| Literature DB >> 29950839 |
Mallik Greene1, Luciano Paladini2, Teresa Lemmer2, Alexandra Piedade2, Maelys Touya3, Otavio Clark2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bipolar disorder type I (BD-I) is a chronic condition characterized by mania episodes followed by syndromic recovery periods, usually permeated by depressive symptoma-tology and recurring acute manic episodes. It requires long-term pharmacological treatment; thus, it is critical to understand the patterns of drug therapy use and medication compliance to better plan health care policies and needs. This systematic literature review aims to study these data among patients with BD-I in the USA, focusing on medications to treat mania.Entities:
Keywords: bipolar mania; clinical practice guidelines; oral treatment; persistence; polypharmacy; treatment patterns
Year: 2018 PMID: 29950839 PMCID: PMC6011882 DOI: 10.2147/NDT.S166730
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat ISSN: 1176-6328 Impact factor: 2.570
Search terms used
| Publication database* | Search terms used |
|---|---|
| MEDLINE | ((bipolar AND disorder) OR mania OR manic) AND (“Therapeutics” [Mesh]) AND (cross sectional OR prospective OR retrospective OR longitudinal OR cohort OR transversal OR database OR chart review OR medical records OR claim OR survey OR registry OR naturalistic OR health record) |
| EMBASE | ‘bipolar disorder’/exp AND ‘therapy’/exp AND (‘cross-sectional study’/exp OR ‘prospective study’/exp OR ‘retrospective study’/exp OR ‘longitudinal study’/exp OR ‘cohort analysis’/exp OR ‘data base’/exp OR ‘medical record review’/exp OR ‘administrative claims (health care)’/exp OR ‘disease registry’/exp OR ‘health care survey’/exp OR ‘electronic medical record’/exp OR naturalistic:ab,ti) AND [18-10-2006]/sd NOT [18-10-2016]/sd AND [english]/lim AND [embase]/lim AND ([article]/lim OR [article in press]/lim OR [conference abstract]/lim OR [conference paper]/lim OR [short survey]/lim) |
Notes: *Search date: October 4, 2016.
All MEDLINE searches were limited to a 10-year period (2006–2016).
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram.
Studies evaluating patterns of care
| Study | Source of data [period] | Population | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Blanco et al | National USA survey addressing BD-I prevalence according to DSM-5 [2012–2013]. Diagnostic screening used AUDADIS-5 | n=36,309 adults (person-level response rate of 84%) | Treatment rates of 46% (12-month) and 72.4% (lifetime) among all patients with BD-I |
| Merikangas et al | National USA population-based cross-sectional survey (National Comorbidity Survey Replication) [2001–2003]. BD-I diagnosis according to DSM-IV. Diagnostic screening used CIDI | n=9,282 respondents aged ≥18 years | Patients with BD-I – 12-month treatment rates were 67.3%; lifetime treatment rates were 89.2% |
| Sajatovic et al | VA National Psychosis Registry | 73,964 BD patients; mean age=52.3 years | 44.6% received treatment with AP medications |
| Alexander et al | IMS Health National Disease and Therapeutic Index (nationally representative USA data) describing outpatient antipsychotic use [1995–2008] | Approximately 4,800 office-based, patient-care physicians, data for patient visits where an FGA or SGA drug was reported | BD – treatment visits increase (1995–1996 vs 2007–2008): total SGA/FGA in BD visits (thousands): 297/1,199 vs 9,112/383; thus, SGA accounted for 19.8% vs 96% of BD visits |
| Baldessarini et al | USA national MarketScan® research databases used to quantify utilization rates for psychotropic drug classes in persons with ICD-9 BD [2002–2003] | n=7,760 BD patients (69.2% with BD-I) | Baseline: 60.1% of BD patients prescribed initial psychotropic monotherapy (10.7% with AP, where 10.1% are SGA), lithium (7.5%), and divalproex (8.3%) BD-I – midpoint of the 2-year study: 43.3% monotherapy Patients with BD-I receiving monotherapy: lithium (13%), antipsychotics (10.9%), anticonvulsants (7.6%), and antidepressants (57.9%) |
