| Literature DB >> 28614404 |
Flore Decuypere1, Jan Sermon2, Paul Geerts3, Tom R Denee4, Cedric De Vos2, Bart Malfait2, Mark Lamotte5, Cornelis L Mulder6.
Abstract
Achieving greater continuation of treatment is a key element to improve treatment outcomes in schizophrenia patients. However, reported treatment continuation can differ markedly depending on the study design. In a retrospective setting, treatment continuation remains overall poor among patients using antipsychotics. This study aimed to document the difference in treatment continuation between four long-acting injectable antipsychotics based on the QuintilesIMS LRx databases, national, longitudinal, panel based prescription databases of retail pharmacies, in the Netherlands and Belgium. Paliperidone palmitate once monthly, risperidone microspheres, haloperidol decanoate, and olanzapine pamoate were studied. This study demonstrated significantly higher treatment continuation of paliperidone palmitate once monthly compared to risperidone microspheres (p-value<0,01) and haloperidol decanoate (p-value<0,01) in both countries, a significantly higher treatment continuation of paliperidone palmitate once monthly compared to olanzapine pamoate in the Netherlands (p-value<0,01), and a general trend towards better treatment continuation versus olanzapine pamoate in Belgium. Analysing the subgroup of patients without previous exposure to long-acting antipsychotic treatment revealed the positive impact of previous exposure on treatment continuation with a subsequent long acting treatment. Additionally, the probability of restarting the index therapy was higher among patients treated with paliperidone palmitate once monthly compared to patients treated with risperidone microspheres and haloperidol decanoate. The data source used and the methodology defined ensured for the first time a comparison of treatment continuation in a non-interventional study design for the four long-acting injectable antipsychotics studied.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28614404 PMCID: PMC5470699 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0179049
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Treatment durations and grace periods definitions.
| PP1M | Risperidone microspheres | Haloperidol decanoate | Olanzapine pamoate | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coverage period (in days) | 28 | 14 | 28 | 210mg: 28 |
| Grace period (in days) | ||||
| 28 | 28 | 28 | 28 | |
| 60 | 60 | 60 | 60 | |
| 7 | 3 | 7 | 3 for packs of 14 days; 7 for packs of 28 days | |
| 390 | 390 | 390 | 390 |
Patient baseline demographics.
| The Netherlands | Belgium | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PP1M | Risperidone microspheres | Haloperidol decanoate | Olanzapine pamoate | PP1M | Risperidone microspheres | Haloperidol decanoate | Olanzapine pamoate | |
| N | 624 | 540 | 333 | 73 | 481 | 302 | 222 | 43 |
| Gender | ||||||||
| 383 (61%) | 334 (62%) | 202 (61%) | 55 (75%) | 291 (60%) | 155 (51%) | 91 (41%) | 23 (53%) | |
| 239 (38%) | 203 (38%) | 116 (35%) | 17 (23%) | 182 (38%) | 135 (45%) | 119 (54%) | 20 (47%) | |
| 2 (0%) | 3 (1%) | 15 (5%) | 1 (1%) | 8 (2%) | 12 (4%) | 12 (5%) | 0 (0%) | |
| Age | ||||||||
| 38–42 | 38–42 | 38–42 | 38–42 | 38–42 | 48–52 | 68+ | 48–52 | |
| Previous medication in ambulatory setting | ||||||||
| 199 (32%) | 13 (2%) | 9 (3%) | 2 (3%) | 187 (39%) | 12 (4%) | 6 (3%) | 1 (2%) | |
| 117 (19%) | 133 (25%) | 95 (29%) | 24 (33%) | 114 (24%) | 92 (30%) | 74 (33%) | 16 (37%) | |
| 308 (49%) | 394 (73%) | 229 (69%) | 47 (64%) | 180 (37%) | 198 (66%) | 142 (64%) | 26 (60%) | |
| N | 524 | 411 | 373 | 92 | 813 | 568 | 401 | 136 |
| Gender | ||||||||
| 349 (67%) | 270 (66%) | 205 (55%) | 70 (76%) | 433 (53%) | 241 (42%) | 165 (41%) | 76 (56%) | |
| 172 (33%) | 134 (33%) | 153 (41%) | 20 (22%) | 332 (41%) | 277 (49%) | 206 (51%) | 44 (32%) | |
| 3 (1%) | 7 (2%) | 15 (4%) | 2 (2%) | 48 (6%) | 50 (9%) | 30 (7%) | 16 (12%) | |
| Age | ||||||||
| 38–42 | 28–32 | 28–32 | 33–37 | 38–42 | 48–52 | 63–67 | 43–47 | |
| Previous medication in ambulatory setting | ||||||||
| 76 (15%) | 7 (2%) | 14 (4%) | 2 (2%) | 128 (16%) | 25 (4%) | 22 (5%) | 17 (13%) | |
| 106 (20%) | 109 (27%) | 112 (30%) | 28 (30%) | 235 (29%) | 149 (26%) | 130 (32%) | 35 (26%) | |
| 342 (65%) | 295 (72%) | 247 (66%) | 62 (67%) | 450 (55%) | 394 (69%) | 249 (62%) | 84 (62%) | |
Fig 1Time to treatment discontinuation curves—Base case analysis.
