| Literature DB >> 30073580 |
Rosarin Sruamsiri1,2, Hideto Kameda3, Jörg Mahlich4,5.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The study assessed persistence rates of biological disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (bDMARDs) for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis in Japan and compared resource utilization and treatment costs between persistence and non-persistence groups.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30073580 PMCID: PMC6119169 DOI: 10.1007/s40801-018-0139-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drugs Real World Outcomes ISSN: 2198-9788
Fig. 1Persistence measurement and healthcare utilization measurement
Fig. 2Patient flow
Patient characteristics of persistence vs. non-persistence in bDMARD-naïve groups
| Characteristic, | bDMARD-naïve patients | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | Persistence | Non-persistence | ||
| RA patients | 6153 | 4867 (79) | 1286 (21) | |
| Age (mean ± SD) | 59.20 ± 14.20 | 59.34 ± 14.29 | 58.69 ± 13.82 | 0.131 |
| ≤ 60 years | 2882 (47) | 2254 (46) | 628 (49) | |
| 61–70 years | 1905 (31) | 1505 (31) | 400 (31) | |
| > 70 years | 1366 (22) | 1108 (23) | 258 (20) | |
| Gender | 0.198 | |||
| Male | 1398 (23) | 1123 (23) | 275 (21) | |
| Female | 4755 (77) | 3744 (77) | 1011 (79) | |
| CCI score (mean ± SD) | 5.01 ± 3.15 | 5.03 ± 3.16 | 4.97 ± 3.08 | 0.579 |
| ≤ 2 | 1341 (22) | 1064 (22) | 277 (22) | |
| 3–5 | 2663 (43) | 2094 (43) | 569 (44) | |
| > 5 | 2149 (35) | 1709 (35) | 440 (34) | |
Value present: persistence rate in percent and 95% confidence intervals by time point
bDMARDs biological disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs, CCI Charlson Co-morbidity Index, CI confidence interval, RA rheumatoid arthritis
Fig. 3Persistence rate of all included patients
Unadjusted persistence rates by prescribed bDMARDs
| Time points (months) | Total RA patients (95% CI) | ETN (95% CI) | ADL (95% CI) | IFX (95% CI) | GOL (95% CI) | CTZ (95% CI) | TCZ (95% CI) | ABT (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Base-case analysis (gap 60 days) | ||||||||
| 6 | 91 (90–92) | 88 (87–90) | 93 (91–95) | 90 (89–92) | 95 (92–96) | 97 (90–99) | 92 (90–93) | 93 (91–95) |
| 12 | 85 (84–86) | 82 (80–84) | 88 (85–90) | 82 (80–84) | 92 (89–94) | 91 (81–96) | 86 (83–88) | 87 (83–90) |
| 18 | 79 (78–80) | 76 (73–78) | 82 (79–85) | 76 (73–78) | 88 (84–92) | 87 (75–93) | 81 (78–84) | 79 (75–83) |
| Sensitivity analysis (gap 30 days) | ||||||||
| 6 | 78 (76–78) | 70 (68–73) | 84 (81–86) | 81 (79–83) | 87 (84–90) | 76 (65–83) | 71 (68–74) | 81 (77–84) |
| 12 | 63 (62–65) | 58 (55–60) | 74 (70–77) | 65 (62–67) | 80 (76–84) | 42 (30–53) | 52 (48–56) | 69 (65–73) |
| 18 | 51 (49–52) | 48 (45–51) | 66 (62–70) | 48 (46–51) | 72 (66–77) | 25 (14–38) | 39 (35–43) | 58 (53–63) |
| Sensitivity analysis (gap 90 days) | ||||||||
