Literature DB >> 28831261

Real-world use of PCSK-9 inhibitors by early adopters: cardiovascular risk factors, statin co-treatment, and short-term adherence in routine clinical practice.

Kathleen A Fairman1, Lindsay E Davis1, David A Sclar1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Inconsistency of real-world medication use with labeled indications may affect cost and clinical value of pharmacotherapy. PCSK-9 inhibitors are labeled in the US for use with statins to reduce low-density lipoprotein cholesterol in patients with atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) or familial hypercholesterolemia (FH).
OBJECTIVE: To assess consistency with labeled indications and treatment persistency for early (first 5 post-launch months) adopters of PCSK-9 inhibitor pharmacotherapy.
METHODS: Retrospective analysis of commercially insured cohorts derived from the Truven Health MarketScan® database was performed. Subjects were aged 18-64 years, initiated PCSK-9 inhibitor or highest-intensity statin (rosuvastatin 40 mg/day or atorvastatin 80 mg/day) pharmacotherapy from August to December 2015, and were enrolled throughout 2015 and during separate baseline (pre-treatment) periods of 6 and 18 months. Baseline ASCVD, FH, and ASCVD events (myocardial infarction, transient ischemic attack, and cerebrovascular occlusion) were measured. Persistency was measured through December 2015 for subcohorts of patients initiating treatment from August to September 2015.
RESULTS: Baseline disease rates were higher for patients treated with PCSK-9 inhibitors (n=390) compared with highest-intensity statins (n=26,306): ASCVD (68.5% vs 33.4%, respectively); FH (39.7% vs 15.5%); both P<0.001. In 18 months pre-treatment, 35.6% of PCSK-9 inhibitor-treated patients had ≥1 ASCVD event, and 87.9% had a labeled indication. Rates of 60-day nonpersistency for PCSK-9 inhibitors and highest-intensity statins were 33.3% and 39.8%, respectively (P=0.207). During PCSK-9 inhibitor pharmacotherapy, 33.8% of patients had evidence of statin supply and, of those initiating treatment from August to September, 40.9% filled ≥1 statin prescription. Of those with sustained pre-treatment statin use, 34.8% had no statin supply during PCSK-9 inhibitor pharmacotherapy.
CONCLUSION: Among early-adopting PCSK-9 inhibitor-treated patients, the off-label diagnosis rate was 12%; a majority lacked statin co-treatment; and one third filled prescriptions for ≤60 days. Inconsistency with labeled uses may reflect prescriber/patient decisions, health-insurance coverage determinations, or statin intolerance not reported on claims.

Entities:  

Keywords:  PCSK-9 inhibitors; alirocumab; evolocumab; hyperlipidemia; off-label use; specialty medications

Year:  2017        PMID: 28831261      PMCID: PMC5548274          DOI: 10.2147/TCRM.S143008

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ther Clin Risk Manag        ISSN: 1176-6336            Impact factor:   2.423


