| Literature DB >> 28629442 |
Geneviève Gauthier1, Annie Guérin1, Maryia Zhdanava1, William Jacobson2, George Nomikos3, Elizabeth Merikle4, Clément François5, Vanessa Perez6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although the symptoms of major depressive disorder (MDD) are often manageable with pharmacotherapy, response to first-line antidepressant treatment is often less than optimal. This study describes long-term treatment patterns in MDD patients in the United States and quantifies the economic burden associated with different treatment patterns following first-line antidepressant therapy.Entities:
Keywords: Antidepressants; Economic burden; Healthcare costs; Healthcare resource utilization; Major depressive disorder; Treatment patterns
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28629442 PMCID: PMC5477263 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-017-1385-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Fig. 1Study design. *MDD = major depressive disorder; Dx = diagnosis; AD = antidepressant
First pharmacotherapy change definition
| Pharmacotherapy changea | Definition |
|---|---|
| Discontinuation | Interruption of ≥42 consecutive days of the drug regimen initiated at the beginning of the line of therapy |
| Dose escalation | Increase in daily dose of ≥50% compared to prior dose - |
| Switchb | Initiation of a new drug regimen (antidepressant and/or atypical antipsychotic) within 42 days of the discontinuation of the drug regimen initiated at the beginning of the line of therapy - |
| Persistence | Absence of any of the treatment changes until the end of the study period |
| Combination | Treatment add-on resulting in the use of ≥2 antidepressants simultaneously. |
| Augmentation | Treatment add-on resulting in the use of one antidepressant and an atypical antipsychotic simultaneously. |
aSubsequent pharmacotherapy changes (second through fourth) were identified in a similar manner, and also included switch/drop (i.e., in combination and augmentation cohorts only, this represented a change in the overall drug regimen); and resumption of pharmacotherapy (i.e., initiation of a new drug regimen or re-initiation of the same drug regimen following discontinuation)
bFor antidepressants, the analysis was performed at the active ingredient level, i.e., a change from a branded to a generic form of the same active ingredient was not considered as a switch. A switch from an atypical antipsychotic to another atypical antipsychotic was not considered
Fig. 2Sample selection flowchart. *MDD = major depressive disorder. [1] Patients were considered to be on monotherapy if they did not have any claims for another antidepressant or an atypical antipsychotic during the first 30 days following the index date. [2] Overall study sample without restriction in terms of adequate treatment duration
Sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of patients at baseline
| Overall study samplea | Analysis sub-sample | |
|---|---|---|
|
|
| |
| Age at Index Date, Mean ± SD [Median] | 42.1 ± 15.1 [42] | 43.3 ± 15.2 [43] |
| Female, | 24,150 (61.1) | 12,784 (60.6) |
| Region of Residence at Index Date, | ||
| West | 12,021 (30.4) | 6946 (32.9) |
| South | 11,764 (29.7) | 5798 (27.5) |
| North East | 10,474 (26.5) | 5530 (26.2) |
| North Central | 4773 (12.1) | 2572 (12.2) |
| Unknown | 525 (1.3) | 242 (1.1) |
| Type of Healthcare Plan at Index Date*, | ||
| PPO | 20,747 (52.4) | 10,834 (51.4) |
| HMO and POS with Capitation | 10,081 (25.5) | 5750 (27.3) |
| POS without Capitation and EPO | 4272 (10.8) | 2081 (9.9) |
| Comprehensive | 2605 (6.6) | 1438 (6.8) |
| CDHP and HDHP | 1354 (3.4) | 740 (3.5) |
| Unknown | 498 (1.3) | 245 (1.2) |