| Baldessarini et al | Survey including 131 randomly selected prescribing psychiatrists and their adult BD patients in five geographic regions in USA [2005] | n=1,321 patients with BD approached/429 (32.5% of them responded)/among these 429 patients: 79% with BD-I (n=339) | Psychiatrists considered patients’ state: 52.7% clinically euthymic and in maintenance treatment when surveyed; 18% depressed; 10.7% hypomanic; 5.6% manic – of whom 37.5% were hospitalized |
| Baldessarini et al | Proprietary research database containing eligibility information and pharmacy and medical claims data from a large commercial USA health plan (concentration in the South and Midwest) [2000–2004] | n=7,406 BD patients ≥17 years (55.4% BD-I) | Among all patients, 67% with initial monotherapy prescription and 33% with a prescription for two or more major psychotropic drugs (anticonvulsants with mood-stabilizing or antimanic effects, lithium, antipsychotics, or antidepressants) |
| Bates et al | Self-report, web-based survey from USA patients aged 18–65 years who reported a diagnosis of BD and current use of psychotropic medication [2008] | n=1,052 patients with high risk of BD according to the CIDI-bipolar disorder score ≥7 | Drug usage: 47% SGA; 83.3% MS |
| Bauer et al | Administrative claims records from the VA Data Center (drawing from all VA medical centers across the USA) [2003–2010] | n=27,727 BD (79.8% BD-I) patients receiving one or more 30-day outpatient prescription as a first intentional trial of SGA or other common antimanic agents | Drug prescriptions: 43.2% only SGA; 27.9% only valproate; 14.1% only lithium; 7.7% SGA/valproate; 3.6% SGA/lithium; 3.4% carbamazepine or oxcarbazepine |
| Chen et al | Three MarketScan research databases: Commercial Claims and Encounters Database, “Medicare”: Medicare supplemental and coordination of benefits database, and multistate Medicaid database [2002–2008] | n=16,807 patients with BD-I (34.7% from commercial/Medicare and 65.3% from Medicaid) aged ≥18 years who newly initiated an oral SGA | Baseline: 35.7% using mood stabilizers Most frequently used index SGA: quetiapine (31.5%), olanzapine (28.7%), risperidone (20.5%), aripiprazole (9.7%), ziprasidone (5.6%), and paliperidone (0.1%). Index polytherapy in only 3.8%. Similar drug use patterns between commercial/Medicare and Medicaid patients |
| Citrome et al | Retrospective cohort using adult OptumInsight commercial data set | n=6,115 BD patients | Most commonly used antipsychotics: quetiapine (39.5%), aripiprazole (37.2%), risperidone (11%), olanzapine (7.9%), and ziprasidone (4.2%) |
| Depp et al | Medicaid beneficiaries receiving service in the San Diego county public mental health system (merged data from the encounter-based management information system of San Diego county’s adult and older adult mental health services and the California’s department of health care services) [2001–2004] | n=2,427 adult BD patients (n=1,473 were continuously enrolled) | Drug usage in 2004: 77% MS or AP (among these, 20% MS monotherapy; 36% AP monotherapy; 44% MS+AP) AP used: 96% SGA; MS: 35% lithium, 13% valproate/carbamazepine, and 53% lamotrigine, topiramate, or gabapentine. Antidepressants used by 62% of patients Significant trend for decreased use of MS monotherapy (25%–20%); increase in the use of AP monotherapy (32%–36%) |
| Dusetzina et al | Retrospective, repeated cross-sectional study based on MarketScan Commercial Claims and Encounters inpatient, outpatient, and pharmacy claims databases, representing enrollees in commercial health insurance plans sponsored by over 100 large- or medium-sized USA based employers [2007] | n=16,641 children and adolescents aged 0–17 years (35% BD-I) | Treated prevalence (BD): 0.26%/63.5% receiving one or more psychotropic drug (among these, 60.2% were receiving two or more drugs) |
| Lage and Hassan | Extracted data for individuals with bipolar disorder from the PharMetrics database | n=7,769 BD patients | SGAs prescribed: quetiapine (45.7%), olanzapine (33.9%), risperidone (28.2%), aripiprazole (18.3%), ziprasidone (7.2%), fluoxetine/olanzapine (4.3%), and clozapine (0.08%) |
| Lang et al | Retrospective cohort analysis of Medicaid patients [2004–2006] | n=9,410 patients aged ≥18 years, had medical claims indicating BD-I, and filled one or more prescription for antipsychotic medication | Drug usage: 81.2% only oral SGA; 9.6% oral FGA and SGA; 2.4% received oral FGA only; 2.3% LAI SGA; 4.4% LAI FGA |