Introduction

Two PCSK-9 inhibitors, alirocumab (sanofiaventis U.S. LLC. Bridgewater, NJ, USA and Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Tarrytown, NY, USA) and evolocumab (Amgen Inc. Thousand Oaks, CA), are currently approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for use in two disease indications, in conjunction with dietary modification and “maximally tolerated statin therapy”, to reduce low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) which remains above goal despite statin treatment.1,2 FDA-labeled disease indications for PCSK-9 inhibitors include clinical atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) and familial hypercholesterolemia (FH), a genetic metabolic disorder affecting about 0.4% of adults.3,4 In Europe, the medications are approved for a somewhat broader list of diagnoses, including FH, non-FH, and mixed dyslipidemia.5 Although treatment with PCSK-9 inhibitors reduced LDL-C by an average of 65.29 mg/dL in randomized controlled trials,6 market launch of the drugs in the US was accompanied by considerable questioning about their use in routine clinical practice, based on both economic and clinical factors.7,8 The foremost economic consideration was the high acquisition cost for PCSK-9 inhibitors, estimated at US$12,000–US$14,000 annually, compared with less than US$100 annually for generic statins.8–10 A related consideration was the high prevalence of hypercholesterolemia, which affects approximately 28% of US adults.11 Specifically, industry observers and employer coalitions suggested that off-label use, particularly in patients with hypercholesterolemia but without ASCVD or FH, could dramatically expand treatment prevalence, increase total drug costs to unsustainable levels, and eventually result in curtailing or termination of employer-based health care benefits.12,13 Clinical considerations included the need for parenteral administration, lack of sufficiently powered long-term studies of safety and cardiovascular outcomes, and questions about whether real-world use of PCSK-9 inhibitors would be consistent with clinical trial protocols.7,12,14,15 Specifically, the FDA Endocrinologic and Metabolic Drugs Advisory Committee expressed concern that patients who were “not truly intolerant” of statins would use PCSK-9 inhibitors as monotherapy despite the use of background statin therapy in most patients studied in clinical trials.1,2,14,15 Conversely, some observers suggested that compared with daily oral administration of statins, once- or twice-monthly injections of PCSK-9 inhibitors had the potential to improve therapy adherence, thereby reducing the rate of cardiovascular events.16 To date, no studies of which these authors are aware have examined how and by whom PCSK-9 inhibitors are being used in routine clinical practice. To address this need, the present study, conducted using a large database of commercially insured enrollees, examined real-world use of PCSK-9 inhibitors in the first 5 post-launch months. Examination of patients treated immediately after launch is important in a therapy class with the potential for off-label use or an adherence advantage, because early adopters of innovative therapies may represent those with the most immediate clinical needs.17 Study metrics included 1) baseline (pretreatment) rates of cardiovascular risk factors, indications for use, and comorbidities; 2) concomitant use of other lipid-lowering medications; and 3) treatment persistency.

Methods

Data source and design

The study was a retrospective analysis of cohorts derived from the Truven Health MarketScan® Commercial Claims and Encounters database. The database is a fully de-identified, Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)-compliant dataset comprising claims for all health care (medical and pharmacy) services provided to approximately 50 million commercially insured enrollees each year. It has been used in more than 1,400 published studies of US health care, including numerous analyses of commercially insured enrollees with cardiovascular diseases and related comorbidities.18–22 Data are obtained by Truven Health from employers and health insurance plans, cleaned for quality and accuracy, and de-identified using encrypted case numbers for research purposes. The study was deemed exempt from Institutional Review Board (IRB) review by the Midwestern University IRB committee. The study compared patients newly treated with PCSK-9 inhibitors vs highest-intensity statin therapy, defined as a rosuvastatin (AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals. Wilmington, DE, USA) dosage of 40 mg/day or atorvastatin dosage of 80 mg/day.23 Highest-intensity statin treatment was used as a comparator for two reasons. First, rates of nonadherence to statin pharmacotherapy are high in routine clinical practice.24,25 Second, high-intensity statins are a potential treatment alternative when lower-dose statin therapy does not achieve the desired level of LDL-C reduction.26 The term “highest-intensity” is used throughout this article because treatment guidelines identify “high-intensity” statin therapy in daily dosage ranges of 40–80 mg atorvastatin or 20–40 mg rosuvastatin.26 The top of the range was chosen for cohort identification in the present study because one would expect greater statin discontinuation rates at higher dosages,27 thereby providing a conservative point of comparison for rates of PCSK-9 inhibitor discontinuation. To test the effect of this decision, a sensitivity analysis examined patients treated with atorvastatin ≥40 mg/day or rosuvastatin ≥20 mg/day. Statin dosages per day were calculated as total mg dispensed (strength per unit multiplied by number of units), divided by the days supply field value reported on the claim.

Sampling and cohort identification process

All subjects meeting the criteria listed below were included in the study sample. Included subjects: 1) were aged 18–64 years and continuously enrolled for benefits throughout 2015 (n=15,448,306); 2) newly initiated pharmacotherapy with a study medication regimen – either a) a PCSK-9 inhibitor, with or without one or more statins (PCSK-9 inhibitor cohort, n=390) or b) highest-intensity statin therapy without a PCSK-9 inhibitor (statin cohort, n=26,306) – during the time period from August 1, 2015, to December 31, 2015. New initiation was defined as filling ≥1 prescription for a regimen beginning at any time on or after August 1, 2015, with no (zero) filled prescriptions for that regimen from January 1, 2015, to July 31, 2015. This design was chosen because of the August 2015 market launch of PCSK-9 inhibitors. In both cohorts, a proportion of patients used one or more statins prior to initiating the study medication regimen, as described in the following section “Measurement of pre-treatment characteristics”.

