Primary Nonadherence, Associated Clinical Outcomes, and Health Care Resource Use Among Patients with Rheumatoid Arthritis Prescribed Treatment with Injectable Biologic Disease-Modifying Antirheumatic Drugs

被引:72
作者
Harnett, James [1 ]
Wiederkehr, Daniel [2 ]
Gerber, Robert [3 ]
Gruben, David [4 ]
Bourret, Jeffrey [5 ]
Koenig, Andrew [5 ]
机构
[1] Pfizer, Real World Data & Analyt, New York, NY 10017 USA
[2] Pfizer, Worldwide Policy, New York, NY 10017 USA
[3] Pfizer Inc, Outcomes & Evidence, Groton, CT 06340 USA
[4] Pfizer Inc, Stat, Groton, CT 06340 USA
[5] Pfizer, North Amer Med Affairs, Collegeville, PA USA
关键词
ADHERENCE; THERAPIES; PERSISTENCE; RECOMMENDATIONS; ETANERCEPT; INFLIXIMAB;
D O I
10.18553/jmcp.2016.22.3.209
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
BACKGROUND: Adherence to biologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (bDMARDs) among patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is often suboptimal in routine clinical practice. Low or nonadherence can reduce the effectiveness of bDMARD therapies. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate filling of newly prescribed initial bDMARDs for the treatment of RA and evaluate potential for characterizing treatment decisions and patient outcomes. METHODS: In this retrospective cohort analysis, patients aged >= 18 years with an RA diagnosis (ICD-9-CM code 714.xx) were selected from a de-identified database of clinical information from the Electronic Health Record (EHR; Humedica) database linked to health care claims (Optum) from commercial and Medicare Advantage health plans (2007-2013). The first biologic prescription date in EHR was the index date. Patients were categorized as filling the prescription within 30 days (early fillers), 31-180 days (late fillers), or not at all within 180 days (nonfillers) of index date. RESULTS: Of 373 patients meeting inclusion criteria, 170 (45.6%), 59 (15.8%), and 144 (38.6%) were categorized as early fillers, late fillers, and nonfillers, respectively. Most prescriptions were written or ordered for tumor necrosis factor inhibitors (88.7%). Compared with late and nonfillers, early fillers were younger and more likely to be female, with higher pain scores (among those reporting pain scores) and RA severity scores pre-index, and filled more prescriptions for any reason pre-index. More nonfillers (66.0%) were Medicare patients than early (17.7%) and late (35.6%) fillers. During days 0-30 post-index, conventional synthetic DMARD use was greatest for early fillers (45.9%) and lowest among nonfillers (24.3%); however, during days 31-180 post-index, the proportion was highest for late fillers (61.0%) and lowest for nonfillers (35.4%). Of early fillers, 12.9% did not fill/receive a bDMARD after 30 days. Only 23 patients had pre/post-index pain scores, and 47 patients had a rationale for stopping or not filling a bDMARD. In patients with pharmacy and medical coverage for 180 days post-index, early fillers had greater RA-related pharmacy and medical resource use and costs than late and nonfillers combined. CONCLUSIONS: These findings confirm a high rate of primary nonadherence to bDMARDs among patients with RA. Copyright (C) 2016, Academy of Managed Care Pharmacy. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:209 / 218
页数:10
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