| Hooshmand et al | BD outpatients referred to the Stanford University Bipolar Disorder Clinic [2000–2011] | n=597 patients were included (40.7% with BD-I) | BD-I: medication usage (2000–2005 vs 2006–2011): lamotrigine (17% vs 30.6%), valproate (37.4% vs 22.2%), quetiapine (10% vs 22.2%), aripiprazole (3.5% vs 20.8%), olanzapine (24.6% vs 11.1%), and risperidone (14% vs 6.9%). No data presented for lithium BD: lithium (27.6% vs 22.7%) |
| Seabury et al | Claim-level data on inpatient, outpatient, long-term care, and pharmacy claims from the Medicaid Analytic eXtract (MAX) files [2001–2008] | n=170,596 BD patients from 24 states, newly prescribed an SGA, aged 18–64 years | Index SGA used: quetiapine (40%), risperidone (30%), aripiprazole (11%), olanzapine (10%), and ziprasidone (8%) |
| Burns et al | Medicaid and Medicare administrative data, nationally representative cohort [2004–2007] | n=1,431 adults, dual beneficiaries, with diagnosed BD-I | Measures of pharmacotherapy quality derived from clinical practice guidelines (two VA guidelines) and FDA indications |
| Busch et al | Retrospective private insurance administrative data | Patients with BD-I aged 18–64: n=431 from 1991, n=598 from 1994, and n=600 from 1999 | Medication and psychotherapy quality indicators based on APA guidelines published in 1994 |
| Dennehy et al | STEP-BD (Systematic Treatment Enhancement Program for Bipolar Disorder) patients observed over 2 years as part of the standard-of-care pathway prospective study [1999–2002] | n=964 patients (68.7% with BD-I) who experienced a new major depressive, manic, hypomanic, or mixed episode | Guideline concordance defined as concordance with choice of medication, and concordance with medication and dosage range according to APA, VA, and expert consensus guidelines, and Texas Implementation of Medication Algorithms guidelines |
| Dusetzina et al | Retrospective, repeated cross-sectional study based on MarketScan [2005–2007] | Children (n=412; aged 6–17 years) with BD-I | Guideline-recommended therapy: only 20% of the children. Among children receiving care from a psychiatrist (51% of the children), this percentage rises to 68% |
| Freeland et al | Retrospective chart review of patients discharged from a 100-bed inpatient psychiatric hospital in South Carolina [2007–2010] | n=294 patients with BD depression | 58% were prescribed evidence-based medications (one of the following: quetiapine, lithium, and olanzapine–fluoxetine combination) upon discharge |
| Huang et al | Humana Medicare advantage beneficiaries [2008–2010] | n=2,338 beneficiaries with BD diagnosis | The rate of guideline-concordant bipolar care (defined as receipt of a mood stabilizer and/or antipsychotic) =48.1% (54% for those aged <65 years and 40% for those aged ≥65 years) |
| Merikangas et al | National USA population-based cross-sectional survey (National Comorbidity Survey Replication) [2001–2003]. BD-I diagnosis according to DSM-IV. Diagnostic screening used CIDI | n=9,282 respondents aged ≥18 years | Patients with BD-I: appropriate medication (in patients receiving 12-month treatment) was reported by 41.6% of patients with BD-I treated by psychiatrists |
Notes:
VA National Psychosis Registry – consists of records for all patients who received a diagnosis of psychosis during inpatient stays and outpatient visits and received VA Services.
OptumInsight commercial data set – represents a geographically diverse, national health plan, including >20 million members.
PharMetrics database – contains information on 55 million commercially insured individuals.
Abbreviations: AP, antipsychotic; APA, American Psychological Association; AUDADIS-5, Alcohol and Use Disorder and Associated Disabilities Interview Schedule-5; BD, bipolar disorder; BD-I, BD type I; CIDI, Composite International Diagnostic Interview; DSM, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders; FDA, US Food and Drug Administration; FGA, first-generation antipsychotic; IMS, Intercontinental Marketing Services; LAI, long-acting injectable; MPR, medication possession rate; MS, mood stabilizer; SGA, second-generation antipsychotic; VA, Veterans Affairs.