Measurement of pre-treatment characteristics

For each sampled subject, analyses of baseline demographic and clinical characteristics were performed. Clinical characteristics were measured during two separate baseline periods comprising the 183 days (6-month pre-treatment baseline period) and 548 days (18-month pre-treatment baseline period) prior to the first observed study medication claim (PCSK-9 inhibitor or highest-intensity statin). The 18-month analysis was limited to subcohorts of subjects who were continuously enrolled throughout both 2014 and 2015 (n=21,563 highest-intensity statin subcohort; n=340 PCSK-9 inhibitor subcohort). Baseline clinical characteristics included diagnoses of ASCVD and FH; ASCVD events indicating use in secondary prevention (ie, myocardial infarction, transient ischemic attack [TIA], and cerebrovascular occlusion); potential statin intolerance; and comorbidities. Diagnoses were measured in any of the first four diagnosis fields reported on ambulatory claims (outpatient hospital department, emergency department, and physician office), and in these four fields plus the primary diagnosis field and diagnosis-related group (DRG) codes on inpatient hospital claims. Revascularization, including percutaneous transluminal angioplasty, stenting, balloon angioplasty, and coronary artery bypass grafting, was measured using procedure codes for all treatment settings and DRG codes for inpatient admissions. Because no specific International Classification of Diseases (ICD) codes are available for FH or statin intolerance, proxy measures were used. In accordance with guidance provided on instructional websites for claims (billing) coders and descriptions provided in the ICD-9 and ICD-10, FH was defined as “pure hypercholesterolemia” and coded as ICD-9=272.0x or ICD-10=E78.0x.28–30 For statin intolerance, which is defined as clinically significant myalgia, cognitive impairment, or rhabdomyolysis, a number of coding approaches ranging in scope have been tested.31,32 In the present study, statin intolerance was defined as diagnoses of rhabdomyolysis (ICD-728.88 or ICD-10=M62.82), unspecified adverse effect of drug (ICD-9=995.2), or adverse effects of cardiovascular drugs or unspecified drugs (ICD-10=T46 or T50). As a validation metric for this approach, the resulting prevalence rate was compared to the known prevalence rate for statin intolerance, which is estimated at 1%–10%.31 Pre-treatment statin utilization was assessed for the time period beginning on January 1, 2015, and ending on the day prior to the start of the study medication regimen. Three metrics were assessed: 1) any statin use, defined as ≥1 claim for any statin at any dosage; 2) ≥1 claim for ≥20 mg rosuvastatin or ≥40 mg atorvastatin daily (ie, the lower end of the range considered “high-intensity” in treatment guidelines);26 and 3) sustained statin use, defined as a total of ≥120 days supply or ≥3 claims.

Measurement of pharmacotherapy characteristics

The assessment of pharmacotherapy characteristics comprised two metrics: adherence and use of other lipid-lowering pharmacotherapy in addition to study medications. Because a history of cardiovascular events may affect both of these metrics, they were measured both for the sample overall and for the secondary-prevention subcohort. Adherence to pharmacotherapy with either highest- intensity statins or a PCSK-9 inhibitor was measured as short-term persistence, defined as the number of days from the first to the final study medication claim fill dates in calendar year 2015. To permit a sufficient measurement time frame for the reporting of 60-day persistency rates, this analysis was limited to patients whose first study medication claim (ie, either for highest-intensity statin therapy or for PCSK-9 inhibitor therapy) was in August or September of 2015, yielding a minimum of 90 days follow-up. Concomitant statin use during PCSK-9 inhibitor treatment was assessed using two metrics. First, for all PCSK-9 inhibitor-treated patients, concomitant use was defined as either filling ≥1 prescription for a statin after the start of the study medication or having available medication supply for ≥30 days after the start of treatment. The 30-day requirement was chosen as a minimal measure of statin use, because the availability of 30 days of drug supply is a common metric in research using pharmacy claims data, and because in previous studies of concomitant pharmacotherapies, results for 30-, 60-, and 90-day overlap were generally similar.33–35 For this metric, medication supply after treatment start was calculated by 1) summing the fill date plus the days supply for the final pre-treatment statin claim to produce a pretreatment medication depletion date, then 2) calculating the number of days from the treatment start date to the pretreatment medication depletion date. For example, a patient who filled a prescription for a 90-day supply of a statin on November 1, 2015, then initiated PCSK-9 inhibitor treatment on December 15, 2015, would be assumed to have available statin supply until January 30, 2016 (ie, 46 days after treatment start), thereby meeting the 30-day requirement. Second, for patients whose first study medication claim was in August or September 2015, concomitant use was defined as filling ≥1 statin prescription at any time after the start of PCSK-9 inhibitor treatment. The rationale for this metric was that in a minimum of 90 days of follow-up for a patient using a PCSK-9 inhibitor and statin concomitantly, one would expect ≥1 filled statin prescription. Bivariate analyses of patient characteristics used an alpha (critical P) value of 0.05, with Student’s t-tests for interval-scale variables and Pearson chi-square tests for categorical variables. To produce nationally representative estimates, all results were weighted for the sample-to-population ratio across strata formed on sex, age group, region, and policy-holder status (ie, enrollee vs dependent), using a method and strata population sizes provided by Truven Health. The total sample size after weighting was held to the original (pre-weighting) cohort size by applying a constant to all strata weights. All statistical analyses were performed with SPSS (IBM Corporation, Armonk, NY, USA) version 23.0.