| Medicare Coverage at Index Date, | 2812 (7.1) | 1723 (8.2) |
| CCI during the 12-Month Baseline Period, Mean ± SD [Median]b, c | 0.4 ± 1.0 [0] | 0.4 ± 1.0 [0] |
| Antidepressant Initiated on the Index Date, | ||
| SSRI | 27,502 (69.5) | 15,048 (71.4) |
| SNRI | 4283 (10.8) | 2325 (11.0) |
| TCA | 403 (1.0) | 124 (0.6) |
| Other | 7369 (18.6) | 3591 (17.0) |
| All-Cause Healthcare Resource Utilization, Mean ± SD [Median] | ||
| Inpatient Admissions | 0.2 ± 0.6 [0] | 0.2 ± 0.5 [0] |
| Outpatient Visits | 12.2 ± 12.6 [8] | 12.1 ± 12.5 [8] |
| Emergency Room Visits | 0.4 ± 1.0 [0] | 0.3 ± 0.9 [0] |
| Other Medical Service Visits | 1.5 ± 3.9 [0] | 1.6 ± 4.1 [0] |
| Number of Visits to a Mental Health Professional, Mean ± SD [Median] | 1.9 ± 4.1 [1] | 1.8 ± 4.2 [1] |
| All-Cause Healthcare Costs (2014 USD), Mean ± SD [Median] | 9941 ± 48,697 [3375] | 9152 ± 23,965 [3230] |
*PPO = Preferred Provider Organization; HMO = Home Maintenance Organization; POS = Point of Service; EPO = Exclusive Provider Organization; CDHP = Consumer Directed Health Plan; HDHP = High Deductible Health Plan; CCI = Charlson-Quan Comorbidity Index; SD = standard deviation; SSRI = Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor; SNRI = Serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor; TCA = Tricyclic agent
aThe overall study sample was defined without restriction in terms of adequate treatment duration.
bQuan H, Sundararajan V, Halfon P et al. Coding Algorithms for Defining Comorbidities in ICD-9-CM and ICD-10 Administrative Data. Medical Care 2005;43:1130–1139. The CCI score is calculated based on dichotomous variables indicating whether or not a patient had the condition as follows: sum (myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure, peripheral vascular disease, cardiovascular disease, dementia, chronic pulmonary disease, rheumatologic disease, peptic ulcer disease, max[mild liver disease, 3*moderate liver disease], max[mild diabetes, 2*chronic diabetes], 2*hemiplegia, 2* renal disease, max [2* malignancy, 6* metastatic solid tumor], 6*AIDS)
cThe most common physical comorbidity during the baseline period was hypertension, observed in 7392 (18.7%) patients. The most common mental comorbidity during the baseline period was anxiety disorder, observed in 5698 (14.4%) patients
Treatment cohorts and most common treatment patterns within each cohort
|
| |
|---|---|
| Total Number of Patients – Analysis Sub-Sample | 21,088 (100%) |
| Number of patients with 3 most common treatment patterns within each cohort | 14,882 (70.6%) |
| Discontinuation (Cohort 1) | 10,358 (49.1) |
| Pattern 1a: Discontinuation → Remained Untreated | 4833 (22.9) |
| Pattern 1b: Discontinuation → Resumption → Discontinuation → Resumption | 2364 (11.2) |
| Pattern 1c: Discontinuation → Resumption → Discontinuation → Remained Untreated | 1158 (5.5) |
| other patterns | 2003 (9.5) |
| Dose Escalation (Cohort 2) | 7879 (37.4) |
| Pattern 2a: Escalation → Discontinuation → Remained Untreated | 1918 (9.1) |
| Pattern 2b: Escalation → Discontinuation → Resumption → Discontinuation | 1866 (8.8) |
| Pattern 2c: Escalation → Persistence | 1104 (5.2) |
| other patterns | 2991 (14.2) |
| Switch (Cohort 3) | 1390 (6.6) |
| Pattern 3a: Switch → Discontinuation → Remained Untreated | 275 (1.3) |
| Pattern 3b: Switch → Discontinuation → Resumption → Discontinuation | 198 (0.9) |
| Pattern 3c: Switch → Escalation → Discontinuation → Resumption | 185 (0.9) |
| other patterns | 732 (3.5) |
| Persistence (Cohort 4) | 732 (3.5)b,c |
| Combination (Cohort 5) | 588 (2.8)c |
| Pattern 5a: Combination → Switch/Drop → Discontinuation → Resumption | 82 (0.4) |
| Pattern 5b: Combination → Escalation → Switch/Drop → Combination | 58 (0.3) |
