| Literature DB >> 27334893 |
David B Price1,2,3, Glenis Scadding4, Claus Bachert5, Hesham Saleh6, Shuaib Nasser7, Victoria Carter8, Julie von Ziegenweidt2, Alice M S Durieux2, Dermot Ryan9.
Abstract
Little data on UK prescribing patterns and treatment effectiveness for allergic rhinitis (AR) are available. We quantified unmet pharmacologic needs in AR by assessing AR treatment effectiveness based on the prescribing behaviour of UK general practitioners (GP) during two consecutive pollen seasons (2009 and 2010). We conducted a retrospective observational study with the data from the Optimum Patient Care Research Database. We assessed diagnoses and prescription data for patients with a recorded diagnosis of rhinitis who took rhinitis medication during the study period. We assessed the data from 25,069 patients in 2009 and 22,381 patients in 2010. Monotherapy was the initial prescription of the season for 67% of patients with seasonal AR (SAR) and 77% of patients with nonseasonal upper airways disease (NSUAD), for both years. Initial oral antihistamine (OAH) or intranasal corticosteroid (INS) monotherapy proved insufficient for >20% of SAR and >37% of NSUAD patients. Multiple therapy was the initial prescription for 33% of SAR and 23% of NSUAD in both years, rising to 45% and >50% by season end, respectively. For NSUAD, dual-therapy prescriptions doubled and triple-therapy prescriptions almost tripled during both seasons. Many patients revisited their GP regardless of initial prescription. Initial OAH or INS monotherapy provides insufficient symptom control for many AR patients. GPs often prescribe multiple therapies at the start of the season, with co-prescription becoming more common as the season progresses. However, patients prescribed multiple therapies frequently revisit their GP, presumably to adjust treatment. These data suggest the need for more effective AR treatment and management strategies.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27334893 PMCID: PMC4918055 DOI: 10.1038/npjpcrm.2016.33
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Prim Care Respir Med ISSN: 2055-1010 Impact factor: 2.871
Patient demographic and baseline characteristics
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| Age, years mean (s.d.) | 31.3 (20.1) | 46.5 (22.1) | 32.1 (20.3) | 47.7 (21.9) |
| Male, | 8,811 (48.0) | 2,636 (39.2) | 7,679 (47.4) | 2,426 (39.2) |
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| 15,406 (84.0) | 6,397 (95.1) | 13,266 (82.0) | 5,873 (94.8) |
| Non-smokers | 11,050 (71.7) | 4,101 (64.1) | 9,444 (71.2) | 3,728 (63.5) |
| Current smokers | 1,889 (12.3) | 707 (11.1) | 1,637 (12.3) | 644 (11.0) |
| Ex-smokers | 2,467 (16.0) | 1,589 (24.8) | 2,185 (16.5) | 1,501 (25.5) |
| Asthma diagnosis, | 7,145 (39.0) | 3,745 (55.7) | 5,517 (34.1) | 3,270 (52.8) |
| Eczema diagnosis, | 6,481 (35.3) | 2,645 (39.3) | 5,603 (34.6) | 2,364 (38.2) |
| Urticaria, | 1,621 (8.8) | 809 (12.0) | 1,553 (9.6) | 596 (9.6) |
| Nasal polyps, | 167 (0.9) | 283 (4.2) | 150 (0.9) | 263 (4.2) |
Abbreviations: NSUAD, nonseasonal upper airways disease; SAR, seasonal allergic rhinitis.
