Literature DB >> 22947171

Long-term persistency and costs associated with the use of iron chelation therapies in the treatment of Sickle cell disease within Medicaid programs.

Edward P Armstrong1, Grant H Skrepnek, Medha Sasane, Susan M Snodgrass, Samir K Ballas.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: This retrospective study evaluated iron chelating therapy (ICT) discontinuation and costs in Sickle cell disease (SCD) Medicaid recipients using healthcare claims from 2006-2010.
METHODS: Patients with ≥1 SCD diagnosis claim, ≥2 claims for deferoxamine (DFO) or deferosirox (DFX), and continuous enrollment ≥6 months prior to and 18 months following ICT initiation were included. Outcomes included treatment discontinuation, persistence (i.e., refill gaps ≥6 weeks), and total healthcare costs.
RESULTS: The average age among 404 SCD patients meeting study inclusion criteria was 18.7 (±11.0) years, with 45.8% being males and 66.7% being Blacks. Switches or combinations from DFO at index occurred in 124 (74.7%) patients compared to 10 (4.2%) with DFX at index. The Cox regression model that assessed long-term medication persistence indicated a 1.30-times higher likelihood of treatment discontinuation with DFO compared to DFX (95% CI: 1.06-1.61). Some 19.7% of patient remained on DFX relative to 4.8% on DFO. Both inpatient and total costs were similar in DFX and DFO treatment groups. Following 1 year of treatment, 37.4% remained on DFX compared to 15.7% on DFO. Meaningful differences in treatment discontinuation between the two treatment groups did not occur until 220+ days during the study period. At 18-months, treatment discontinuation rates were high in both groups; 95% for DFO and 80% for DFX.
CONCLUSION: This study of SCD Medicaid patients found more therapeutic switches from DFO to DFX and a higher medication persistency rate with DFX than DFO. The conclusions are limited by the study's retrospective nature, which depends on multivariate statistics to account for patient heterogeneity and risk factors.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22947171     DOI: 10.3111/13696998.2012.723081

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Med Econ        ISSN: 1369-6998            Impact factor:   2.448


  3 in total

1.  Medical Resource Use and Costs of Treating Sickle Cell-related Vaso-occlusive Crisis Episodes: A Retrospective Claims Study.

Authors:  Nirmish Shah; Menaka Bhor; Lin Xie; Jincy Paulose; Huseyin Yuce
Journal:  J Health Econ Outcomes Res       Date:  2020-06-15

2.  Advances in iron chelation therapy: transitioning to a new oral formulation.

Authors:  Nirmish R Shah
Journal:  Drugs Context       Date:  2017-06-16

3.  Medical and Non-medical Costs of Sickle Cell Disease and Treatments from a US Perspective: A Systematic Review and Landscape Analysis.

Authors:  Zachary Baldwin; Boshen Jiao; Anirban Basu; Joshua Roth; M A Bender; Zizi Elsisi; Kate M Johnson; Emma Cousin; Scott D Ramsey; Beth Devine
Journal:  Pharmacoecon Open       Date:  2022-04-26
  3 in total

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