mix or NPH) that is not expected to occur with the requested agent

OR

      1. The patient has an FDA labeled contraindication to the generic equivalent that is not expected to occur with the requested agent

OR

  1. There is information that the patient has a physical or a mental disability that would prevent him/her from using a preferred insulin agent

OR

  1. The patient is pregnant

Length of Approval:  12 months

Agent(s)

Contraindication(s)

Admelog

Apidra

Fiasp

Humalog, Humalog Junior

Humalog Mix 50/50

Humalog Mix 75/25

Insulin Aspart

Insulin Lispro

Insulin Lispro Junior

Insulin Lispro Protamine/Insulin Lispro (75-25)

Lyumjev

NovoLog

NovoLog Mix 70/30

Use during episodes of hypoglycemia

Hypersensitivity to the insulin analog or to any of the product excipients

Humulin R/Novolin R/ReliOn R

Humulin N/Novolin N

Humulin 70/30/ Novolin 70/30/ Insulin aspart protamine/insulin aspart

Use during episodes of hypoglycemia

Hypersensitivity to the insulin product or to any of the product excipients

 

FDA LABELED INDICATIONS1-13,16-24

Agent(s)

Indication(s)

Onset

Peak

Duration

Rapid-Acting Insulins

Admelog (insulin lispro)

To improve glycemic control in adults and pediatric patients 3 years and older with type 1 diabetes mellitus and adults with type 2 diabetes mellitus

15-30 min

2 hours

Up to 7 hours

Apidra (insulin glulisine)

To improve glycemic control in adults and pediatric patients with diabetes mellitus

10 to 20 min

30-90 min

2 to 4 hours

Fiasp (insulin aspart)

To improve glycemic control in adults and pediatric patients with diabetes mellitus

15 to 20 min

50 to 70 min

~5 hours

Humalog, Humalog Junior, Insulin Lispro, Insulin Lispro Junior

To improve glycemic control in adults and pediatric patients with diabetes mellitus

10-20 min

30-90 min

3 to 5 hours

Lyumjev (insulin lispro-aabc)

To improve glycemic control in adults with diabetes mellitus

17 min

120-174 min

4.6-7.3 hours

NovoLog, Insulin Aspart

To improve glycemic control in adults and pediatric patients with diabetes mellitus

10 to 20 min

40 to 50 min

3 to 5 hours

Short-Acting Insulins

Humulin R

To improve glycemic control in adults and pediatric patients with diabetes mellitus

30 to 60 min

2 to 4 hours

5 to 8 hours

Novolin Ra, ReliOn Ra

30 min

1.3 to 2 hours

Up to 8 hours

a - Manufacturer recommends Novolin R should not be used in external insulin pumps due to risk of precipitation

 

Intermediate-Acting Insulins

Indication

Onset

Peak

Duration

Humulin N

To improve glycemic control in adult and pediatric patients with diabetes mellitus

1 to 3 hours

8 hours

Up to 24 hours

Novolin N

1.5 hours

4 to 12 hours

Up to 24 hours

Long-Acting Insulins

Basaglar

To improve glycemic control in adults and pediatric patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus and in adults with type 2 diabetes mellitus

1 hour

NA

24 hours

Lantus

To improve glycemic control in adults and pediatric patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus and in adults with type 2 diabetes mellitus

1 hour

NA

24 hours

Levemir

To improve glycemic control in adults and pediatric patients with diabetes mellitus

1.6 hours

NA

Up to 24 hours

Semglee

To improve glycemic control in adults and pediatric patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus and in adults with type 2 diabetes mellitus

1 hour

NA

24 hours

Toujeo, Toujeo Max

To improve glycemic control in adults and pediatric patients 6 years and older with diabetes mellitus

6 hours

NA

24 hours

Tresiba

To improve glycemic control in patients 1 year of age and older with diabetes mellitus

1 hour

NA

At least 42 hours

NPH-Regular Combinations

Humulin 70/30

To improve glycemic control in adult patients with diabetes mellitus

30 to 60 min

Varies

12 to 16 hours

Novolin 70/30, insulin aspart protamine/insulin aspart

To improve glycemic control in adults and pediatric patients with diabetes mellitus

