| Literature DB >> 29922062 |
Martha Sajatovic1,2, Ruth Ross3, Susan N Legacy4, Christoph U Correll5,6, John M Kane5,6, Faith DiBiasi7, Heather Fitzgerald8, Matthew Byerly9.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To assess expert consensus on barriers and facilitators for long-acting injectable antipsychotic (LAI) use and provide clinical recommendations on issues where clinical evidence is lacking, including identifying appropriate clinical situations for LAI use.Entities:
Keywords: bipolar disorder; expert consensus; long-acting injectable antipsychotics; schizoaffective disorder; schizophrenia
Year: 2018 PMID: 29922062 PMCID: PMC5997124 DOI: 10.2147/NDT.S167394
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat ISSN: 1176-6328 Impact factor: 2.570
Demographics and practice characteristics of expert panel
| Demographic and practice experience | Value |
|---|---|
| Mean (range) age, years | 58 (42–82) |
| Male sex, n (%) | 21 (62) |
| Mean (range) years in practice | 25 (0–45) |
| Degree, n (%) | |
| MD | 24 (71) |
| PhD | 6 (18) |
| DNP | 2 (6) |
| PharmD | 2 (6) |
| Involved in schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, or major depressive disorder research (within previous 5 years), n (%) | 22 (65) |
| Mean (range) research experience, years | 22 (0–52) |
| NIMH/NIH research grant as principal investigator, n (%) | 15 (44) |
| Principal investigator for an industry-sponsored grant, n (%) | 20 (59) |
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| Proportion of time spent seeing patients, n (%) | |
| All/majority of the time | 12 (36) |
| 50% of the time | 7 (21) |
| 25% of the time | 10 (29) |
| <10% of the time | 5 (15) |
| Practice setting(s) where significant number of patients seen, | |
| Private practice | 8 (25) |
| Public sector | 11 (34) |
| Academic clinical or research setting | 23 (69) |
| Mean percentage of time (range) spent treating or supervising the treatment of patients, by disease | |
| Schizophrenia/schizoaffective disorder | 30 (0–100) |
| Bipolar disorder | 25 (0–75) |
| Major depressive disorder | 24 (0–60) |
| Mean percentage of patients (range) with insurance coverage | |
| Private insurance | 30 (0–100) |
| Medicaid | 33 (0–75) |
| Medicare | 22 (0–70) |
| Uninsured | 15 (0–70) |
| Mean percentage of patients (range) treated by age group | |
| <18 years | 10 (0–75) |
| 18–34 years | 35 (0–55) |
| 35–65 years | 41 (0–70) |
| >65 years | 13 (0–65) |
| Mean percentage of patients (range) in practice currently receiving LAI, by disease | |
| Schizophrenia/schizoaffective disorder | 33 (0–100) |
| Bipolar disorder | 11 (0–40) |
Note:
Some experts may have provided >1 response.
Abbreviations: LAI, long-acting injectable antipsychotic; NIMH/NIH, National Institute of Mental Health/National Institutes of Health.
Figure 1Expert consensus on selecting appropriate patients with schizophrenia/schizoaffective and bipolar disorders for LAI treatment.
Notes: Rating scale: 1 = extremely inappropriate, 2–3 = usually inappropriate, 4–6 = sometimes appropriate, 7–8 = usually appropriate, 9 = extremely appropriate. Horizontal bars represent CIs. *Options that received highest ranking by ≥50% of respondents. Open bars indicate no consensus; shaded bars indicate consensus (dark shading = first line; medium shading = second line; light shading = third line). Colors of the survey questions correlate to the colors in the figure.
Abbreviation: LAI, long-acting injectable antipsychotic.
