| Literature DB >> 26643112 |
Sophia L Johnson1, Mari Palta2,3, Christie M Bartels4, Carolyn T Thorpe5,6, Jennifer M Weiss7, Maureen A Smith8,9,10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Interpreting clinical guideline adherence and the appropriateness of medication regimens requires consideration of individual patient and caregiver factors. Factors leading to initiation of a medication may differ from those determining continued use. We believe this is the case for systemic steroid therapy in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), resulting in a need to apply methods that separately consider factors associated with initiation and duration of therapy. To evaluate the relationship between patient characteristics and the frequency and duration of incident steroid use we apply a 2-part hurdle model to Medicare data. We do so in older patients with tumor necrosis factor antagonist (anti-TNFs) contraindications, as they are of special interest for compliance with Medicare-adopted, quality metrics calling for anti-TNFs and nonbiologic immune therapies to reduce steroid utilization. Many older patients have contraindications to anti-TNFs. However, nonbiologics cause adverse events that are concerning in older adults, limiting their use in this population and increasing reliance on systemic steroids.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26643112 PMCID: PMC4672478 DOI: 10.1186/s40360-015-0034-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pharmacol Toxicol ISSN: 2050-6511 Impact factor: 2.483
Fig. 1Data Fit for Count Model. The average total number of days of steroid therapy (observed) among patients who received steroid therapy and the average total number of steroid therapy days that steroid recipients were expected to receive drug therapy based on their characteristics
Baseline Participant Characteristics, Overall and by Drug Therapy
| Full cohort ( | Ever systemic steroid users ( | Ever nonbiologic users ( | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sociodemographicsb | n | % | n | % | n | % |
| Age Mean (SD)c | 79 (8) | 78 (7)e | 75 (7)e | |||
| Female | 1136 | 68 | 494 | 68 | 50 | 59 |
| Caucasian | 1474 | 88 | 654 | 90d | 80 | 94 |
| Region | ||||||
| Northeast | 444 | 26 | 182 | 25 | 19 | 22 |
| Southeast | 459 | 27 | 208 | 29 | 24 | 28 |
| Midwest | 417 | 25 | 189 | 26 | 28 | 33 |
| Rocky Mountain | 34 | 2 | 12 | 2 | <11g | <11g |
| Southwest | 163 | 10 | 96 | 10 | <11g | <11g |
| Pacific (incl HI, AK, PR)h | 165 | 10 | 68 | 9 | <11g | <11g |
| Urban/Suburban | 1266 | 76 | 516 | 72e | 61 | 72 |
| Medicaid coverage | 547 | 33 | 219 | 30 | 21 | 25 |
| Clinicalb | n | % | n | % | n | % |
| Polypharmacy (>5 drugs) | 1290 | 81 | 602 | 85e | 69 | 83 |
| Charlson Index Mean (SD) | 4 (3) | 4 (3) | 4 (2) | |||
| Primary managing provider type | ||||||
| Primary Care Provider | 769 | 46 | 320 | 44.4 | 38 | 44.7 |
| Gastroenterologist | 19 | 1 | <11g | <11g | <11g | <11g |
| Other specialists | 868 | 52 | 393 | 55 | 44 | 52 |
| antiTNF | 37 | 2 | 26 | 4e | 18 | 21e |
| Aminosalicylates | 374 | 22 | 215 | 30e | 38 | 45e |
| Locally administered steroids | 12 | 1 | <11g | <11d,g | <11g | <11g |
| Antidiarrheals | 209 | 12 | 111 | 15e | 14 | 17 |
| >1 endoscopy | 452 | 27 | 201 | 28 | 25 | 29 |
| IBD surgery | 106 | 6 | 41 | 6 | <11g | <11g |
| Hospitalizations Mean (SD) | 2 (2) | 2 (2)e | 2 (2) | |||
| ED visits Mean (SD) | 1 (2) | 1 (2)e | 1 (2) | |||
aBivariate analyses is the comparison of Steroid Use to NonUse; Nonbiologic Use to Nonuse; bBaseline characteristics were ascertained during 12 months prior to study inclusion; cSD = standard deviation d p < .05, e p < .01, f p < .001; gCell sizes are too small to include variable in regression model & requires cell suppression
hHI = Hawaii, AK = Alaska, PR = Puerto Rico
Annual Utilization by IBD Drug Class
| Number of utilizers per 1000 IBD patients per yeara | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Class of Agent | 2006 | 2007 | 2008 | 2009 |
| Systemic Steroids | 303 | 345 | 336 | 317 |
| Immunomodulators | 48 | 53 | 50 | 45 |
| antiTNFs | 12 | 16 | 22 | 17 |
| Nonbiologic Immunomodulatorsb | 42 | 45 | 37 | 35 |
| Aminosalicylates | 285 | 265 | 246 | 249 |
| Locally administered steroids | 12 | 11 | <11c | <11c |
| Antidiarrheals | 129 | 121 | 115 | 118 |
aMid-year population used to calculate utilizers per year
bNonbiologic immunomodulators include azathioprine, mercaptopurine, and methotrexate
cCell size too small and requires suppression
dThese utilization numbers were derived by dividing the number of patients who received a particular drug class during the year by the mid-year study population and multiplying by 1000.
