| Literature DB >> 32161454 |
Shiyuan Zhang1, Denise King2, Virginia M Rosen3, Afisi S Ismaila1,4.
Abstract
With increasing choice of medications and devices for asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) treatment, comparative evidence may inform treatment decisions. This systematic literature review assessed clinical and economic evidence for using a single combination inhaler versus multiple inhalers to deliver the same medication for patients with asthma or COPD. In 2016, Embase, PubMed and the Cochrane library were searched for publications reporting studies in asthma or COPD comparing a single-inhaler combination medicine with multiple inhalers delivering the same medication. Publications included English-language articles published since 1996 and congress abstracts since 2013. Clinical, economic and adherence endpoints were assessed. Of 2031 abstracts screened, 18 randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in asthma and four in COPD, nine retrospective and three prospective observational studies in asthma, and four observational studies in COPD were identified. Of these, five retrospective and one prospective study in asthma, and two retrospective studies in COPD reported greater adherence with a single inhaler than multiple inhalers. Nine observational studies reported significantly (n=7) or numerically (n=2) higher rates of adherence with single- versus multiple-inhaler therapy. Economic analyses from retrospective and prospective studies showed that use of single-inhaler therapies was associated with reduced healthcare resource use (n=6) and was cost-effective (n=5) compared with multiple-inhaler therapies. Findings in 18 asthma RCTs and one prospective study reporting lung function, and six RCTs reporting exacerbation rates, showed no significant differences between a single inhaler and multiple inhalers. This was in contrast to several observational studies reporting reductions in healthcare resource use or exacerbation events with single-inhaler treatment, compared with multiple inhalers. Retrospective and prospective studies showed that single-inhaler use was associated with decreased healthcare resource utilization and improved cost-effectiveness compared with multiple inhalers. Lung function and exacerbation rates were mostly comparable in the RCTs, possibly due to study design.Entities:
Keywords: COPD exacerbations; asthma exacerbations; cost-effectiveness; health-related quality of life; lung function
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32161454 PMCID: PMC7049753 DOI: 10.2147/COPD.S234823
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Chron Obstruct Pulmon Dis ISSN: 1176-9106
Figure 1Screening selection of clinical studies.
Abbreviation: Tx, treatment.
Figure 4Screening selection of adherence studies.
Abbreviations: COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; Tx, treatment.
Figure 2Screening selection of economic studies.
Abbreviation: Tx, treatment.
Figure 3Screening selection of HRQoL studies.
Abbreviations: HRQoL, health-related quality of life; QoL, quality of life; Tx, treatment.
Adherence Outcomes
| Reference [Country] | Comparisons | Sample Size | Study Design | Method of Comparing Outcome | Measure of Adherence | Difference (Selected Example) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Asthma: observational studies (n=8) | ||||||
| Chan, 2007 | FP/SAL versus BDP + SAL (both with concomitant BSA) | 2426 | Retrospective database: electronic medical and prescription records (July 2001 to December 2002) | Conditional logistic regression analysis | ≥1 prescription for an oral steroid over 6 months | OR=0.801; 95% CI: 0.662, 0.970; |