Expert consensus on selecting patients with schizophrenia/schizoaffective disorder who are appropriate for LAI treatment based on treatment history
| Rating | Patient with schizophrenia/schizoaffective disorder treated with antipsychotic medication for ≥2 years (mean [SD] rating | |
|---|---|---|
| Assumed treatment adherence | Questionable treatment adherence | |
| First line | ||
| Frequently misses clinic appointments (8.1 [1.1]) | ||
| Family/care partner does not support antipsychotic treatment regimen (7.5 [2.0]) | Family/care partner does not support antipsychotic treatment regimen (7.6 [1.8]) | |
| Patient with whom I have a good therapeutic alliance (7.1 [1.7]) | Patient with whom I have a good therapeutic alliance (7.6 [1.5]) | |
| High second line | Concomitant maintenance treatment with other psychotropic medications (eg, mood-stabilizing agents, antidepressants) (6.6 [1.7]) | Positive symptoms (hallucinations, delusions) have not responded to previous trials of oral antipsychotic medications (7.2 [2.2]) |
| Patient with whom I do not have a strong therapeutic alliance (6.6 [2.1]) | Patient with whom I do not have a strong therapeutic alliance (7.1 [1.9]) | |
| Positive symptoms (hallucinations, delusions) have responded well to oral antipsychotic medications, but patient continues to have negative symptoms or cognitive symptoms/impairment (6.5 [2.0]) | Patient being treated with an antipsychotic indicated for treatment-resistant schizophrenia but is still experiencing positive symptoms (6.5 [2.4]) | |
| Positive symptoms (hallucinations, delusions) have not responded to previous trials of oral antipsychotic medications (6.5 [2.3]) | History of refusing treatment with LAI (6.5 [2.0]) | |
Notes:
Rating scale: 1 = extremely inappropriate, 2–3 = usually inappropriate, 4–6 = sometimes appropriate, 7–8 = usually appropriate, 9 = extremely appropriate; bold indicates an option rated 9 by ≥50% of the experts.
High second-line options are those for which the upper value of the CI is ≥6.5, the boundary for first line.
Abbreviation: LAI, long-acting injectable antipsychotic.
Expert consensus on selecting patients with bipolar disorder who are appropriate for LAI treatment based on treatment history
| Rating | Patient with established diagnosis of bipolar disorder and treated with medication for ≥2 years (mean [SD] rating | |
|---|---|---|
| Assumed treatment adherence | Questionable treatment adherence | |
| First line | ||
| History of suboptimal adherence to medications (7.6 [1.2]) | ||
| Has done well on LAI in the past (7.5 [1.5]) | History of suboptimal adherence to medications (7.9 [1.3]) | |
| Frequently misses clinic appointments (7.3 [1.7]) | Frequently misses clinic appointments (7.4 [1.5]) | |
| High second line | Has shown only partial response to lithium or anticonvulsant mood-stabilizing medications (6.9 [1.5]) | Has shown only partial response to lithium or anticonvulsant mood-stabilizing medications (7.0 [1.7]) |
| Has failed to respond to lithium or anticonvulsant mood-stabilizing medications (6.8 [1.9]) | Patient with whom I do not have a strong therapeutic alliance (6.9 [1.8]) | |
| Patient with whom I have a good therapeutic alliance (6.8 [1.9]) | Concomitant treatment with other mood-stabilizing agents or antidepressants (6.7 [2.0]) | |
| Patient with whom I do not have a strong therapeutic alliance (6.6 [1.8]) | Has done well on oral antipsychotic medications in the past but has never been treated with an LAI (6.6 [2.0]) | |
Notes:
Rating scale: 1 = extremely inappropriate, 2–3 = usually inappropriate, 4–6 = sometimes appropriate, 7–8 = usually appropriate, 9 = extremely appropriate; bold indicates an option rated 9 by ≥50% of the experts.
High second-line options are those for which the upper value of the CI is ≥6.5, the boundary for first line.
Abbreviation: LAI, long-acting injectable antipsychotic.
First- and high second-line expert ratings on the importance of potential facilitators for consideration of LAI use in a patient with schizophrenia/schizoaffective or bipolar disorder
| Rating | Factors, beliefs, or perceptions about LAIs by healthcare providers that would facilitate consideration of an LAI (mean [SD] rating |
|---|---|
| First line | |
| No need for patient to make a daily decision to take medication or remember to take medication daily (8.1 [0.9]) | |
| Reduced symptoms because of continuous medication coverage (7.8 [1.6]) | |
| Reduced burden and increased satisfaction for families (7.6 [1.3]) | |
| Ability for the clinician to identify nonadherence immediately and intervene as soon as it is detected (7.6 [1.7]) | |
| Better symptom control for patient who might abuse substances and reduce or stop medication (7.6 [1.4]) | |
| Improved patient and physician satisfaction (7.4 [1.3]) | |
| No or minimal concern about LAI being taken incorrectly or misused because staff are administering (reduced risk of unintentional or deliberate overdose) (7.2 [1.3]) | |
| High second line | Ability for the clinician to discriminate inadequate response due to lack of efficacy versus poor response due to adherence problems (7.1 [2.0]) |
| No need for patient to refill prescription for oral medication (6.9 [2.1]) | |
| No concern about patient losing medication (6.9 [1.7]) | |
| Ensures regular contact between patient and treatment team (6.7 [2.0]) | |
| More time to focus on nonmedication-related issues rather than adherence issues in clinical sessions (6.7 [1.9]) | |
| Reduced stigma associated with having to take daily psychiatric medication (6.7 [1.8]) | |
| Patients who travel do not need to carry medication with them (6.4 [2.0]) | |
| Less variation in peak-to-trough antipsychotic blood level with lower risk of peak-level side effects (6.3 [1.8]) |
Notes:
Rating scale: 1 = not important at all, 2–3 = not very important, 4–6 = somewhat important, 7–8 = important, 9 = extremely important; bold indicates an option rated 9 by ≥50% of the experts.