Results

Pre-treatment characteristics

Cohorts of patients newly treated with PCSK-9 inhibitor (n=390) and highest-intensity statin (n=26,306) pharmacotherapy did not significantly differ with respect to sex or baseline rates of chronic kidney disease, cerebral occlusion/TIA, or myocardial infarction measured in the 6-month pre-treatment period (Table 1). Secondary-prevention rates were similar for patients treated with PCSK-9 inhibitors and highest-intensity statins (21.0 vs 20.0%, respectively; P=0.612). However, rates of ASCVD prevalence were higher for patients treated with PCSK-9 inhibitors (68.5%) compared with highest-intensity statins (33.4%, P<0.001). PCSK-9 inhibitor-treated patients were approximately 2 years older, on average, than those treated with highest-intensity statin pharmacotherapy (means of 55 vs 53 years, respectively; P<0.001).
Table 1

Baseline demographic and clinical characteristics, patients initiating pharmacotherapy with highest-intensity statin or PCSK-9 inhibitor, August through December 2015

Patient characteristicsHighest-intensity statinaPCSK-9 inhibitorP-value
N26,306390
Age mean (median)53 (55)55 (57)<0.001
Female (%)34.638.70.089
Pre-treatment statin use in calendar year 2015 (%)b
 Any use (≥1 claim)52.459.50.006
 Sustained use (≥120 days supply and/or ≥3 claims)42.847.70.052
 Rosuvastatin ≥20 mg or atorvastatin ≥40 mg daily (≥1 claim)26.333.30.002
 Highest-intensity statina (≥1 claim)0.024.4
Diagnoses in 6-month pre-treatment baseline
 Chronic kidney disease (%)2.42.80.604
 Diabetes (%)30.322.1<0.001
 Hypertension (%)53.064.6<0.001
 Hypercholesterolemia (%)62.992.8<0.001
 Familial hypercholesterolemia (%)15.539.7<0.001
 Statin intolerance (%)0.43.6<0.001
ASCVD (%)
 Angina5.711.3<0.001
 CABG/PTCI10.75.40.001
 Cerebral occlusion/TIA8.39.70.312
 Myocardial infarction12.913.30.780
 PAD/extremity revascularization2.56.9<0.001
 Any ASCVDc33.468.5<0.001
 ASCVD or familial hypercholesterolemia (PCSK-9 inhibitor indications)42.481.0<0.001
 ASCVD event (secondary prevention)d20.021.00.612
Diagnoses in 18-month pre-treatment baselinee
 N21,563340
 Chronic kidney disease (%)3.53.50.941
 Diabetes (%)35.325.0<0.001
 Hypertension (%)67.077.1<0.001
 Hypercholesterolemia (%)80.796.5<0.001
 Familial hypercholesterolemia (%)25.548.8<0.001
 Statin intolerance (%)0.96.5<0.001
ASCVD (%)
 Angina7.719.7<0.001
 CABG/PTCI12.510.90.384
 Cerebral occlusion/TIA11.421.4<0.001
 Myocardial infarction15.519.70.032
 PAD/extremity revascularization4.09.7<0.001
 Any ASCVDc40.877.4<0.001
 ASCVD or familial hypercholesterolemia (PCSK-9 inhibitor indications)54.587.9<0.001
 ASCVD event (secondary prevention)d24.835.6<0.001

Notes:

Rosuvastatin 40 mg daily or atorvastatin 80 mg daily.