| Change in SABA use | SABA use (canister equivalents over 6 months): –0.66; | |||||
| Refills for SAL (mean [SD]) | FP/SAL: 2.71 (1.41); | |||||
| Elkout, 2012 | ICS/LABA versus ICS + LABA | 3172 | Observational retrospective database; 5 years | Multivariate logistic regression analysis | MPR dichotomized as either adequate (MPR 80–120% inclusive) or inadequate (MPR outside the 80–120% range) | ICS/LABA: 25% adequate MPR; mean MPR 93% |
| Latry, 2008 | ICS/LABA versus ICS + LABA | 12,502 | Observational retrospective database; 2 years, 17 months follow-up | Kaplan-Meier analysis | Cumulative rate of persistence at 12 months | ICS/LABA: 44.1% (95% CI: 38.2, 50.0) |
| Marceau, 2006 | FP/SAL or BUD/FOR versus ICS (FP, BUD, BDP) + LABA (SAL, FOR) | 5118 | Observational retrospective databases; 3 years | Chi-squared tests, cumulative persistence from Kaplan-Meier failure time and Log rank test, Cox regression for probability of non-persistence while adjusting for covariables | Treatment discontinuations | Single combination inhaler users were 17% less likely to discontinue their treatment than concurrent users (RR=0.83; 95% CI: 0.78, 0.88) |
| Log rank test | Prescriptions of ongoing therapy continuously at 1 and 2 years | 1 year: 10% versus <5% | ||||
| Number of prescriptions filled during first year of treatment | 3.5 versus 2.7; | |||||
| O’Connor, 2005 | FP/SAL versus FP + SAL | 2414 | Observational, retrospective cohort | Cox regression | Discontinuation | HR for risk of discontinuation=0.74 (95% CI: 0.64, 0.85) |
| Switching | HR for risk of switch=0.64 (95% CI: 0.50, 0.81) | |||||
| Rosenhall, 2003 | BUD/FOR versus BUD + FOR | 320 | Open-label, parallel-group, prospective study | Descriptive statistics | Percentage of patients who withdrew | 9.2% versus 19.4%; |
| Percentage who withdrew after excluding patients not participating in 6-month extension | 5.5% versus 14.6%; | |||||
| Stempel, 2005 | FP/SAL versus FP + SAL | 3503 | Observational retrospective cohort study; 2 years | Chi-square and Wilcoxon rank test and ANOVA | Refill rates: number of 1-month (30-day) supplies of the medication of interest during the 12-month post-index period | 3.98 (95% CI: 3.78, 4.18) versus 2.36 (95% CI: 1.97, 2.75); |
| Total number of treatment days when FP was supplied | 84.76 (95% CI: 79.82, 89.69) versus 26.76 (95% CI: 17.11, 36.40); | |||||
| Stoloff, 2004 | FP/SAL vs FP + SAL | 2511 | Retrospective observational cohort study; 2 years, 1-year follow-up | ANOVA | Medication refill rates, treatment days, and MPR | versus FP + SAL: |
| COPD: observational studies (n=2) | ||||||
| Chrischilles, 2002 | IPR/ALB vs IPR + ALB | 1086 | Retrospective inception cohort study; 2.5 years, ≥3 months’ follow-up | Multivariate logistic regression analysis | No treatment interruption (≥1-month break in prescription coverage) or discontinuation (≥2-month break in prescription coverage) | IPR/ALB associated with greater likelihood of compliance (OR=1.77; 95% CI: 1.46, 2.14) |
| York, 2007 | IPR/ALB versus IPR + ALB | 1531 | Retrospective, population-based analysis | Regression analysis | 1-month break in prescription therapy and use of IPR + ALB | Interruptions (proportion of patients): 0.78 versus 0.85; |
| ≥2 consecutive months of prescription therapy without subsequent use of IPR + ALB | Discontinuations (proportion of patients): 0.43 versus 0.46; | |||||
| Asthma: RCTs (n=4) | ||||||
| Aubier, 1999 | FP/SAL versus FP + SAL | 503 | MC, double-blind, double-dummy RCT; 28 weeks | NR | % of expected medication use Weeks 1–28 | 93–94% for all treatment groups |
