| Literature DB >> 29673355 |
Sender Herschorn1, David Staskin2, Le Mai Tu3, Jonathan Fialkov4, Terry Walsh5, Katherine Gooch5, Carol R Schermer5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The PREFER study was an assessment of medication tolerability, treatment preference and symptom improvement during treatment with mirabegron (M) and tolterodine (T) extended release (ER) in patients with overactive bladder (OAB). In this analysis of PREFER, patient-reported outcomes (PROs) were assessed during treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Health-related quality of life; Mirabegron; OAB-questionnaire; OAB-satisfaction; Overactive bladder; Patient Perception of Bladder Condition; Patient-reported outcomes; Tolterodine ER
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29673355 PMCID: PMC5909214 DOI: 10.1186/s12955-018-0892-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Qual Life Outcomes ISSN: 1477-7525 Impact factor: 3.186
Fig. 1PREFER study design
Patient demographics, OAB characteristics, and baseline PROs
| Period 1 | Total | |||||
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| M/T | T/M | M/M | T/T | Mirabegrona | Tolterodinea | |
| Women, | 116 (75.3) | 108 (75.0) | 18 (60.0) | 20 (66.7) | 232 (73.4) | 233 (75.2) |
| Mean (SD) age, years | 53.5 (14.8) | 52.3 (12.6) | 59.0 (13.1) | 54.9 (14.8) | 53.4 (13.9) | 53.2 (13.7) |
| Age group, | ||||||
| < 65 years | 117 (76.0) | 120 (83.3) | 20 (66.7) | 21 (70.0) | 247 (78.2) | 243 (78.4) |
| ≥ 65 years | 37 (24.0) | 24 (16.7) | 10 (33.3) | 9 (30.0) | 69 (21.8) | 67 (21.6) |
| Race, | ||||||
| White | 123 (79.9) | 116 (80.6) | 24 (80.0) | 24 (80.0) | 253 (80.1) | 248 (80.0) |
| Black/African American | 28 (18.2) | 23 (16.0) | 4 (13.3) | 5 (16.7) | 53 (16.8) | 53 (17.1) |
| Asian | 2 (1.3) | 4 (2.8) | 1 (3.3) | 1 (3.3) | 7 (2.2) | 7 (2.3) |
| American Indian/Alaska native | 0 | 1 (0.7) | 0 | 0 | 1 (0.3) | 1 (0.3) |
| Other | 1 (0.6) | 0 | 1 (3.3) | 0 | 2 (0.6) | 1 (0.3) |
| Ethnicity, | ||||||
| Hispanic/Latino | 33 (21.4) | 24 (16.7) | 8 (26.7) | 6 (20.0) | 65 (20.6) | 61 (19.7) |
| Not Hispanic/Latino | 121 (78.6) | 120 (83.3) | 22 (73.3) | 24 (80.0) | 251 (79.4) | 249 (80.3) |
| Mean (SD) BMI (kg/m2) | 28.75 (6.65) | 29.96 (7.10) | 31.25 (8.49) | 31.64 (10.98) | 29.56 (7.08) | 29.70 (7.45) |
| OAB characteristics |
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| Mean duration of OAB, months (SD) | 81.85 (74.34) | 75.11 (99.13) | 74.06 (84.98) | 67.16 (59.96) | 76.98 (86.66) | 77.57 (84.62) |
| Type of OAB, | ||||||
| Urgency incontinence only | 65 (42.2) | 55 (38.2) | 12 (40.0) | 14 (46.7) | 139 (40.8) | 140 (41.7) |
| Mixed stress/Urgency incontinence with urgency as predominant factor | 53 (34.4) | 50 (34.7) | 10 (33.3) | 8 (26.7) | 116 (34.0) | 112 (33.3) |
| Frequency/urgency without incontinence | 36 (23.4) | 39 (27.1) | 8 (26.7) | 8 (26.7) | 86 (25.2) | 84 (25.0) |
| Incontinent patients at baseline of Period 1, | ||||||
