Abstract
After a drug obtains marketing authorization, the usage depends on the regulation of off-label prescriptions for unapproved indications. We investigate the impact of off-label prescription regulation on physicians’ behavior, patients’ health, treatment costs, and pharmaceutical firms’ pricing with a structural demand and supply model. Exploiting rich panel data on physicians’ activities and office visits in France over nine years, we use a model of prescription choice and health outcomes with unobserved patient-level heterogeneity. We identify the demand for on-label and off-label drugs and the effect of prescription choice on health outcomes. On the supply side, we use a Nash-in-Nash bargaining model between the government and the pharmaceutical companies that allows the partial identification of the marginal costs of drugs. Counterfactual simulations show that when we remove off-label drugs from the choice set of physicians, substitution to on-label drugs at constant prices would lead to an increase of 15% in the expenditure on prescription drugs. If we allow bargaining adjustment on drug prices under a ban on off-label prescriptions, the ban would further increase the treatment cost, by 26%, without improving health outcomes.
Keywords
Physician Behavior; Prescription Drugs; Off-Label Drugs; Regulation; Bargaining;
JEL codes
- I18: Government Policy • Regulation • Public Health
- D12: Consumer Economics: Empirical Analysis
- C51: Model Construction and Estimation
- L65: Chemicals • Rubber • Drugs • Biotechnology
Replaces
Tuba Tuncel, “Should We Prevent Off-Label Drug Prescriptions? Empirical Evidence from France”, TSE Working Paper, n. 22-1383, September 2022.
Reference
Tuba Tuncel, “Should We Prevent Off-Label Drug Prescriptions? Empirical Evidence from France”, The Review of Economic Studies, n. rdae060, May 2024, revised June 10, 2026.
See also
Published in
The Review of Economic Studies, n. rdae060, May 2024, revised June 10, 2026