| Perrin, 2010 | FP/SAL vs FP + SAL | 111 | Randomized controlled parallel-group study; 24 weeks | Student’s | Adherence as a % of prescribed doses taken during final (4th) 6-week period | FP=73.7% |
| Rosenhall, 2002 | BUD/FOR versus BUD + FOR | 586 | RCT; 6 months | Qualitatively analyzed via descriptive statistics and assessed by safety experts | Overall withdrawal rates in 2nd half of study (%) | 6.7% versus 10.7%; |
| Zetterstrom, 2001 | BUD/FOR versus BUD + FOR | 362 | Randomized, double-blind, double-dummy, active-controlled study with a parallel-group design | ANOVA | Self-reported adherence (patient diary) | Mean >98% with both treatments |
| COPD: RCTs (n=2) | ||||||
| Ferguson, 2013 | IPR/ALB-Respimat vs IPR/ALB-MDI versus IPR + ALB | 465 | Open-label, randomized, active-controlled, parallel-group study; 48 weeks | Mixed-effect repeated-measures model | Mean number of inhalations of study medication (range, 80–120%) | IPR/ALB-Respimat: 95% |
| Discontinued treatment prematurely | IPR/ALB-Respimat versus IPR + ALB: HR=0.487 (95% CI: 0.296, 0.801); | |||||
| Hagedorn, 2013 | FP/SAL versus FP + SAL | 213 | Prospective, randomized controlled, open-label, parallel-group study | Descriptive statistics | Residual doses of study medication in inhalation device | FP/SAL: 98.4% ± 19.6 |
Abbreviations: ALB, albuterol; ANOVA, analysis of variance; BDP, beclomethasone dipropionate; BSA, beclomethasone; BUD, budesonide; CI, confidence interval; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; FOR, formoterol; FP, fluticasone propionate; HR, hazard ratio; ICS, inhaled corticosteroid; IPR, ipratropium; LABA, long-acting β2-agonist; MDI, metered-dose inhaler; MPR, medication possession ratio; NR, not reported; NS, not significant; OR, odds ratio; RCT, randomized controlled trial; SABA, short-acting β2-agonist; SAL, salmeterol; SD, standard deviation; US, United States.
Healthcare Resource Utilization and Costs
| Reference [Country] | N, Comparisons | Study Design | Resource Use Findings | Cost Findings | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Outcomes Assessed | Results | Outcomes Assessed | Results | |||
| Asthma: observational studies (n=7) | ||||||
| Brüggenjürgen, 2010 | 645 | Retrospective analysis of data from a RCT: cost-minimization, CE, and threshold analyses | % treated by a specialist every quarter | 75% of patients are treated by a specialist every quarter and 12.5% every 2nd quarter | CE of BDP/FOR | CE ratio for BDP/FOR versus BDP + FOR: €21.34 versus €48.45 per additional day of asthma-free symptoms |
| % of patients hospitalized due to severe exacerbations | 0% in BDP/FOR group | BDP + FOR in a 24-week period | ICER: –€9.77 per additional day free of asthma symptoms in favor of BDP/FOR (dominant) | |||
| Total medical costs in a 24-week period | €525 versus €637 | Total drug costs in a 24-week period | €272 versus €353 | |||
| Chan, 2007 | 2426 | Observational, retrospective longitudinal; administrative databases from Kaiser Permanente Medical Care Program, California | Patients with ER/hospital admission with ICD-9-CM code 493.02 (asthma-related event) for asthma | Adjusted OR (reference=BDP + SAL)=0.67 (95% CI: 0.44, 1.01; | NR | NR |
| SABA use (change in adjusted LS mean canister equivalents) | –1.05 versus –0.39; –0.66; | |||||
| % with oral steroids | 35.8% versus 38.0%; OR=0.801 (95% CI: 0.662, 0.970); | |||||
| Elkout, 2010 | 10,454 | Retrospective, observational research data | ≥1 prescription for OCS per year | Adjusted ORs (95% CI): | NR | NR |
| Additional diagnostic tests performed, n (%) | 18 (5.8%) versus 16 (9.3%) | |||||
