| Literature DB >> 29721712 |
C A Janssen1, M A H Oude Voshaar2, H E Vonkeman2,3, M Krol4, M A F J van de Laar2,3.
Abstract
Urate-lowering therapy (ULT) is a recommended life-long treatment for gout patients. However, despite these recommendations, recurrent gout attacks are commonly observed in clinical practice. The purpose of this study was to assess the levels of compliance and persistence to ULT in The Netherlands, in order to reflect on the current gout care delivered by health professionals. Anonymous prescription records were obtained from IQVIA's Dutch retrospective longitudinal prescription database, containing ULT dispensing data for allopurinol, febuxostat, and benzbromarone from November 2013 to July 2017. Compliance to ULT was determined by calculating the proportion of days covered (PDC) over 12 months. Persistence over 12 months was evaluated by determining the time to discontinuation, without surpassing a refill gap of > 30 days. Association of PDC and persistence with age, gender, and first prescriber were examined using beta regression- and cox-regression models, respectively. There were 45,654 patients who met the inclusion criteria. Overall, 51.7% of the patients had a ULT coverage of ≥ 80% of the days in 1 year (PDC ≥ 0.80), and 42.7% of the patients were still persistent after 1 year. Men, older patients, and patients whose first prescriber was a rheumatologist were more persistent and had a higher PDC. Our results show that medication adherence to ULT after 1 year is suboptimal, considering that current guidelines recommend ULT as a life-long treatment. Future studies addressing the reasons for treatment cessation and improving treatment adherence seem warranted.Entities:
Keywords: Compliance; Gout; Persistence; Urate-lowering therapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29721712 PMCID: PMC6061072 DOI: 10.1007/s10067-018-4127-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Rheumatol ISSN: 0770-3198 Impact factor: 2.980
Initial ULT dispensed among general practitioners and rheumatologists
| Type of ULT | General practitioner, % ( | Rheumatologist, % ( |
|---|---|---|
| Allopurinol 100 mg | 75.9 (28773) | 72.1 (5576) |
| Allopurinol 200 mg | 1.3 (476) | 0.4 (31) |
| Allopurinol 300 mg | 20.1 (7630) | 20.4 (1582) |
| Febuxostat 80 mg | 0.2 (83) | 1.5 (113) |
| Febuxostat 120 mg | 0.0 (4) | 0.0 (0) |
| Benzbromarone 100 mg | 2.5 (951) | 5.6 (435) |
ULT urate-lowering therapy
1Percentage of total group, N = 37,917
2Percentage of total group, N = 7737
Variables associated with PDC
| Univariable analyses | Multivariable analyses1 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | Age | Prescriber | Gender | Age | Prescriber | |
| Intercept | 0.957 | 0.252 | 0.890 | 0.139 | 0.139 | 0.139 |
| β-coefficient | − 0.044* | 0.011** | 0.336** | − 0.127** | 0.012** | 0.348** |
| SE | 0.014 | < 0.000 | 0.015 | 0.014 | < 0.000 | 0.015 |
| Pseudo | < 0.000 | 0.011 | 0.011 | 0.024 | 0.024 | 0.024 |
SE, standard error; PDC, proportion of days covered
1Model: PDC ~ gender + age + prescriber
*P < 0.01; **P < 0.001
Multivariate cox-regression for persistence
| HR | 95% CI | Time to discontinuation in days, median (Q1, Q3) | Persistent at 12 months (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | ||||
| Female1 | – | – | 236 (60, 401) | 41.9 |
| Male | 0.897* | 0.87, 0.92 | 257 (90, 420) | 43.0 |
| Age group | ||||
| 18–601 | – | – | 180 (60, 404) | 35.6 |
| 61–73 | 0.713* | 0.69, 0.73 | 333 (90, 438) | 47.5 |
| ≥ 74 | 0.750* | 0.72, 0.77 | 286 (85, 404) | 45.0 |
| Prescriber | ||||
| General practitioner1 | – | – | 225 (72, 408) | 41.5 |
| Rheumatologist | 0.788* | 0.76, 0.82 | 359 (90, 450) | 48.9 |
-, not applicable; HR, hazard ratio; CI, confidence interval; Q1, quartile 1; Q3, quartile 3
1Comparator group for HR
*Significant difference at p < 0.05
Fig. 1Graphs of the proportion of patients who continued treatment with urate-lowering therapy (ULT) 1 year after initiation of treatment. a The level of continuance stratified by gender, b stratified by age, and c stratified by initial prescriber of ULT