| Literature DB >> 31385283 |
Kellyn Moran1, Kyle Null1, Zhongwen Huang1, Trevor Lissoos1, Sunanda Kane2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Patients' adherence to and persistence on treatment for inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) can vary, depending on type and distribution of disease and treatment modality. We aim to identify differences in adherence and persistence with treatments with different administration routes (intravenous vs oral) in IBD.Entities:
Keywords: Adherence; Databases; Drug administration; Inflammatory bowel disease; Monoclonal antibodies; Outcomes research/analysis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31385283 PMCID: PMC6822974 DOI: 10.1007/s12325-019-01037-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Ther ISSN: 0741-238X Impact factor: 3.845
Baseline demographics and clinical characteristics by disease state and initiated treatment
| VDZ/IBD ( | IFX/IBD ( | IFX/RA ( | TOF/RA ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| VDZ/IBD vs TOF/RA | IFX/IBD vs IFX/RA | |||||
| Age, mean (SD), years | 44.4 (13.9) | 41.0 (15.5) | 55.1 (12.5) | 55.2 (11.3) | < 0.0001 | < 0.0001 |
| Sex, | ||||||
| Male | 219 (47.9) | 428 (47.5) | 74 (19.6) | 151 (16.8) | < 0.0001 | < 0.0001 |
| Female | 238 (52.1) | 473 (52.5) | 304 (80.4) | 747 (83.2) | ||
| Prior resource utilizationb, | ||||||
| ED visit | 70 (15.3) | 172 (19.1) | 37 (9.8) | 42 (4.7) | < 0.0001 | < 0.0001 |
| Hospitalization | 80 (17.5) | 228 (25.3) | 3 (0.8) | 6 (0.7) | < 0.0001 | < 0.0001 |
| Number of prior biologics, | ||||||
| 0 | 155 (33.0) | 627 (69.6) | 163 (43.1) | 235 (26.2) | < 0.0001 | < 0.0001 |
| 1 | 226 (49.5) | 245 (27.2) | 136 (36.0) | 385 (42.9) | ||
| 2 | 66 (14.4) | 27 (3.0) | 63 (16.7) | 211 (23.5) | ||
| 3 | 14 (3.1) | 2 (0.2) | 16 (4.2) | 67 (7.5) | ||
| Quan–Charlson Comorbidity Index, | ||||||
| 0 | 321 (70.2) | 649 (72.0) | 185 (48.9) | 476 (53.0) | < 0.0001 | < 0.0001 |
| 1 | 60 (13.1) | 120 (13.3) | 110 (29.1) | 246 (27.4) | ||
| 2 | 51 (11.2) | 93 (10.3) | 51 (13.5) | 97 (10.8) | ||
| 3 | 13 (2.8) | 24 (2.7) | 23 (6.1) | 46 (5.1) | ||
| 4 | 6 (1.3) | 8 (0.9) | 6 (1.6) | 15 (1.7) | ||
| ≥ 5 | 6 (1.3) | 7 (0.8) | 3 (0.8) | 18 (2.0) | ||
| Prescription burdenc, | ||||||
| 0 | 28 (6.1) | 76 (8.4) | 21 (5.6) | 21 (2.3) | < 0.0001 | < 0.0001 |
| 1 | 12 (2.6) | 43 (4.8) | 4 (1.1) | 21 (2.3) | ||
| 2 | 37 (8.1) | 75 (8.3) | 11 (2.9) | 35 (3.9) | ||
| 3 | 50 (10.9) | 99 (11.0) | 14 (3.7) | 56 (6.2) | ||
| 4 | 40 (8.8) | 92 (10.2) | 33 (8.7) | 77 (8.6) | ||
| ≥ 5 | 290 (63.5) | 516 (57.3) | 295 (78.0) | 688 (76.6) | ||
ED emergency department, IBD inflammatory bowel disease, IFX infliximab, RA rheumatoid arthritis, SD standard deviation, TOF tofacitinib, VDZ vedolizumab
aP values are from a chi-squared test for categorical variables, two-sample Student t test for parametric continuous variables, or Wilcoxon–Mann–Whitney U test for nonparametric continuous variables
bPatients hospitalized subsequent to an ED visit within 2 days were counted as having a hospitalization
cPrescription burden was calculated as the number of unique prescription medications filled within 180 days before the index date but with available days’ supply within the 90 days before the index date. Unique prescription medications are defined as distinct classes of medications according to the therapeutic class
Fig. 1Adherence among patients initiating vedolizumab, infliximab, or tofacitinib as measured by a mean PDC, b PDC ≥ 80%, and c CG20. CG20, cumulative days with gap ≥ 20% beyond the expected interval. IBD inflammatory bowel disease, IFX infliximab, PDC mean proportion of days covered, RA rheumatoid arthritis, TOF tofacitinib, VDZ vedolizumab
Fig. 2Kaplan–Meier survival curve for time to treatment discontinuation among patients initiating vedolizumab compared with tofacitinib. CD Crohn’s disease, RA rheumatoid arthritis, TOF tofacitinib, UC ulcerative colitis, VDZ vedolizumab
Fig. 3Proportion of persistent patients initiating vedolizumab, infliximab, or tofacitinib after 12 months of follow-up. Nonpersistence was defined as gap in therapy ≥ 1.5 times the prior day’s supply, beginning from the end of the last supply. IBD inflammatory bowel disease, IFX infliximab, RA rheumatoid arthritis, TOF tofacitinib, VDZ vedolizumab