| 6 | 95 (95–96) | 93 (91–94) | 95 (93–96) | 96 (95–97) | 98 (96–99) | 98 (92–99) | 95 (94–97) | 96 (93–97) |
| 12 | 92 (91–92) | 88 (86–90) | 91 (89–93) | 93 (91–94) | 96 (94–98) | 97 (87–99) | 92 (89–94) | 92 (90–95) |
| 18 | 88 (87–89) | 84 (82–86) | 86 (83–89) | 90 (84–88) | 92 (88–95) | 90 (77–96) | 89 (86–91) | 90 (86–92) |
Value present: persistence rate in percent and 95% confidence intervals by time point
ABT abatacept, ADL adalimumab, bDMARDs biological disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs, CI confidence interval, CTZ certolizumab pegol, ETN etanercept, GOL golimumab, IFX infliximab, RA rheumatoid arthritis, TCZ tocilizumab
Healthcare utilization before and after initiation of bDMARD treatment
| Healthcare resource utilization | Overall ( | Persistence ( | Non-persistence ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Number of OPD visits | ||||
| Mean ± SD | 9.6 ± 9.2 | 10.1 ± 9.6 | 8.1 ± 9.7 | <0.001 |
| Median (IQR) | 8 (3–13) | 8 (4–13) | 6 (2–11) | |
| Number of hospitalizations | ||||
| Mean ± SD | 3.3 ± 3.0 | 3.5 ± 2.8 | 3.1 ± 2.8 | 0.510 |
| Median (IQR) | 3 (3–5) | 3 (3–5) | 3 (3–5) | |
| Length of stay | ||||
| Mean ± SD | 17.2 ± 39.9 | 18.4 ± 21.8 | 16.9 ± 23.5 | 0.733 |
| Median (IQR) | 8 (3 –29) | 8 (4–30) | 8 (3–27) | |
| Number of re-hospitalizations | ||||
| Mean ± SD | 0.6 ± 0.4 | 0.7 ± 0.8 | 0.5 ± 0.8 | 0.205 |
| Median (IQR) | 1 (1–1) | 1 (1–1) | 1 (1–1) | |
|
| ||||
| Number of OPD visits | ||||
| Mean ± SD | 16.4 ± 13.99 | 16.4 ± 13.3 | 16.3 ± 13.9 | 0.757 |
| Median (IQR) | 13 (9–20) | 14 (9–20) | 13 (8–18) | |
| Number of hospitalizations | ||||
| Mean ± SD | 1.6 ± 0.7 | 1.4 ± 0.7 | 1.9 ± 0.6 | 0.075 |
| Median (IQR) | 2 (1–3) | 2 (1–3) | 2 (1–4) | |
| Length of stay | ||||
| Mean ± SD | 12.2 ± 19.1 | 12.5 ± 18.7 | 11.8 ± 21.0 | 0.198 |
| Median (IQR) | 12 (8–20) | 12 (8–20) | 12 (7–18) | |
| Number of re-hospitalizations | ||||
| Mean ± SD | 0.3 ± 0.1 | 0.3 ± 0.6 | 0.2 ± 0.4 | 0.467 |
| Median (IQR) | 1 (0–1) | 1 (0–1) | 1 (0–1) | |
|
| ||||
| Number of OPD visits | 6.7 (0.2), < 0.001 | 6.3 (0.2), < 0.001 | 8.2 (0.5), < 0.001 | − 1.9 (0.6), 0.072 |
| Number of hospitalizations | − 2.0 (0.2), < 0.001 | − 2.1 (0.1), < 0.001 | − 1.2 (0.2), < 0.001 | − 0.9 (0.3), 0.042 |
| Length of stay | − 5.0 (1.1), < 0.001 | − 5.9 (1.8), < 0.001 | − 5.1 (1.1), 0.001 | − 0.9 (0.9), 0.653 |
| Number of re-hospitalizations | − 0.3 (0.1), < 0.001 | − 0.4 (0.2), < 0.001 | − 0.3 (0.1), < 0.001 | − 0.1 (0.3), 0.411 |
bDMARDs biological disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs, IQR interquartile range, OPD Outpatient Department, SD standard deviation
Healthcare costs before and after initiation of bDMARD treatment
| Healthcare resources | Overall | Persistence | Non-persistence | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 12 months prior | 12 months post | 12 months prior | 12 months post | 12 months prior | 12 months post | ||
