| Literature DB >> 31832974 |
Sabrina Müller1, Tobias Heidler2, Andreas Fuchs3, Andreas Pfaff4, Kathrin Ernst4, Gunter Ladinek5, Thomas Wilke6.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The aim of this study was to describe the real-word treatment and associated healthcare resource use (HCRU) of multiple sclerosis (MS) patients, as stratified by different MS subtypes.Entities:
Keywords: Claims data; Costs; Germany; HCRU; Multiple sclerosis; Real-world treatment
Year: 2019 PMID: 31832974 PMCID: PMC7229080 DOI: 10.1007/s40120-019-00172-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurol Ther ISSN: 2193-6536
Sample definition of patients with multiple sclerosis enrolled in the study
| MS patient categories and subtypes | Inclusion criteria | Start of observation (index date) | End of observation |
|---|---|---|---|
| MS-prevalent patients | At least two outpatient MS diagnoses (ICD-10 G35.-) documented by a neurologist in two different quarters of 1 year and/or at least one inpatient MS diagnosis (ICD-10 G35.-) between 01 January 2011 and 31 December 2015 | First documented MS diagnosis | End of 2015 or death |
| MS-incident patients | At least two outpatient MS diagnoses (ICD-10 G35.-) documented by a neurologist in two different quarters of 1 year and/or at least one inpatient MS diagnosis (ICD-10 G35.-) between 01 January 2012 and 31 December 2015 without any previous MS diagnosis (minimum pre-index period of 12 months) | First documented MS diagnosis | End of 2015 or death |
| Therapy-naïve MS-incident patients | After incident MS diagnosis, at least one prescription of an agent of interest (disease-modifying immunomodulatory agent) between 01 January 2012 and 31 December 2013 and no previous prescription of these agents (minimum pre-index period of 12 months) | First prescription of a disease-modifying immunomodulatory agent | End of 2015 or death |
| PPMS patients | At least two outpatient PPMS diagnoses (ICD-10 G35.2) documented by a neurologist in two different quarters of 1 year and/or at least one inpatient PPMS diagnosis (ICD-10 G35.2) between 01 January 2011 and 31 December 2015 | First documented MS diagnosis | End of 2015 or death |
| SPMS patients | At least two outpatient SPMS diagnoses (ICD-10 G35.3) documented by a neurologist in two different quarters of 1 year and/or at least one inpatient SPMS diagnosis (ICD-10 G35.3) and no PPMS (G35.2) diagnosis between 01 January 2011 and 31 December 2015 | First documented SPMS diagnosis | End of 2015 or death |
| RRMS patients | At least two outpatient RRMS diagnoses (ICD-10 G35.1) documented by a neurologist in two different quarters of 1 year and/or at least one inpatient RRMS diagnosis (ICD-10 G35.1) and no PPMS (G35.2) or SPMS diagnosis (G35.3) between 01 January 2011 and 31 December 2015 | First documented RRMS diagnosis | End of 2015 or SPMS diagnosis or death |
| CIS patients | At least two outpatient CIS diagnoses (ICD-10 G35.0) documented by a neurologist in two different quarters of 1 year and/or at least one inpatient CIS diagnosis (ICD-10 G35.0) between 01 January 2011 and 31 December 2015 and no PPMS (G35.2), SPMS (G35.3) or RRMS (G35.1) diagnosis between 01 January 2011 and 31 December 2015 | First documented CIS diagnosis | End of 2015 or SPMS or RRMS diagnosis or death |
MS Multiple sclerosis, PPMS primary progressive MS, SPMS secondary progressive MS, RRMS relapsing–remitting MS, CIS clinically isolated syndrome, ICD International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems by the World Health Organization
This table shows the criteria used to identify patients that belong to the corresponding MS subtypes. A patient could be assigned to different MS subtypes during the observation time. Reassignment was allowed from MS subtypes of lower severity to those of higher severity, starting with the lowest severity (CIS) and progressing, in order of increasing severity, to RRMS, SPMS, and PPMS. Reassignment was “prohibited” for reassignment to MS subtypes of reduced severity; thus, patients remained assigned to a more severe subtype even if, after such a diagnosis, a less severe MS subtype was diagnosed. Patients that fulfilled the criteria for PPMS at any given time were considered to be PPMS patients for the whole observational period
