RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Vitamin B12 injections versus oral supplements. How much money could be saved by switching from injections to pills? JF Canadian Family Physician JO Can Fam Physician FD The College of Family Physicians of Canada SP 79 OP 86 VO 47 IS 1 A1 C van Walraven A1 P Austin A1 C D Naylor YR 2001 UL http://www.cfp.ca/content/47/1/79.abstract AB OBJECTIVE To estimate savings, using a third-party payer perspective, if all elderly patients currently receiving vitamin B12 (cobalamin) injections were switched to high-dose oral therapy. DESIGN We modeled high-dose oral B12 supplement costs to include drugs, pharmacists' fees, and one-time conversion costs consisting of two physician visits and laboratory monitoring. The number of vitamin-injection visits avoided by switching to oral therapy was predicted using a multivariate model that considered covariates for overall patient illness. SETTING Ontario family physicians' and internists' practices. PARTICIPANTS Population-based administrative databases for Ontario were used to identify all people between 65 and 100 years who received parenteral vitamin B12 during 1995 and 1996. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES The cost of parenteral vitamin B12 for each patient, including drugs, injections, pharmacists' fees, and injection-associated physician visits, was measured directly from the databases. RESULTS The annual cost of parenteral vitamin B12 therapy averaged $145.88 per person and totaled a maximum $25 million over 5 years. Converting all patients to high-dose oral B12 and treating them for 5 years would cost $7.4 million. Depending on how many vitamin-injection visits are avoided by switching to oral therapy, between $2.9 million and $17.6 million would be saved. Switching to oral B12 administration saved costs as long as 16.3% of injection-associated visits were avoided. CONCLUSION Switching all patients from B12 injections to oral cobalamin therapy could result in substantial savings.