| Wet | 117 (76.0) | 98 (68.1) | 24 (80.0) | 22 (73.3) | 250 (73.3) | 241 (71.7) |
| Dry | 37 (24.0) | 46 (31.9) | 6 (20.0) | 8 (26.7) | 91 (26.7) | 95 (28.3) |
| Previous non-drug treatment, | ||||||
| Yes | 6 (3.9) | 6 (4.2) | 1 (3.3) | 3 (10.0) | 11 (3.2) | 17 (5.1) |
| No | 148 (96.1) | 138 (95.8) | 29 (96.7) | 27 (90.0) | 330 (96.8) | 319 (94.9) |
| Baseline PROs |
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| Premedication OAB-S scales, mean (SE) | ||||||
| Impact on Daily Living with OAB | 44.71 (2.37) | 48.36 (2.38) | 40.50 (5.50) | 47.33 (5.15) | 51.49 (1.67) | 53.78 (1.60) |
| Overall Assessment of Interruption of Day-to-Day Life Due to OAB | 1.69 (0.07) | 1.67 (0.07) | 1.57 (0.14) | 1.77 (0.19) | 1.95 (0.06) | 2.01 (0.06) |
| OAB-q scales and PPBC, mean (SE) | ||||||
| Symptom Bother (0–100; higher score indicates greater bother) | 61.20 (1.65) | 60.83 (1.62) | 66.83 (3.79) | 59.83 (3.94) | 52.67 (1.28) | 51.14 (1.28) |
| Coping (0–100; higher score indicates improvement) | 48.04 (2.25) | 51.89 (2.23) | 47.50 (6.01) | 53.58 (4.58) | 56.98 (1.59) | 59.96 (1.52) |
| Concern (0–100; higher score indicates improvement) | 51.54 (1.97) | 51.57 (2.04) | 50.86 (4.74) | 56.67 (4.30) | 59.86 (1.42) | 61.60 (1.41) |
| Sleep (0–100; higher score indicates improvement) | 40.99 (2.13) | 44.53 (2.23) | 37.20 (4.63) | 48.53 (5.27) | 51.09 (1.59) | 52.44 (1.54) |
| Social Interaction (0–100; higher score indicates improvement) | 75.45 (2.05) | 77.44 (2.00) | 70.00 (4.71) | 76.53 (4.41) | 78.86 (1.33) | 80.54 (1.28) |
| HRQL total (0–100; higher score indicates better QoL) | 53.09 (1.83) | 55.44 (1.88) | 50.88 (4.69) | 58.03 (4.15) | 60.99 (1.34) | 63.03 (1.31) |
| PPBC (1–6; higher score indicates deterioration in bladder condition) | 4.51 (0.08) | 4.54 (0.09) | 4.47 (0.21) | 4.40 (0.15) | 4.20 (0.06) | 4.16 (0.06) |
a Patients with the same treatment in two different periods (sequences M/M and T/T) are counted once
Fig. 2Change in OAB-S scales over time: a Impact on Daily Living with OAB; b OAB Control; c Satisfaction with OAB Control; and change in OAB-S single items: d Patient’s Fulfillment of OAB Medication Expectations; e Interruption of Day-to-Day Life Due to OAB; f Overall Satisfaction with OAB Medication; g Improvement in Day-to-Day Life Due to OAB Medication; h Willingness to Continue OAB Medication
Fig. 3Change from baseline in OAB-q scales and PPBC at each visit. Adjusted change from baseline generated from ANCOVA model with sequence group, study period, period-by-treatment interaction, sex and treatment as factors, baseline as covariate and subject-within-sequence as random term. a Symptom Bother; b Total HRQoL; c Coping; d Concern; e Sleep; f Social interaction; g PPBC
Fig. 4Percentage of responders at EoT. a Achieving a ≥ 10-point improvement in OAB-q Symptom Bother score, Total HRQoL, and OAB-q HRQoL subscales; b Achieving an OAB-S Medication Tolerability score ≥ 90