30 min

4.2 hours

Up to 24 hours

NPH-Lispro Combinations

Humalog Mix 75/25, Insulin Lispro Protamine/Insulin Lispro (75/25)

To improve glycemic control in patients with diabetes mellitus

10 to 15 min

Varies

16 to 22 hours

Humalog Mix 50/50

10 to 15 min

Varies

16 to 22 hours

NPH – NovoLog Combination

NovoLog Mix 70/30, Insulin aspart protamine/insulin aspart

To improve glycemic control in patients with diabetes mellitus

10 to 20 min

2.4 hours

Up to 24 hours

DOSING AND ADMINISTRATION

Dosing must be individualized.  Total daily, insulin requirements for type 1 patients can be estimated based on weight, with typical doses ranging from 0.4 to 1.0 units/kg/day.  A typical starting dose for patients with type 1 diabetes who are metabolically stable is 0.5 units/kg/day, with half administered as prandial insulin and the other half as basal insulin.  Type 2 diabetics usually have insulin started as an addition to a current regimen of other antidiabetic agents.  Basal insulin is usually selected first over prandial insulin.  Starting doses can be estimated based on body weight (0.1-0.2 units/kg/day) and the degree of hyperglycemia, with individualized titration over days to weeks as needed.  Individuals with type 2 diabetes may require prandial insulin in addition to basal insulin.  The recommended starting dose of prandial insulin is either 4 units or 10% of the basal dose at the largest meal or the meal with the greatest postprandial excursion.  Titration is based on home glucose monitoring or A1C.14     

CLINICAL RATIONALE

The American Diabetes Association Standards of Medical Care in Diabetes recommend the following therapy for type 1 diabetes mellitus:

  • Most people with type 1 diabetes should be treated with multiple daily injections of prandial and basal insulin, or subcutaneous insulin infusion
  • Most individuals with type 1 diabetes should use rapid-acting insulin analogs to reduce hypoglycemia risk.
  • Patients with type 1 diabetes should be trained to  match prandial insulin doses to carbohydrate intake, premeal blood glucose, and anticipated physical activity.14

For type 2 diabetes mellitus, the American Diabetes Association recommends the following:

  • Metformin is the preferred initial pharmacological agent for type 2 diabetes
  • The early introduction of insulin should be considered if there is evidence of ongoing catabolism, if symptoms of hyperglycemia are present, or when A1C levels or blood glucose levels are very high
  • A patient-centered approach should be used to guide the choice of pharmacological agents. Considerations include comorbidities, hypoglycemia risk, impact on weight, cost, risk of side effects, and patient preferences.
  • In  patients who need the greater glucose-lowering effect of an injectable medication than can be obtained with oral agents, glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) receptor agonists are preferred to insulin when possible.14

The American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists and American College of Endocrinology (AACE/ACE) algorithm for type 2 diabetics recommends starting insulin therapy if the patient has an A1c > 9% and is having hyperglycemia symptoms.  Patients with recent-onset type 2 diabetes or who have mild hyperglycemia (A1c <7.5%), lifestyle therapy plus antihyperglycemic monotherapy (preferably with metformin) is recommended.  Patients who present with an A1c >7.5% should be started initially on metformin plus another agent, one of which is insulin.  Patients taking two oral antihyperglycemic agents who have an A1c >8 and/or long-standing type 2 diabetes are less likely to reach their target with a third oral antihyperglycemic agent.  Although adding a GLP-1 receptor agonist as the third agent may lower hyperglycemia, eventually many patients will still require insulin.  When insulin becomes necessary, a single daily dose of basal insulin should be added to the regimen.  Dosage should be adjusted at regular and at short intervals to achieve the glycemic goal.  Patients whose glycemia remains uncontrolled while receiving basal insulin in combination with oral agents or GLP-1 receptor agonists may require mealtime insulin to cover postprandial hyperglycemia.15

References:

  1. American Diabetes Association.  Medications Consumer Guide 2020.  Diabetes Forecast.  Accessed 09/17/2020.  Available at: http://main.diabetes.org/dforg/pdfs/2020/2020-cg-medications.pdf?utm_source=Offline&utm_medium=Print&utm_content=medications&utm_campaign=DF&s_src=vanity&s_subsrc=medications
  1. Humalog (insulin lispro injection [rDNA origin] solution for subcutaneous injection).  Eli Lilly and Company. November 2019.
  2. NovoLog (insulin aspart [rDNA origin] injection) solution for subcutaneous use.  Novo Nordisk, Inc.  November 2019.
  3. Apidra (insulin glulisine [rDNA origin] injection) solution for injection. Sanofi-Aventis.   November 2019.
  1. Humulin R (insulin human injection [rDNA origin]) solution for subcutaneous injection.  Eli Lilly and Company.  November 2019.
  1. Novolin R (human insulin injection [rDNA origin]). Novo Nordisk, Inc. November 2019.
  1. Humulin N (insulin [rDNA origin] isophane suspension).  Eli Lilly and Company.  November 2019.
  1. Novolin N (human insulin isophane suspension injection) suspension.  Novo Nordisk.  November 2019.
  2. Novolin 70/30 (70% NPH, Human Insulin Isophane Suspension and 30% Regular, Human Insulin Injection, [rDNA]).  Novo Nordisk.  November 2019.
  3. Humulin 70/30 (70% human insulin isophane suspension and 30% human insulin injection (rDNA origin).  Eli Lilly and Company.  November 2019.
  1. Humalog Mix 75/25 (75% insulin lispro protamine suspension and 25% insulin lispro injection (rDNA origin).  Eli Lilly and Company.  November 2019.
  2. Humalog Mix 50/50 (50% insulin lispro protamine suspension and 50% insulin lispro injection [rDNA origin]).  Eli Lilly and Company.  November 2019.
  1. NovoLog 70/30 (70% insulin aspart protamine suspension and 30% insulin aspart injection.  Novo Nordisk Inc.  November 2019.
  1. American Diabetes Association.  Pharmacologic Approaches to Glycemic Treatment:  Standards of medical care in diabetes-2020.  Accessed 9/18/2020.  Available at https://care.diabetesjournals.org/content/43/Supplement_1/S98
  1. AACE/ACE Comprehensive Type 2 Diabetes Management Algorithm (2020) Executive Summary.  Accessed 09/18/2020.  Available at:  https://www.aace.com/disease-state-resources/diabetes/clinical-practice-guidelines-treatment-algorithms/comprehensive
  1. Lantus prescribing information. Sanofi-Aventis US, LLC. November 2019.
  2. Levemir prescribing information. Novo Nordisk, Inc. March 2020.
  3. Toujeo prescribing information. Sanofi-Aventis U.S. LLC. December 2019.
  4. Tresiba prescribing information. Novo Nordisk Inc. November 2019.
  1. Fiasp prescribing information. Novo Nordisk Inc. December 2019.
  2. Admelog prescribing information. Sanofi-Aventis US, LLC. November 2019.
  3. Basaglar prescribing information.  Eli Lilly and Company.  November 2019.
  4. Lyumjev prescribing information.  Eli Lilly and Company.  June 2020.
  5. Semglee prescribing information.  Mylan Specialty L.P.  July 2020.

This pharmacy policy is not an authorization, certification, explanation of benefits or a contract. Eligibility and benefits are determined on a case-by-case basis according to the terms of the member’s plan in effect as of the date services are rendered. All pharmacy policies are based on (i) information in FDA approved package inserts (and black box warning, alerts, or other information disseminated by the FDA as applicable); (ii) research of current medical and pharmacy literature; and/or (iii) review of common medical practices in the treatment and diagnosis of disease as of the date hereof. Physicians and other providers are solely responsible for all aspects of medical care and treatment, including the type, quality, and levels of care and treatment.
 
The purpose of Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Alabama’s pharmacy policies are to provide a guide to coverage. Pharmacy policies are not intended to dictate to physicians how to practice medicine. Physicians should exercise their medical judgment in providing the care they feel is most appropriate for their patients.

Neither this policy, nor the successful adjudication of a pharmacy claim, is guarantee of payment.

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