Fig. 2Mean Annual Number of Days on Therapy Among Utilizers. For each year of the study, the number of days that all nonbiologic and systemic steroid therapy recipients received the respective drug therapy
Multivariable Regression Model of Steroid Exposure
| Steroid use (yes/no)a | Duration of steroid use among utilizersb | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| OR | CI | Ratio of Durationsc | CI | |
| Age ( 5 year decrease) | 1.25 | (1.14, 1.39)f | 0.97 | (0.88, 1.06) |
| Female | 1.30 | (0.93, 1.80) | 1.11 | (0.85, 1.45) |
| Caucasian | 1.46 | (0.87, 2.46) | 0.87 | (0.54, 1.38) |
| Region | ||||
| Midwest | 1.00 | Reference | 1.00 | Reference |
| Northeast | 0.92 | (0.61, 1.37) | 1.13 | (0.81, 1.57) |
| Southeast | 0.91 | (0.61, 1.35) | 0.93 | (0.67, 1.29) |
| Southwest | 0.80 | (0.47, 1.38) | 0.84 | (0.54, 1.32) |
| Rocky Mountain | 0.44 | (0.12, 1.55) | 0.90 | (0.29, 2.73) |
| Pacific & HI, AK, PRg | 0.70 | (0.38, 1.30) | 0.84 | (0.51, 1.40) |
| Rural | 1.54 | (1.10, 2.13)d | 0.93 | (0.71, 1.20) |
| Medicaid eligible | 0.80 | (0.57, 1.13) | 0.89 | (0.66, 1.20) |
| antiTNFs | 1.66 | (0.52, 5.34) | 0.63 | (0.30, 1.29) |
| Nonbiologic immunomodulators | 2.14 | (0.82, 5.57) | 0.76 | (0.42, 1.36) |
| Aminosalicylates | 1.78 | (1.26, 2.51)e | 1.01 | (0.77, 1.33) |
| Locally administered steroids | 3.77 | (0.69, 20.6) | 1.41 | (0.46, 4.35) |
| Antidiarrheals | 1.72 | (1.12, 2.62)d | 0.83 | (0.59, 1.18) |
| Charlson index | 0.96 | (0.90, 1.01) | 1.00 | (0.95, 1.06) |
| Hospitalizations | 0.97 | (0.88, 1.07) | 0.99 | (0.90, 1.09) |
| Endoscopy (>1) | 1.09 | (0.76, 1.56) | 0.83 | (0.60, 1.15) |
| IBD-associated Surgery | 0.75 | (0.40, 1.39) | 0.89 | (0.48, 1.64) |
aDependent variable was incident steroid use during the follow-up period, Individuals with baseline steroid use were excluded from this model (n = 1216)
bDependent variable was days of steroid use among steroid users (n = 260) during the follow-up period, Individuals with baseline steroid use were excluded from this model; count truncated at zero; cEffect measure is ratio of steroid therapy durations; All explanatory variables are measured within the first 12 months after study entry; d p < .05, e p < .01, f p < .001; gHI = Hawaii, AK = Alaska, PR = Puerto Rico
Simple Poisson Multivariable Regression Model of Steroid Exposure
| Poisson regression | ||
|---|---|---|
| Duration of Steroid Use | ||
| RR | CI | |
| Age ( 5 year decrease) | 1.19 | (1.08, 1.31)e |
| Female | 1.40 | (0.97, 2.02) |
| Caucasian | 1.39 | (0.80, 2.42) |
| Region | ||
| Midwest | 1.00 | Reference |
| Northeast | 0.86 | (0.56, 1.32) |
| Southeast | 0.71 | (0.46, 1.08) |
| Southwest | 0.60 | (0.30, 1.18) |
| Rocky Mountain | 0.42 | (0.09, 2.05) |
| Pacific & HI, AK, Prf | 0.60 | (0.29, 1.23) |
| Rural | 1.23 | (0.86, 1.77) |
| Medicaid eligible | 1.04 | (0.72, 1.51) |
| antiTNFs | 0.62 | (0.19, 2.03) |
| Nonbiologic immunomodulators | 1.58 | (0.75, 3.33) |
| Aminosalicylates | 1.41 | (0.98, 2.03) |
| Locally administered steroids | 4.39 | (1.51, 12.70)d |
| Antidiarrheals | 1.07 | (0.69, 1.65) |
| Charlson index | 0.96 | (0.90, 1.01) |
| Hospitalizations | 0.96 | (0.87, 1.05) |
| Endoscopy (>1) | 0.87 | (0.60, 1.27) |
| IBD-associated Surgery | 0.68 | (0.35, 1.33) |
aDependent variable was days of steroid use among participants (n = 1216) during the follow-up period; The models were run with robust standard errors, Individuals with baseline steroid use were excluded from these models; bRR = rate ratios; All explanatory variables are measured within the first 12 months after study entry; c p < .05, d p < .01, e p < .001; fHI = Hawaii, AK = Alaska, PR = Puerto Rico
Variable Definitions
| Variable | Identification Codes |
|---|---|
| IBD encounters to identify provider type | HCPCS codes: 99201–99205, 99212–99215, 99241–99245, 99251–99255, 99354–99357, 99401–99404, 99406-99407 |
| Endoscopies | ICD-9 procedures: 45.11–45.14, 45.16, 45.21–45.27, 48.23, 48.24; HCPCS codes 43234, 43235, 43239, 44360, 44361, 44376, 44378, 45335, 45378, 45379, 45380, 45381, 45382, 45383, 45384, 45385, 45300, 45303, 45305, 45307, 45308, 45309, 45315, 45317, 45320, 45321, 45327, 45330–45335, 45337–45340, 45345 |
| IBD surgeries | ICD-9 procedure codes: 45.7, 45.71, 45.73–45.76, 45.79, 45.8, 45.9, 45.90–45.95, 45.6, 45.61–45.63, 46.0, 46.01–46.04,46.1, 46.10–46.11, 46.13–46.14, 46.2, 46.20–46.24, 48.5, 48.6, 48.61–48.65, 48.69 |