Baseline characteristics of all patients with multiple sclerosis included in the study and according to subgroup
| Characteristics | MS-prevalent patients | CIS patients | RRMS patients | PPMS patients | SPMS patients | Incident-MS patients | Newly-treated, MS-incident patients |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 13,133 | 1398 | 5498 | 2247 | 2042 | 8026 | 1750 | |
| Mean length of follow-up, days (median | SD) | 339.1 (365 | 73.7) | 314.8 (365 | 96.8) | 345.5 (365 | 62.1) | 329.9 (365 | 85.9) | 350.6 (365 | 56.5) | 733.9 (715 | 423.7) | 990.9 (1011 | 288.2) |
| Mean age, yearsa (median | SD) | 50.2 (50 | 15.1) | 40.0 (39 | 13.8) | 44.6 (45 | 12.8) | 58.9 (59 | 13.0) | 57.7 (57 | 12.2) | 48.4 (48 | 16.1) | 42.5 (43 | 12.9) |
| Female gender, | 9278 (70.7%) | 989 (70.7%) | 4018 (73.1%) | 1440 (64.1%) | 1441 (70.6%) | 5606 (69.8%) | 1255 (71.7%) |
| Mean CCI (median | SD) | 2.6 (2 | 2.8) | 1.6 (1 | 2.3) | 2.2 (1 | 2.6) | 3.5 (3 | 2.9) | 3.4 (3 | 2.8) | 3.0 (2 | 3.1) | 2.8 (2 | 2.9) |
| Mean number of GP visitsb per PY (median | SD)c | 15.0 (14 | 7.8) | 12.6 (12 | 7.6) | 15.5 (15 | 8.1) | 15.2 (14 | 7.6) | 15.5 (15 | 7.3) | 17.6 (16 | 9.3) | 18.6 (17 | 9.1) |
| Mean number of neurologist visits per PYc (median | SD) | 1.3 (0 | 1.7) | 0.6 (0 | 1.2) | 1.7 (1 | 1.8) | 1.3 (0 | 1.8) | 1.4 (0 | 1.8) | 0.9 (0 | 1.4) | 1.3 (1 | 1.6) |
| Mean number of hospitalizations per PY (median | SD)c | 0.8 (0 | 1.4) | 0.6 (0 | 1.0) | 0.6 (0 | 1.3) | 1.3 (1 | 1.8) | 1.0 (0 | 1.6) | 1.2 (1 | 1.2) | 1.2 (0 | 1.0) |
SD Standard deviation, CCI Charlson Comorbidity Index, GP general practitioner, PY person year
aAge is calculated as of the index date (01 January 2015 for the prevalent sample and respective subsample in terms of the different MS subtypes or date of first diagnosis/first prescription for incident/newly-treated patients)
bAll GP visits
cNumber of GP visits/neurologist visits per PY and inpatient hospitalizations per PY were calculated based a 12-month pre-index period
Fig. 1Description of drug treatments for all multiple sclerosis (MS)-prevalent patients and the respective MS subtype groups in 2015. The percentage of patients who received different MS agents (at least one prescription in 2015) and the prescribed defined daily dosage (DDD) per person year based on patients who received at least one prescription of a respective agent are shown. The disease-modifying immunomodulatory agents alemtuzumab, mitoxantrone, ofatumumab, and rituximab were not included in this figure due to the low number of patients receiving each drug. Specific numbers referring to this figure are available in ESM file 3. CIS clinically isolated syndrome, RRMS relapsing–remitting MS, PPMS primary progressive MS, SPMS secondary progressive MS
Fig. 2Treatment cascade of MS-incident patients who started interferon beta-1a therapy. The treatment cascade is shown for treatment-naïve MS-incident patients who started their first therapy with interferon beta-1a, the most commonly prescribed first-line agent (note: treatment cascades for less common first-line agents are presented in ESM file 4), between 01 January 2012 and 31 December 2013 without prior prescription of an MS treatment (minimum pre-index period of 12 months). An agent was classified as “add-on” if there was at least one prescription for the previous agent after the prescription of the second-line agent. Third-line agents were not further stratified by agent due to low patient numbers