Statins include atorvastatin, fluvastatin, lovastatin, pitavastatin, pravastatin, rosuvastatin, simvastatin, and combination therapies including atorvastatin + amlodipine, lovastatin + niacin, simvastatin + ezetimibe, and simvastatin + niacin. Measured from January 1, 2015, through 1 day prior to the study medication start date.

Any of the ASCVD diagnoses listed above or any code for atherosclerosis or ischemic heart disease.

Cerebral occlusion, MI, or TIA.

Measurement of 18-month baseline diagnoses was limited to patients continuously enrolled through 2014 and 2015.

Abbreviations: ASCVD, atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease; CABG, coronary artery bypass grafting; MI, myocardial infarction; PAD, peripheral arterial disease; PTCI, percutaneous transluminal coronary intervention; TIA, transient ischemic attack.

When measured in the 18 months prior to initiation of study medication, prevalence rates for cardiovascular disease, most comorbidities, and cardiovascular events were generally higher for patients treated with PCSK-9 inhibitors (n=340) than for those treated with highest-intensity statins (n=21,563; Table 1). Nearly one half of PCSK-9 inhibitor-treated patients (48.8%), compared with 25.5% of those treated with highest-intensity statins, had a documented/coded diagnosis of FH (P<0.001). Those treated with PCSK-9 inhibitors were also more likely than were highest-intensity statin-treated patients to have had a prior ASCVD event (ie, secondary prevention, 35.6% vs 24.8%, respectively; P<0.001). Characteristics of the patient population treated with PCSK-9 inhibitors deviated somewhat from labeled indications (Table 1). The 6-month baseline prevalence rate on a composite metric of ASCVD or FH (ie, labeled indications) was 81.0% for PCSK-9 inhibitor-treated patients. In the 18-month baseline period, prevalence rates for the composite of ASCVD or FH were 87.9% and 54.5% for patients treated with PCSK-9 inhibitors and highest-intensity statins, respectively (P<0.001). Patients receiving PCSK-9 inhibitor pharmacotherapy were somewhat more likely than were highest-intensity statin-treated patients to have used any statin (59.5% vs 52.4%, respectively; P=0.006) or rosuvastatin of ≥20 mg or atorvastatin of ≥40 mg daily (33.3% vs 26.3%, respectively; P=0.002) prior to initiating the study medication regimen. Rates of highest-intensity statin use in the pre-treatment period were 24.4% in the PCSK-9 inhibitor cohort and, by design, 0% in the highest-intensity statin cohort. Rates of sustained pre-treatment statin use (≥120 days supply or ≥3 claims) for the two cohorts did not significantly differ (47.7% vs 42.8%, respectively; P=0.052).

Pharmacotherapy characteristics

Approximately one third (33.8%) of patients treated with PCSK-9 inhibitors had evidence of statin medication supply during treatment, based on prescriptions filled in either the pre-treatment period or after the start of PCSK-9 pharmacotherapy (Table 2). Among patients initiating PCSK-9 inhibitor pharmacotherapy in August or September, 40.9% filled ≥1 statin prescription prior to December 31, 2015. However, PCSK-9 inhibitor-treated patients were much more likely to fill ≥1 prescription for ezetimibe than were those treated with highest-intensity statins (16.7% vs 2.4%, respectively; P<0.001). Of patients identified as sustained statin users in the pre-treatment period who subsequently used a PCSK-9 inhibitor (n=187), 65.2% had evidence of statin medication supply during PCSK-9 inhibitor pharmacotherapy (not shown in Table 2).
Table 2

Characteristics of pharmacotherapy with highest-intensity statins or PCSK-9 inhibitors, patients initiating treatment from August through December, 2015