Studies included regarding adherence and persistence
| Study | Source of data [period] | Population | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Baldessarini et al | Proprietary research database containing eligibility information and pharmacy and medical claims data from a large commercial USA health plan (concentration in the South and Midwest) [2000–2004] | n=7,406 BD patients aged ≥17 years (55.4% BD-I) | 2,197 patients with MS monotherapy prescription: only 28% considered adherent (MPR – percentage of the past 365 days with apparent access to an initial mood stabilizer – ≥80%) Factors independently associated with MS adherence: older age, lack of substance abuse, treatment by a psychiatrist (vs primary care physician), and lower illness complexity |
| Bates et al | Data collected via a self-report, web-based survey from USA patients aged 18–65 years who reported a diagnosis of BD and current use of psychotropic medication [2008] | 1,052 patients with high risk of BD according to the CIDI-BD score ≥7 | Nonadherent: 49.5% of patients Adherence |
| Berger et al | Truven MarketScan® Commercial Claims and Encounters Database (a health insurance claims database) and the Truven MarketScan Hospital Drug Database (admission-level database) [2001–2008] | n=84 BD patients receiving SGAs (aripiprazole, quetiapine, or ziprasidone) at hospital discharge | During the 6-month period of follow-up, mean MPR=37.3%, suggesting a poor adherence in BD patients discharged on SGA |
| Burns et al | Analysis of Medicaid and Medicare administrative data, nationally representative cohort [2004–2007] | n=1,431 adults, dual beneficiaries, with diagnosed BD-I | Average percentage of beneficiaries with MPR |
| Chen et al | Three MarketScan research databases: Commercial Claims and Encounters Database (“commercial”), Medicare supplemental and coordination of benefits database (“Medicare”), and multistate Medicaid database [2002–2008] | n=16,807 patients (34.7% from commercial/Medicare and 65.3% from Medicaid database) aged ≥18 years with BD-I who newly initiated an oral SGA | Adherence generally poor (8.3%; mean MPR=0.19) Mean MPR and adherence by SGA: quetiapine (0.23/10.4%), aripiprazole (0.18/5.9%), risperidone (0.17/6.8%), and olanzapine (0.16/6.8%) |
| Hassan et al | Claims data from a Medicaid database [1999–2001] | n=620 BD patients receiving SGA; n=205 receiving FGA | Mean MPR: quetiapine (71%), risperidone (68%), olanzapine (68%), and FGA (46%) |
| Lage and Hassan | Extracted data from the PharMetrics database | n=7,769 BD patients | Mean MPR for antipsychotics: 41.7% (MPR ≥80% was present in only 15.82% of the patients) |
| Lang et al | Retrospective cohort analysis of Medicaid patients [2004–2006, 1-year follow-up] | n=9,410 patients with BD-I aged ≥18 years, and filled one or more prescription for antipsychotic medication | MPR ≥80% (mean MPR |
| Perlis et al | Prospective data from two cohorts of individuals from the Systematic Treatment Enhancement Program for Bipolar Disorder (STEP-BD) study [1999–2005] | n=3,640 BD patients | Poor adherence (≥25% of milligrams for each medication missed in the past week) reported on 12.8% of visits (average). Nonadherence on ≥20% visits: 23.9% patients; adherence at all visits: 46.4% patients |
| Rascati et al | Retrospective analysis of claims data for Medicaid patients from eight states (claims extracted from the Texas Medicaid Vendor Drug, Texas Medicaid Medical Services, and MarketScan databases) [2002–2008] | n=2,446 BD patients | Patients with clinically recommended doses: 58% considered adherent (MPR |
| Sajatovic et al | VA National Psychosis Registry; | 73,964 BD patients | Mean MPR for individuals receiving SGAs: 75% (84% clozapine, 75% risperidone, 75% olanzapine, 77% quetiapine, 77% ziprasidone, and 79% aripiprazole) |
| Sajatovic et al | VA National Psychosis Registry; | 44,637 BD patients receiving lithium and anticonvulsants | Mean MPR for individuals receiving lithium or anticonvulsants: 77% (79% lithium, 80% carbamazepine, 76% valproate, and 81% lamotrigine) |
| Baldessarini et al | USA national MarketScan research database was used to quantify utilization rates for psychotropic drug classes in patients with ICD-9 BD [2002–2003] | n=7,760 BD patients (69.2% with BD-I) | Median time to discontinuation of the initial drug (weeks): lithium (58.3), divalproex (36.1), and SGAs (29.1) |
| Baldessarini et al | Survey including 131 randomly selected prescribing psychiatrists and their adult BD patients in five geographic regions in the USA [2005] | n=429 (32.5%) BD patients (79% BD-I) | Prominent AE associated with treatment nonadherence (n=145): weight gain (58.5%), excessive sedation (54.2%), and physical awkwardness or tremor (33.1%) |
| Sajatovic et al | VA National Psychosis Registry | 73,964 BD patients | Factors associated with nonadherence: younger age, minority ethnicity, comorbid substance abuse and homelessness. |
Notes:
Medication adherence – assessed via the Morisky Medication Adherence Scale, with scores ≥2 considered nonadherent.