Fig. 3Persistence to MS index treatment in treatment-naïve MS-incident patients. Kaplan–Meier curves of the percentage of patients without changes in treatment or non-persistence for the five most commonly prescribed immunomodulatory agents are shown. Censored events include death and end of observational period. Uncensored events are specified as agent changes, the addition of another agent, or a drug availability gap of > 90 days
Healthcare resource use by multiple sclerosis-prevalent patients in 2015
| Healthcare resource use | MS-prevalent patients | CIS patients | RRMS patients | PPMS patients | SPMS patients |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 13,133 | 1398 | 5498 | 2247 | 2042 | |
| Mean number of GP visitsa per PY (median | SD) | 8.7 (8.2 | 5.4) | 6.5 (4.8 | 11.4) | 9.6 (9.0 | 5.3) | 9.6 (9.0 | 5.1) | 10.4 (10.0 | 5.0) |
| Mean number of neurologist visits per PY (median | SD) | 1.4 (0.0 | 1.9) | 1.2 (0.0 | 4.5) | 2.0 (2.0 | 2.1) | 1.3 (0.0 | 1.9) | 1.5 (0.0 | 2.0) |
| Mean number of hospitalizations per PY (median | SD) | 0.5 (0.0 | 3.0) | 1.8 (0.0 | 7.6) | 0.6 (0.0 | 6.1) | 0.5 (0.0 | 2.0) | 0.6 (0.0 | 1.4) |
| Mean duration of hospitalizations per PY, days (median | SD) | 3.7 (0.0 | 19.9) | 11.5 (0.0 | 48.6) | 3.8 (0.0 | 33.0) | 4.8 (0.0 | 15.2) | 6.5 (0.0 | 21.3) |
| Number of patients receiving an immunomodulatory agent (%) | 6020 (45.8%) | 536 (38.3%) | 3826 (69.6%) | 504 (22.4%) | 693 (33.9%) |
| Mean number of prescriptions of an immunomodulatory agent per PY (median | SD) | 2.6 (0.0 | 3.6) | 2.6 (0.0 | 3.8) | 4.0 (4.0 | 3.8) | 1.3 (0.0 | 2.9) | 1.9 (0.0 | 3.2) |
| Number of patients receiving a flare-up treatment (%) | 2488 (18.9%) | 203 (14.5%) | 1093 (19.9%) | 415 (18.5%) | 439 (21.5%) |
| Number of patients receiving at least two flare-up treatments (%) | 1175 (9.0%) | 81 (5.8%) | 460 (8.4%) | 226 (10.1%) | 246 (12.0%) |
| Mean number of prescriptions of a flare-up treatment agent per PY (median | SD) | 0.4 (0.0 | 1.4) | 0.4 (0.0 | 1.6) | 0.4 (0.0 | 1.2) | 0.5 (0.0 | 1.6) | 0.6 (0.0 | 1.5) |
| Mean number of days absent from work due to MS per PY (median | SD) | 7.1 (0.0 | 32.5) | 11.3 (0.0 | 43.0) | 10.6 (0.0 | 39.3) | 3.1 (0.0 | 20.3) | 3.6 (0.0 | 22.3) |
| Mean number of inpatient rehabilitations per patient year (median | SD) | 0.3 (0.0 | 1.3) | 0.8 (0.0 | 3.9) | 0.4 (0.0 | 5.4) | 0.4 (0.0 | 1.3) | 0.5 (0.0 | 1.2) |
| Mean duration of inpatient rehabilitation per patient year, days (median | SD) | 3.3 (0.0 | 17.3) | 5.6 (0.0 | 25.0) | 3.1 (0.0 | 31.0) | 5.2 (0.0 | 24.5) | 7.3 (0.0 | 25.4) |
This table shows the healthcare resource use of observed MS-prevalent patients in 2015, per observed PY
aMS-related GP visits
Fig. 4Total healthcare cost of MS-prevalent patients per person year (PY) in 2015. MS-associated healthcare costs are shown per observed PY for MS-prevalent patients, stratified by MS subtype, and separately for different healthcare components. Further details are available in ESM files 5 and 6
| Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic and progressive autoimmune disease of the central nervous system, the prevalence of which is increasing in Germany. |
| Although disease severity is known to be a cost driver, far less is known about whether healthcare resource use (HCRU) and costs are similar among MS subtypes or whether specific MS subtypes are associated with substantially higher HCRU/costs. |
| The aim of this study was to identify real-world treatment patterns, patient characteristics, MS-related HCRU, and direct/indirect costs of patients diagnosed with unselected clinically isolated syndrome (CIS), relapsing remittent MS (RRMS), primary progressive MS (PPMS), or secondary progressive MS (SPMS) and treated in Germany. |
| Of all enrolled patients, 41.9% had from RRMS, 17.1% had PPMS, 15.6% had SPMS, and 10.6% had CIS. |
| RRMS patients experienced the highest drug prescription quotas and, consequently, healthcare costs were highest for patients with this MS subtype. |
| The general rates of MS patients not receiving any disease-modifying immunomodulatory agent or any glucocorticoid treatment were high. |