| Requiring ≥6 SABA prescriptions annually | 78% versus 68%; | |||||
| Elkout, 2012 | 3172 | Observational, retrospective, PTI database | <6 canisters SABA/year | 77.5% versus 75.9% | NR | NR |
| <6 canisters SABA/year with pre-index OCS | 23.0% versus 32.4% | |||||
| Marceau, 2006 | 5118 | Observational retrospective databases; 3 years | ER visit for asthma | 0.2 versus 0.4; | NR | NR |
| Moderate-to-severe exacerbation | 0.7 versus 1.1; | |||||
| O’Connor, 2005 | 2414 | Observational, retrospective cohort | ER/IP service use during post-index period | FP/SAL associated with fewer events: HR=0.69 (95% CI: 0.51, 0.95) versus FP + SAL | NR | NR |
| Post-index SABA use | FP/SAL had 0.53 fewer SABA prescriptions than FP + SAL ( | |||||
| Stoloff, 2004 | 2511 | ANOVA adjusting for potential differences in demographic and baseline measures models were used to statistically test the differences across cohorts | SABA rescue medication (mean use over 12 months) | 1.61 versus 2.28; | NR | NR |
| COPD: observational studies (n=4) | ||||||
| Benayoun, 2001 | 1052 | Retrospective, historical cohort of new users of two bronchodilators, identified using Saskatchewan Health databases | Use of inhaled bronchodilators/other respiratory medications | Adjusted RR=1.16 (95% CI: 1.07, 1.26) | Total costs for bronchodilators | Prescribing combined therapy resulted in lower costs, RR=0.83 (95% CI: 0.76, 0.92) |
| Rate of use of other respiratory drugs and antibiotics | Adjusted RR=1.03 (95% CI: 0.93, 1.16) | |||||
| Chrischilles, 2002 | 1086 | Retrospective inception cohort study: conducted using a claims database for United Healthcare enrollees from five health plans spanning the period from July 1996 to December 1998 | First respiratory-related ER visit or hospitalization | IPR/ALB RR=0.58 (95% CI: 0.36, 0.94) | Total monthly charges for respiratory-related care, excluding medical charges | $261 versus $215 |
| Mean monthly provider-claimed charges for respiratory meds | IP facilities: $5.96/month; higher adjusted average PPPM charges for IPR+ALB group; | |||||
| York, 2007 | 1531 | Retrospective, population-based analysis of adjudicated claims from a diverse managed care database | Utilization over the 12-month treatment period | ER visits: 0.93 versus 1.33 (30% fewer in IPR group; Medical visits: 16 versus 15.8 days ( Hospital events (PPPY): 0.77 versus 0.91 ( LoS (days PPPY): 6.2 versus 6.89 ( | Total expenditures over the 12-month treatment period | $1840.36 versus $2046.73; |
| Yu, 2011 | 23,494 | Retrospective: healthcare claims data extracted from a combined database of the Thomson MarketScan Commercial Database and MarketScan Medicare Supplemental and Coordination of Benefits database between January 2004 and December 2008 | HRU (COPD-related IP admissions, IP days, ER visits, urgent care visits, OP visits, and other medical services visits) | Events (per patient-year); adjusted IRR (95% CI); IP admission: 0.03 versus 0.05; 1.64 (95% CI: 1.43, 1.89); IP days: 0.17 versus 0.30; 1.82 (95% CI: 1.54, 2.16); Urgent care visits: 0.19 versus 0.32; 1.76 (95% CI: 1.50, 2.07); OP visits: 2.02 versus 3.20; 1.59 (95% CI: 1.51, 1.68); Other medical services: 2.62 versus 3.25; 1.24 (95% CI: 1.16, 1.32); | Healthcare costs (COPD-related) during 12-month post-index period | Mean ± SD; adjusted cost difference; Total medical costs: $779 ± 2878 versus $1251 ± 4034; $520; Pharmacy costs: $782 ± 756 versus $1749 ± 1033; $976; Total healthcare costs: $1560 ± 3012 versus $3000 ± 4229; $1516; |
| Asthma: RCTs (n=4) | ||||||