|
| |||||||
| Total OPD cost | 3675 ± 1632 | 12,720 ± 1704 | 3664 ± 1657 | 12,874 ± 1691 | 3702 ± 1794 | 12,540 ± 1765 | 0.063/0.960 |
| Laboratory cost | 55 ± 16 | 54 ± 18 | 58 ± 17 | 52 ± 18 | 35 ± 406 | 60 ± 21 | <0.001/0.233 |
| Radiology cost | 49 ± 16 | 38 ± 15 | 47 ± 16 | 34 ± 14 | 55 ± 17 | 40 ± 19 | 0.027/< 0.001 |
| Management cost (drug, counselling and general management) | 151 ± 140 | 465 ± 244 | 156 ± 129 | 458 ± 238 | 130 ± 184 | 497 ± 264 | 0.011/0.036 |
| RA-related medication cost | 3161 ± 1257 | 12,076 ± 6258 | 3147 ± 1371 | 12,253 ± 6285 | 3215 ± 1,2,68 | 11,844 ± 6123 | 0.041/< 0.001 |
| Non-RA-related medication cost | 225 ± 341 | 51 ± 577 | 277 ± 368 | 42 ± 447 | 215 ± 166 | 57 ± 975 | 0.393/0.019 |
| Surgery and other procedure cost | 29 ± 519 | 29 ± 465 | 25 ± 501 | 29 ± 474 | 47 ± 598 | 38 ± 420 | 0.921/0.703 |
| Other cost | 4 ± 47 | 6 ± 61 | 3 ± 49 | 6 ± 65 | 5 ± 38 | 5 ± 38 | 0.849/0.474 |
| Total hospitalization cost | 3072 ± 5194 | 1657 ± 4723 | 3283 ± 5024 | 1469 ± 4669 | 2950 ± 5925 | 2269 ± 4947 | 0.513/0.008 |
| Total healthcare cost | 6747 ± 5491 | 14,337 ± 11,001 | 6946 ± 5430 | 14,343 ± 5008 | 6652 ± 6280 | 14,809 ± 5440 | 0.793/0.412 |
|
| |||||||
| Total OPD cost | 9026 (6689), < 0.001 | 9210 (6242), < 0.001 | 8838 (6271), < 0.001 | 372 (578), 0.010 | |||
| Laboratory cost | − 1 (17), 0.710 | − 7 (13), 0.07 | 25 (17), < 0.001 | − 32 (68), 0.011 | |||
| Radiology cost | − 11 (11), 0.001 | − 13 (22), < 0.001 | − 15 (32), 0.830 | 2 (6), 0.766 | |||
| Management cost (drug, counselling and general management) | 314 (125), < 0.001 | 303 (270), < 0.001 | 367 (288), < 0.001 | − 65 (44), 0.021 | |||
| RA-related medication cost | 8915 (4834), 0.006 | 9106 (7582), < 0.001 | 8629 (6343), < 0.001 | 477 (148), 0.032 | |||
| Non-RA-related medication cost | − 174 (226), < 0.001 | − 185 (39), 0.124 | − 158 (33), 0.018 | − 27 (11), 0.002 | |||
| Surgery and other procedure cost | 0 (8), 0.962 | 4 (1), 0.703 | − 10 (5), 0.451 | 14 (11), 0.416 | |||
| Other cost | 2 (8), 0.153 | 3 (0.9), 0.037 | 0 (174), 0.953 | 3 (2), 0.342 | |||
| Total hospitalization costs | − 1416 (1020), < 0.001 | − 1814 (1137), < 0.001 | − 681 (516), 0.001 | − 1132 (721), 0.021 | |||
| Total healthcare costs | 7630 (5057), 0.022 | 7397 (4549), 0.435 | 8157 (6101), 0.069 | − 760 (277), 0.034 | |||
bDMARDs biological disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs, OPD Outpatient Department, RA rheumatoid arthritis, SD standard deviation
| In general, drug survival of biological agents in Japanese patients with rheumatoid arthritis is high, indicating that relatively few patients discontinue their treatment. |
| Patients who discontinued their treatment or switched to another treatment caused higher costs to the healthcare system compared to patients who were persistent with their initial treatment. |