Whole sampleHighest-intensity statinaPCSK-9 inhibitorP-value
Use of other lipid-lowering therapies, % of patients
 N26,306390
 Any statin usebInapplicablec33.8
 Statin, ≥1 prescription filled, patients initiating PCSK-9 inhibitor treatment in August or SeptemberdInapplicablec40.9
 Ezetimibe, ≥1 prescription fillede2.416.7<0.001
 Prescription-strength fish oil, ≥1 prescription filled0.10.30.148
Duration, patients initiating treatment in August or Septemberd,f
 Mean (SD) days63 (47)69 (41)0.183
 60 days or less, %39.833.30.207
Number of claims, subjects initiating treatment in August or September, %<0.001
 129.315.1
 231.618.3
 315.39.7
 4 or more23.857.0
Secondary-prevention subcohort: subjects with cerebral occlusion, TIA, or MI in 18-month pre-treatment baseline
Use of other lipid-lowering therapies, % of patients
 N5,302117
 Any statin usebInapplicablec40.2
 Statin, ≥1 prescription filled, patients initiating PCSK-9 inhibitor treatment in August or SeptemberdInapplicablec51.9
 Ezetimibe, ≥1 prescription fillede2.514.0<0.001
 Prescription-strength fish oil, ≥1 prescription filled0.10.00.794
Duration, patients initiating treatment in August or Septemberd,f
 Mean (SD) days71 (44)69 (36)0.817
 60 days or less, %34.244.40.266
Number of claims, patients initiating treatment in August or September, %
 119.711.10.161
 225.233.3
 320.17.4
 4 or more35.048.1

Notes:

Rosuvastatin 40 mg daily or atorvastatin 80 mg daily.

Indicates that during pharmacotherapy with the PCSK-9 inhibitor, patient either had ≥30 days of statin supply, based on the depletion date (fill date plus days supply) for the final pre-treatment statin claim, or filled ≥1 statin prescription.

By design, 100% of patients in this group met the criterion shown in the row label.

Subcohort of the whole sample: n=8,686 highest-intensity statin; n=93 PCSK-9 inhibitor. Subcohort of the secondary-prevention subcohort: n=1,955 highest-intensity statin; n=27 PCSK-9 inhibitor.

Either alone or in combination with simvastatin.

Number of days from first to final fill date.

Abbreviations: MI, myocardial infarction; TIA, transient ischemic attack.

In the secondary-prevention subcohort of PCSK-9 inhibitor-treated patients (ie, those with ≥1 ASCVD event in the 18-month pre-treatment baseline period), the rate of statin co-treatment was somewhat higher (ie, 40.2% with evidence of medication supply and 51.9% filling ≥1 statin prescription). Within this subcohort, 14.0% used ezetimibe concomitantly with the PCSK-9 inhibitor. Among those initiating treatment in August or September 2015, mean durations of therapy prior to December 31, 2015, were similar for patients treated with PCSK-9 inhibitors (69 days) and highest-intensity statins (63 days; P=0.183; Table 2). In the sensitivity analysis of patients treated with atorvastatin ≥40 mg/day or rosuvastatin ≥20 mg/day (n=65,645), mean duration of statin therapy was 126 days (not shown in Table 2). Approximately one third of PCSK9-treated patients filled only one or two claims, and 33.3% became non-persistent with treatment after 60 days. In the secondary-prevention subcohort, mean duration of PCSK-9 inhibitor treatment was 69 days, and 44.4% were treated for 60 days or less.

Discussion

This retrospective cohort analysis of patients newly treated with highest-intensity statin or PCSK-9 inhibitor pharmaco-therapy identified suboptimal treatment patterns, including potentially off-label use rates of 19% and 12% based on the 6- and 18-month periods, respectively, prior to treatment initiation; a monotherapy rate of 59%–66%; and a 60-day nonpersistency rate of 33%. The rate of statin co-treatment was somewhat higher, but still suboptimal, when PCSK-9 inhibitors were used in secondary prevention. In light of complaints from physicians and the pharmaceutical industry about inappropriate coverage denials for patients in need of PCSK-9 inhibitor treatment,36–38 it is important to note that the present study was limited to patients treated with PCSK-9 inhibitors and did not assess the important question of whether patients meeting labeled indications received PCSK-9 inhibitor pharmacotherapy. The present study findings, coupled with a recent preliminary report that PCSK-9 inhibitor coverage denials are more common among patients with LDL-C exceeding 190 mg/dL than among those with lower LDL-C levels,39 suggest that PCSK-9 inhibitor treatment and/or coverage in the immediately post-launch phase may have been sub-optimally targeted. In interpreting these findings, it is important to note that whether treatment decisions were made primarily by prescribers and patients, or determined by health-insurance coverage decisions, cannot be ascertained from the present study data. It is possible that the unexpectedly high rate of 60-day discontinuation observed in this study is the result of prior authorization requirements for periodic assessments of treatment response, although coverage policies generally call for reassessments after 3 to 12 months of treatment – not after only 30 to 60 days.40–43