| Chervinsky, 2008 | 596 | Double-blind, double-dummy RCT | Rescue medicine use; inhalations per day (from diary records) | No significant difference in mean use (2.17 versus 2.33); adjusted mean difference (95% CI): 0.30 (0.15 to 0.75) | NR | NR |
| Rosenhall, 2003 | 321 | Open-label, parallel-group study | Average resource utilization PPPY (difference) | BUD/FOR, BUD + FOR, difference:
Days off work: 1.14, 1.37, –0.23 ER visits: 0.1, 0.34, –0.24 Doctor visits: 0.27, 0.42, –0.15 Nurse visits: 0.22, 0.13, 0.09 House calls: 0.18, 0.26, –0.08 Phone calls: 0.71, 0.78, –0.07 Pharmacy contacts: 0.47, 0.64, –0.17 | Direct and indirect costs, total costs (difference) | BUD/FOR, BUD + FOR, difference:
Total direct costs: SEK 8915, 10,510, –1595 ( Indirect costs (work absence due to illness): SEK 1384, 1673, –289 ( Total costs (direct and indirect): SEK 10,299, 12,183, –1884 ( |
| Stallberg, 2008 | 1776 | Randomized, open-label, parallel-group study | County council perspective | BUD/FOR, BUD/FOR (M + R), BUD + FOR:
Hospital days: 0.010, 0, 0.007 Unplanned/ER visits: 0.295, 0.346, 0.448 PCP visits: 0.811, 0.466, 0.511 Nurse visits: 0.102, 0.058, 0.084 Phone calls (doctor): 0.334, 0.464, 0.284 Phone calls (nurse): 0.120, 0.146, 0.152 Days off work (patient): 1.874, 1.266, 2.317 Days off work (caregiver): 0.113, 0.080, 0.028 | PPPY direct and indirect asthma-related costs | Total direct costs (SEK): Indirect costs (SEK): Total costs (SEK): |
| COPD: RCTs (n=4) | ||||||
| Dahl, 2013 | 193 | RCT: double-blind, active-controlled, non-inferiority design | Rescue medicine use | LS mean difference = –0.04 (95% CI: –0.35, 0.28) | NR | NR |
| Ferguson, 2013 | 465 | RCT: Phase III, 3-therapy, open-label, active-controlled, parallel-group study | Mean number inhalations of rescue medicine used during 48-week study period | Differences ranged from –0.1 to 0.2 mean inhalations | NR | NR |
| Hagedorn, 2013 | 213 | RCT: prospective, open-label, parallel-group, multicenter study | n (%) home visits by an emergency physician | 13 (13.3%) versus 2 (2.1%) | Median total annual COPD-related direct costs per patient during study period | FP/SAL: €831 |
| Hospitalized for any reason (%) | 23.4% versus 17.1% | |||||
| Mean (SD) hospital LoS, days | 21.9 ± 23.1 versus 18.1 ± 18.0 | |||||
| Mean (SD) ICU LoS, days | 2.2 ± 8.4 versus 1.0 ± 2.6 | |||||
| Tashkin, 2008 | 1704 | RCT: double-blind, 6 months | Rescue medicine use (inhalations per day) | LS mean difference:
BUD/FOR 320/9 μg minus BUD/FOR 160/9 μg: 0.17 (95% CI: –0.23, 0.56) BUD/FOR 160/9 μg minus BUD + FOR: 0.04 (95% CI: –0.43, 0.35) | NR | NR |
Abbreviations: ALB, albuterol; ANOVA, analysis of variance; BDP, beclomethasone dipropionate; BUD, budesonide; Can, Canadian; CE, cost-effectiveness; CI, confidence interval; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; ER, emergency room; FOR, formoterol; FP, fluticasone propionate; GLY, glycopyrronium; HR, hazard ratio; HRU, healthcare resource utilization; ICER, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; ICS, inhaled corticosteroid; ICU, intensive care unit; IND, indacaterol; IP, inpatient; IPR, ipratropium; IRR, incidence rate ratio; LABA, long-acting β2-agonist; LoS, length of stay; LS, least-squares; M + R, maintenance and reliever; MC, multicenter; MDI, metered-dose inhaler; med, medication; NR, not reported; NS, not significant; OCS, oral corticosteroid; OP, outpatient; OR, odds ratio; PCP, primary care physician; PPPM, per patient per month; PPPY, per patient per year; PTI, practice team information; RCT, randomized controlled trial; RR, relative risk; SABA, short-acting β2-agonist; SAL, salmeterol; SD, standard deviation; SEK, Swedish Krona.