| Pattern 5c: Combination → Switch/Drop → Combination → Switch/Drop | 60 (0.3) |
| other patterns | 388 (1.8) |
| Augmentation (Cohort 6) | 141 (0.7)c |
| Pattern 6a: Augmentation → Switch/Drop → Augmentation → Switch/Drop | 19 (0.1) |
| Pattern 6b: Augmentation → Switch/Drop → Discontinuation → Resumption | 18 (0.1) |
| Pattern 6c: Augmentation → Persistence | 12 (0.1) |
| other patterns | 83 (0.4) |
aAll percentages were computed among the total number of patients in the analysis sub-sample (N = 21,088)
bThe mean and median duration of treatment for the persistence cohort was 37.9 and 33.6 months, respectively
cTreatment cohorts representing <5% of the analysis sub-sample were not further analyzed due to limited sample size (decided a priori)
Fig. 3a Healthcare resource utilization PPPY during the study period - treatment cohort-level [1]. Data on HCRU are presented for the cohorts that each comprised more than 5% of the analysis sub-sample (decided a priori) [2]. A total number of 14.5 days with medical visits per year in the discontinuation cohort indicates that there was an average of one visit per month, approximately (this interpretation applies across cohorts) [3]. Mean follow-up was 49.6 months in the discontinuation cohort, 49.1 months in the dose escalation cohort, and 50.6 months in the switch cohort [4]. Percentage within each bar represents proportion of days with mental health-related medical visits. b Total healthcare costs PPPY during the study period - treatment cohort-level [1]. Data on costs are presented for the cohorts that each comprised more than 5% of the analysis sub-sample (decided a priori) [2]. Mean follow-up was 49.6 months in the discontinuation cohort, 49.1 months in the dose escalation cohort, and 50.6 months in the switch cohort [3]. Percentages within each bar represent proportions of mental health-related medical costs and MDD-related pharmacy costs
Fig. 4a Healthcare resource utilization PPPY during the study period - treatment pattern-level. Pattern 1a: Discontinuation→Remained Untreated Pattern 1b: Discontinuation→Resumption→Discontinuation→Resumption Pattern 1c: Discontinuation→Resumption→Discontinuation→Remained Untreated Pattern 2a: Escalation→Discontinuation→Remained Untreated Pattern 2b: Escalation→Discontinuation→Resumption→Discontinuation Pattern 2c: Escalation→Persistence Pattern 3a: Switch→Discontinuation→Remained Untreated Pattern 3b: Switch→Discontinuation→Resumption→Discontinuation Pattern 3c: Switch→Escalation→Discontinuation→Resumption.[1] Data on HCRU are presented only for the three most prevalent patterns within each cohort that comprised more than 5% of the analysis sub-sample (decided a priori). [2] Percentage within each bar represents proportion of days with mental health-related medical visits. b Total healthcare costs PPPY during the study period - treatment pattern-level. Pattern 1a: Discontinuation→Remained Untreated Pattern 1b: Discontinuation→Resumption→Discontinuation→Resumption Pattern 1c: Discontinuation→Resumption→Discontinuation→Remained Untreated Pattern 2a: Escalation→Discontinuation→Remained Untreated Pattern 2b: Escalation→Discontinuation→Resumption→Discontinuation Pattern 2c: Escalation→Persistence Pattern 3a: Switch→Discontinuation→Remained Untreated Pattern 3b: Switch→Discontinuation→Resumption→Discontinuation Pattern 3c: Switch→Escalation→Discontinuation→Resumption [1] Data on costs are presented only for the three most prevalent patterns within each cohort that comprised more than 5% of the analysis sub-sample (decided a priori) [2]. Percentages within each bar represent proportions of mental health-related medical costs and MDD-related pharmacy costs