High second-line options are those for which the upper value of the CI is ≥6.5, the boundary for first line.
Abbreviation: LAI, long-acting injectable antipsychotic.
Survey respondents
| Anissa Abi-Dargham, MD, Stony Brook University |
| Rimal Bera, MD, University of California, Irvine |
| Kelly Bliss, DNP, Mental Bliss, PLLC |
| William Carpenter, MD, Maryland Psychiatric Research Center, University of Maryland School of Medicine |
| Leslie Citrome, MD, MPH, New York Medical College |
| Christoph Correll, MD, The Zucker Hillside Hospital and Hofstra Northwell School of Medicine |
| Colin Depp, PhD, University of California, San Diego |
| Nassir Ghaemi, MD, Tufts Medical Center |
| Radhika Gollapudy, MD |
| Philip Harvey, PhD, University of Miami |
| Rona Hu, MD, Stanford University |
| Rakesh Jain, MD, MPH, Private Practice, Austin, TX, USA |
| Anita Kablinger, MD, CPI, Carilion Clinic, Virgnia Tech Carilion School of Medicine |
| John Kane, MD, The Zucker Hillside Hospital |
| Samuel Keith, MD, University of New Mexico |
| Paul Maguire, MD, Community Partners of Strafford County |
| Stephen Marder, MD, University of California, Los Angeles |
| Michael Measom, MD, New Roads/AD Psychotherapy/Volunteers of America |
| David Miklowitz, PhD, University of California, Los Angeles, Semel Institute |
| Frederick Mittleman, MD, CODAC-Health Recovery Wellness |
| Ricky Mofsen, DO, Evolution Research Group |
| Mary Moller, DNP, MSN, Pacific Lutheran University |
| Diana Perkins, MD, University of North Carolina |
| Stacey Rawls, MD, Private Practice, Rocky Mount, NC |
| Martha Sajatovic, MD, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine |
| Stephen Saklad, PharmD, BCPP, The University of Texas at Austin, College of Pharmacy, Pharmacotherapy Division |
| Nina R. Schooler, PhD, SUNY Downstate Medical Center |
| Aimee Schwartz, MD, Terros Health |
| Asim Shah, MD, Baylor College of Medicine |
| Tracey Skale, MD, Greater Cincinnati Behavioral |
| Roger Sommi, PharmD, BCPP, University of Missouri-Kansas City Schools of Pharmacy and Medicine |
| Georgia Stevens, PhD, Director, P.A.L. Associates: Partners in Aging & Long-Term Caregiving |
| Michael Thase, MD, University of Pennsylvania |
| Dawn Velligan, PhD, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio |
General summary of expert opinion on the top barriers to the use of LAIs in the field
| Barriers to the use of LAIs | Experts who listed barrier as ranking in the top 3 to limit the use of LAIs, n (N = 31) |
|---|---|
| Cost/not on formulary/not reimbursed by insurance | 14 |
| Negative perception/prescriber bias/stigma associated with injections as coercive, punitive, taking away patient autonomy/fear of impact on therapeutic alliance | 14 |
| Lack of knowledge/experience with LAIs and how to dose them | 11 |
| Lack of infrastructure and staff to use LAIs/time constraints/concern about it being more work to prescribe and provide LAIs | 11 |
| Perceptions about the types of patients for whom LAIs are appropriate (eg, only patients who are nonadherent, who have had multiple relapses, who are seen as the “worst of the worst,” with schizophrenia but not bipolar disorder) | 9 |
| Patient refusal/fear/dislike of injections | 8 |
| Concern about inability to adjust dosage/discontinue medication immediately as needed, concern about persistence of potential side effects | 6 |
| Problems presenting/explaining LAIs to patients | 5 |
| Availability of only a limited number of LAIs with FDA indications | 3 |
| Lack of family support | 3 |
| Believing patients will reject LAIs but not asking patients themselves | 2 |
| Concern about patients not returning for injections | 2 |
| Concern about pain at injection site | 1 |
| Overestimation of patients’ level of adherence | 1 |
| Patient having to come into the office biweekly or monthly for injections | 1 |
| Lack of awareness of the importance of adherence | 1 |
Abbreviations: FDA, US Food and Drug Administration; LAI, long-acting injectable antipsychotic.