Initial recorded prescription of the period 1st March-31st August
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| OAH | 9,505 (51.8) | 3,378 (50.2) | 8,495 (52.5) | 3,108 (50.2) |
| INS | 1,462 (8.0) | 1,027 (15.3) | 1,172 (7.2) | 1,025 (16.6) |
| Systemic steroid | 656 (3.6) | 472 (7.0) | 560 (3.5) | 365 (5.9) |
| ED | 559 (3.1) | 251 (3.7) | 472 (2.9) | 219 (3.5) |
| Non-steroidal spray | 68 (0.4) | 35 (0.5) | 40 (0.3) | 35 (0.6) |
| LTRA | 38 (0.2) | 16 (0.2) | 26 (0.2) | 8 (0.1) |
| Immunotherapy | 1 (0.01) | 2 (0.03) | 1 (0.01) | 3 (0.1) |
| Total single therapy | 12,289 (67.0) | 5,181 (77.0) | 10,766 (66.5) | 4,763 (76.9) |
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| OAH+INS | 2,153 (11.7) | 676 (10.1) | 1,882 (11.6) | 622 (10.0) |
| OAH+ED | 1,636 (8.9) | 240 (3.6) | 1,472 (9.1) | 229 (3.7) |
| OAH+INS+ED | 1,635 (8.9) | 204 (3.0) | 1,543 (9.5) | 180 (2.9) |
| INS+ED | 330 (1.8) | 97 (1.4) | 287 (1.8) | 84 (1.4) |
| OAH+LTRA | 27 (0.2) | 128 (1.9) | 14 (0.1) | 116 (1.9) |
| Other multiple therapy | 271 (1.5) | 202 (3.0) | 223 (1.4) | 200 (3.2) |
| Total multiple therapy | 6,052 (33.0) | 1,547 (23.0) | 5,421 (33.5) | 1,431 (23.1) |
Abbreviations: ED, eye drops; INS, intranasal corticosteroid; LTRA, leukotriene receptor antagonists; OAH, oral antihistamine; NSUAD, nonseasonal upper airways disease; SAR, seasonal allergic rhinitis.
Figure 1Prescription outcome for patients who started the season on monotherapy, with either (a) oral antihistamine (OAH) or (b) intranasal corticosteroid (INS) and (c) the proportion of seasonal allergic rhinitis (SAR) and nonseasonal upper airways disease (NSUAD) patients prescribing multiple therapies at the start and end of the season, for the 2009 and 2010 seasons. 2009—SAR: n=12,289; NSUAD: n=5,181. 2010—SAR: n=10,766; NSUAD: n=4,764. For c: 2009—SAR: n=18,341; NSUAD: n=6,728; 2010—SAR: n=16,187; NSUAD: n=6,194.
Dynamics of prescription changes during the hay fever season
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| Monotherapy | 12,289 (67.0) | 10,136 (55.3) | 5,181 (77.0) | 3,130 (46.5) | 10,776 (66.6) | 8,850 (54.7) | 4,764 (76.9) | 2,974 (48.0) |
| Dual therapy | 4,314 (23.5) | 5,892 (32.1) | 1,265 (18.8) | 2,741 (40.7) | 3,782 (23.4) | 5,213 (32.2) | 1,172 (18.9) | 2,445 (39.5) |
| Triple therapy | 1,717 (9.4) | 2,243 (12.2) | 272 (4.0) | 755 (11.2) | 1,615 (10.0) | 2,062 (12.7) | 244 (3.9) | 694 (11.2) |
| 4 therapies | 20 (0.1) | 68 (0.4) | 10 (0.2) | 92 (1.4) | 24 (0.2) | 62 (0.4) | 14 (0.2) | 77 (1.2) |
| 5 therapies | 1 (0.0) | 2 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | 9 (0.1) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | 4 (0.1) |
| Total multiple therapies | 6,052 (33.0) | 8,205 (44.7) | 1,547 (23.0) | 3,598 (53.5) | 5,421 (33.5) | 7,337 (45.3) | 1,430 (23.1) | 3,220 (52.0) |
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| OAH+INS | 2,938 (16.0) | 1,448 (21.5) | 2,590 (16.0) | 1,278 (20.6) | ||||
| OAH+INS+ED | 2,026 (11.0) | 466 (6.9) | 1,894 (11.7) | 453 (7.3) | ||||
| OAH+ED | 2,086 (11.4) | 479 (7.1) | 1,882 (11.6) | 453 (7.3) | ||||
| INS+ED | 385 (2.1) | 143 (2.1) | 335 (2.1) | 127 (2.1) | ||||
| Other | 770 (4.2) | 1,062 (15.8) | 636 (3.9) | 909 (14.7) | ||||
Abbreviations: ED, eye drop; INS, intranasal corticosteroid; NSUAD, nonseasonal upper airways disease; OAH, oral antihistamine; SAR, seasonal allergic rhinitis.
Figure 2Proportion of allergic rhinitis (AR) patients requiring multiple GP consultations during the 2009 and 2010 seasons according to (a) number of therapies at first prescription and (b) number of therapies by season end. Season was defined as 1 March to 31 August for both years. 2009: n=25,069; 2010: n=22,381.
Figure 3Consort Diagram. OPCRD, Optimum Patient Care Research Database. Patient data were taken from the OPCRD. Inclusion and exclusion criteria were applied as described in the text.