Limitations

Several limitations and directions for future research should be noted. First, it was not possible to measure cardiovascular outcomes, as the probabilities of serious cardiovascular events (eg, myocardial infarction, revascularization) are so low that the number of events expected in a 5-month time frame would be extremely small.44,45 Future research should examine real-world outcomes for these patient populations, with a focus on number needed to treat and cost to prevent a major cardiac event with PCSK-9 inhibitor vs highest-intensity statin therapy. Assessment of total drug cost for these analyses should include patients who initiated treatment with either PCSK-9 inhibitors or statins, but were nonpersistent and therefore did not receive long-term clinical benefit. Second, a portion of the unexpectedly high rate of PCSK-9 inhibitor monotherapy may have been attributable to statin intolerance which was not recorded in the claims, either because of a lack of specific diagnosis code or because of symptoms that occurred prior to the study time frame (eg, during a time period of coverage by a different insurer or employer). It is also possible that the statin monotherapy rate reflects confounding by indication; specifically, the targeting of PCSK-9 inhibitor treatment to patients who are statin intolerant but need LDL-C reduction. However, it seems unlikely that the high rate of mono-therapy observed in the present study is due entirely to statin intolerance, as the prevalence of true statin intolerance is estimated at 1%–10%, consistent with the rate identified in the present study.31 Moreover, among the PCSK-9 inhibitor cohort, approximately one third of sustained statin users in the pre-treatment period had no evidence of statin supply during PCSK-9 inhibitor treatment. This finding suggests that these patients may have switched from a statin to a PCSK-9 inhibitor despite the ability to tolerate statins for a sustained period of time. Third, it is possible that patients filled prescriptions for generic statins using a discount program, without presenting their insurance card.46,47 If so, statin use in the present study was underestimated. Finally, the sample was limited to early adopters, whose characteristics may differ from those of patients treated later in the product life-cycle. In particular, one pharmaceutical manufacturer launched a televised advertising campaign for evolocumab in March 2017, and our findings may not represent patients newly treated after that date.48 Additionally, to provide information relevant to plans providing employer-based coverage, which have been the subject of the greatest concern about PCSK-9 inhibitor utilization and cost in the US,13 the present study sample was limited to commercially insured enrollees with a maximum age of 64 years. Similar research should be conducted in Medicare and Medicaid.

Conclusion

A retrospective cohort analysis of early-adopting PCSK-9 inhibitor-treated commercially insured enrollees found an off-label use rate of 12% when diagnoses up to 18 months prior to treatment were measured; a 59%–66% rate of mono-therapy without statin co-treatment, despite a documented statin intolerance rate of <10%; and a 33% rate of 60-day discontinuation. Future research should measure real-world use patterns in Medicare and Medicaid, as well as pharmacoeconomic outcomes, including the occurrence and cost of cardiovascular events.
  28 in total

1.  European drug market entries 2015 with new mechanisms of action.

Authors:  Titus W P van den Heuvel; Adam F Cohen; Robert Rissmann
Journal:  Clin Med (Lond)       Date:  2016-10       Impact factor: 2.659

Review 2.  2016 ACC Expert Consensus Decision Pathway on the Role of Non-Statin Therapies for LDL-Cholesterol Lowering in the Management of Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease Risk: A Report of the American College of Cardiology Task Force on Clinical Expert Consensus Documents.

Authors:  Donald M Lloyd-Jones; Pamela B Morris; Christie M Ballantyne; Kim K Birtcher; David D Daly; Sondra M DePalma; Margo B Minissian; Carl E Orringer; Sidney C Smith
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2016-04-01       Impact factor: 24.094

3.  Knowing the Prevalence of Familial Hypercholesterolemia Matters.

Authors:  Anne C Goldberg; Samuel S Gidding
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2016-03-15       Impact factor: 29.690

4.  Trends in Antihypertensive Medication Use Among US Patients With Resistant Hypertension, 2008 to 2014.

Authors:  Andrew Y Hwang; Chintan Dave; Steven M Smith
Journal:  Hypertension       Date:  2016-10-24       Impact factor: 10.190

5.  Cost-effectiveness of PCSK9 Inhibitor Therapy in Patients With Heterozygous Familial Hypercholesterolemia or Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease.