MPR – defined as ratio between number of days’ supply for all index medication fills during the study period and the number of days between index and end date of the last index medication dispensed during the study period.
Persistence – defined as the number of days between the first and last day receiving an antipsychotic divided by the number of days remaining in the period after the first antipsychotic was dispensed.
Non-persistence – defined as duration of therapy from initiation of the index medication until discontinuation.
PharMetrics database – contains information on 55 million commercially insured individuals.
VA National Psychosis Registry – consists of records for all patients who received a diagnosis of psychosis during inpatient stays and outpatient visits and received VA Services.
Abbreviations: AE, adverse effect; BD, bipolar disorder; BD-I, BD type I; CIDI, Composite International Diagnostic Interview; FGA, first-generation antipsychotic; ICD-9, International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision; LAI, long-acting injectable; MPR, medication possession rate; MS, mood stabilizer; OR, odds ratio; SGA, second-generation antipsychotic; VA, Veterans Affairs.
Main results of the SLR
| Topic | Specific topic | Main results |
|---|---|---|
| Treatment prevalence | 12-month treatment rate | • 46% |
| • 44.6% | ||
| Lifetime treatment prevalence | • 72.4% of patients | |
| Patterns of pharmacological treatment | Polypharmacy rates | • 88.7% |
| • Up to 70% receive polytherapy after 1 year | ||
| • Overall, polytherapy in 68.6% of patients | ||
| Most common medications | • Between patients receiving antipsychotics, 93.1%–100% receive SGAs | |
| • SGA and MS as preferred first-line therapy | ||
| • Quetiapine has been the most commonly used SGA in nearly all studies – between 35 and 45% of patients receiving atypical antipsychotics | ||
| • Other common drugs: olanzapine and aripiprazole | ||
| Concordance with clinical practice guidelines | • Appropriate in 41.572% of patients | |
| Adherence to pharmacological therapy | Measured by number of missed doses in previous days/adherence scales | • 45%–50% of patients considered adherent |
| Ratio between the days of medication supply and the total period of observation within the study | • Rates of MPR ≥80%: 8.3%–54.1% (median of 28%) | |
| • Mean MPR: 19%–77% (median of 47.1%) | ||
| Ratio between the days of medication supply and the period between the first and the last day of medication supply | • MPR ≥80%: in 58%–62% of patients | |
| • Mean MPR of 68%–71% for different SGAs |
Abbreviations: BD, bipolar disorder; BD-I, BD type I; BD-II, BD type II; MS, mood stabilizer; MPR, medication possession ratio; SGA, second-generation antipsychotic; SLR, systematic literature review.
Factors associated with nonadherence to pharmacological treatment in BD*/**/BD-I¶
| Study/BD population | Factors studied | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Younger age | Minority ethnicity | Comorbid psychiatric condition | Gender | Marital status | Specific therapy (specific oral SGA or specific MS) | Medication adverse events | Higher illness complexity | Education (lower level) | Polytherapy | |
| Sajatovic et al | (+) | (+) | (+) for SUD | (−) | (−) | (−) | NR | NR | NR | NR |
| Hassan et al | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | (−) | NR | NR | NR | NR |
| Baldessarini et al | (+) | NR | (+) for SUD | NR | NR | NR | (+) | NR | NR | NR |
| Bates et al | NR | NR | (+) for SUD | NR | NR | NR | (+) | (+) | (+) | (+) |
| Perlis et al | (+) | (+) | (+) for SUD | (−) | (+) for not married | NR | (−) | NR | (−) | (+) |
| Lang et al | (+) | NR | (+) for SUD | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR |
| Rascati et al | (+) | (+) | (+) SUD | (−) | NR | (−) | NR | NR | NR | (−) |
| Chen et al | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | (−) | NR | NR | NR | NR |
| Sajatovic et al | (+) | (+) | (+) | (−) | (+) for not married | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR |
| Baldessarini et al | (+) | NR | (−) | NR | NR | NR | NR | (+) | NR | NR |
Notes: (+): factor associated with higher nonadherence; (−): factor not associated with adherence; NR: not reported (factor not studied in that publication).
BD: bipolar disorder as a whole (includes BD-I but no data separately reported for this population); ¶BD-I: data reported specifically for BD-I;
BD: bipolar disorder as a whole, but study population predominantly composed of BD-I patients.
Abbreviations: BD, bipolar disorder; BD-I, BD type I; MS, mood stabilizer; NR, not reported; OCD, obsessive–compulsive disorder; SGA, second-generation antipsychotic; SUD, substance use disorder.