Treatment continuation.
| The Netherlands | Belgium | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PP1M | Risperidone microspheres | Haloperidol decanoate | Olanzapine pamoate | PP1M | Risperidone microspheres | Haloperidol decanoate | Olanzapine pamoate | |
| N | 624 | 540 | 333 | 73 | 481 | 302 | 222 | 43 |
| Percentage of patients remaining on treatment | ||||||||
| 91% | 88% | 85% | 88% | 83% | 69% | 62% | 81% | |
| 59% | 42% | 42% | 25% | 43% | 26% | 18% | 23% | |
| 31% | 21% | 24% | 11% | 23% | 14% | 11% | 14% | |
| Cox regression analysis (base case) | ||||||||
| Reference | 1,50 | 1,32 | 2,12 | reference | 1,60 | 1,63 | 1,27 | |
| reference | <0,01 | <0,01 | <0,01 | reference | <0,01 | <0,01 | 0,33 | |
| Cox regression analysis (subgroup without patients previously treated with LAAP) | ||||||||
| N | 425 | 527 | 324 | 71 | 294 | 290 | 216 | 42 |
| Reference | 1,29 | 1,03 | 2,12 | reference | 1,35 | 1,31 | 1,00 | |
| Reference | <0,01 | 0,75 | 0,01 | reference | <0,01 | 0,01 | 1,00 | |
| N | 524 | 411 | 373 | 92 | 813 | 568 | 401 | 136 |
| Percentage of patients remaining on treatment | ||||||||
| 88% | 91% | 85% | 85% | 75% | 72% | 65% | 83% | |
| 55% | 40% | 47% | 43% | 33% | 28% | 18% | 23% | |
| 33% | 20% | 26% | 27% | 20% | 18% | 11% | 13% | |
| Cox regression analysis (base case) | ||||||||
| Reference | 1,51 | 1,19 | 1,49 | reference | 1,37 | 1,45 | 1,26 | |
| Reference | <0,01 | <0,01 | <0,01 | reference | <0,01 | <0,01 | 0,14 | |
| Cox regression analysis (subgroup without patients previously treated with LAAP) | ||||||||
| N | 448 | 404 | 359 | 90 | 685 | 543 | 379 | 119 |
| Reference | 1,29 | 1,02 | 1,09 | reference | 1,28 | 1,36 | 1,17 | |
| Reference | <0,01 | 0,83 | 0,70 | reference | <0,01 | <0,01 | 0,33 | |
Treatment following discontinuation.
| The Netherlands | Belgium | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PP1M | Risperidone microspheres | Haloperidol decanoate | Olanzapine pamoate | PP1M | Risperidone microspheres | Haloperidol decanoate | Olanzapine pamoate | |
| N | 385 | 405 | 234 | 62 | 343 | 254 | 196 | 36 |
| Treatment following discontinuation | ||||||||
| 161 (42%) | 141 (35%) | 62 (26%) | 27 (44%) | 142 (41%) | 68 (27%) | 33 (17%) | 9 (25%) | |
| 47 (12%) | 39 (10%) | 15 (6%) | 3 (5%) | 24 (7%) | 5 (2%) | 6 (3%) | 0 (0%) | |
| 65 (17%) | 87 (21%) | 63 (27%) | 12 (19%) | 44 (13%) | 47 (19%) | 44 (22%) | 6 (17%) | |
| 112 (29%) | 138 (34%) | 94 (40%) | 20 (33%) | 133 (39%) | 134 (53%) | 113 (58%) | 21 (58%) | |
| Logistic regression model | ||||||||
| reference | 0,70 | 0,43 | 0,82 | reference | 0,71 | 0,46 | 0,45 | |
| reference | 0,54–0,90 | 0,31–0,58 | 0,52–1,30 | reference | 0,49–1,02 | 0,29–0,74 | 0,13–1,62 | |
| reference | <0,01 | <0,01 | 0,39 | reference | 0,07 | <0,01 | 0,22 | |
| N | 320 | 303 | 254 | 65 | 622 | 457 | 350 | 114 |
| Treatment following discontinuation | ||||||||
| 128 (40%) | 101 (33%) | 72 (28%) | 27 (42%) | 228 (37%) | 109 (24%) | 75 (21%) | 39 (34%) | |
| 15 (5%) | 29 (10%) | 8 (3%) | 6 (9%) | 27 (4%) | 26 (6%) | 19 (5%) | 7 (6%) | |
| 49 (15%) | 62 (20%) | 73 (29%) | 17 (26%) | 84 (14%) | 60 (13%) | 52 (15%) | 20 (18%) | |
| 128 (40%) | 111 (37%) | 101 (40%) | 15 (23%) | 283 (45%) | 262 (57%) | 204 (58%) | 48 (42%) | |
| Logistic regression model | ||||||||
| reference | 0,80 | 0,58 | 0,89 | reference | 0,50 | 0,47 | 0,68 | |
| reference | 0,61–1,06 | 0,43–0,79 | 0,56–1,42 | reference | 0,38–0,68 | 0,33–0,65 | 0,39–1,32 | |
| reference | <0,01 | 0,12 | 0,63 | reference | <0,01 | <0,01 | 0,25 | |
Fig 2Time to treatment discontinuation sensitivity analysis.