Authors:  Dhruv S Kazi; Andrew E Moran; Pamela G Coxson; Joanne Penko; Daniel A Ollendorf; Steven D Pearson; Jeffrey A Tice; David Guzman; Kirsten Bibbins-Domingo
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  2016-08-16       Impact factor: 56.272

6.  Efficacy and safety of LDL-lowering therapy among men and women: meta-analysis of individual data from 174,000 participants in 27 randomised trials.

Authors:  Jordan Fulcher; Rachel O'Connell; Merryn Voysey; Jonathan Emberson; Lisa Blackwell; Borislava Mihaylova; John Simes; Rory Collins; Adrienne Kirby; Helen Colhoun; Eugene Braunwald; John La Rosa; T R Pedersen; Andrew Tonkin; Barry Davis; Peter Sleight; Maria Grazia Franzosi; Colin Baigent; Anthony Keech
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2015-01-09       Impact factor: 79.321

7.  Development of a refill pattern method to measure polypharmacy in administrative claims databases.

Authors:  Xinyue Liu; Paul Kubilis; Regina Bussing; Almut G Winterstein
Journal:  Pharmacoepidemiol Drug Saf       Date:  2016-08-16       Impact factor: 2.890

8.  Suboptimal statin adherence and discontinuation in primary and secondary prevention populations.

Authors:  Jeffrey J Ellis; Steven R Erickson; James G Stevenson; Steven J Bernstein; Renee A Stiles; A Mark Fendrick
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  2004-06       Impact factor: 5.128

9.  Longitudinal Commercial Claims-Based Cost Analysis of Diabetic Retinopathy Screening Patterns.

Authors:  Kathryn Fitch; Thomas Weisman; Tyler Engel; Adam Turpcu; Helen Blumen; Yamina Rajput; Purav Dave
Journal:  Am Health Drug Benefits       Date:  2015-09

10.  Economic Evaluation of PCSK9 Inhibitors in Reducing Cardiovascular Risk from Health System and Private Payer Perspectives.

Authors:  Alejandro Arrieta; Timothy F Page; Emir Veledar; Khurram Nasir
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-01-12       Impact factor: 3.240

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1.  PCSK9 Inhibitors' New Users: Analysis of Prescription Patterns and Patients' Characteristics from an Italian Real-world Study.

Authors:  Carlo Piccinni; Ippazio Cosimo Antonazzo; Aldo P Maggioni; Antonella Pedrini; Silvia Calabria; Giulia Ronconi; Letizia Dondi; Nello Martini; Giuseppe Roberto; Tiziana Sampietro; Francesco Sbrana; Beatrice Dal Pino; Federico Bigazzi; Giuseppa Lo Surdo; Elisabetta Volpi; Stefania Biagini; Rosa Gini
Journal:  Clin Drug Investig       Date:  2020-02       Impact factor: 2.859

2.  Clinical characteristics and lipid lowering treatment of patients initiated on proprotein convertase subtilisin-kexin type 9 inhibitors: a nationwide cohort study.

Authors:  Jakob Solgaard Jensen; Peter Ejvin Weeke; Lia Evi Bang; Dan Eik Høfsten; Maria Sejersten Ripa; Anne-Marie Schjerning; Juliane Elizabeth Theilade; Lars Valeur Køber; Gunnar Hilmar Gislason; Jannik Pallisgaard
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2019-04-01       Impact factor: 2.692

3.  PCSK-9 Inhibitors in a Real-World Setting and a Comparison Between Alirocumab and Evolocumab in Heterozygous FH Patients.

Authors:  José Juan Ceballos-Macías; Carolina Lara-Sánchez; Jorge Flores-Real; Carlos Alberto Aguilar-Salinas; Guillermo Ortega-Gutiérrez; Joel Vargas-Sánchez; Ramón Madriz-Prado; Giuseppe Derosa; Hazel Rodríguez-Benítez; Ricardo Baltazar-Romero; Dante José Lopez-Mezquita
Journal:  J Endocr Soc       Date:  2020-11-18
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