| Literature DB >> 32329020 |
Janine van Til1, Catharina Oudshoorn-Groothuis2, Marieke Weernink2,3, Clemens von Birgelen2,4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Recent reviews on patients' preferences towards attributes of oral anti-coagulant therapy have shown that preference for convenience of therapy is heterogeneous. In this study, we used a novel approach-latent class analysis (LCA)-to assess heterogeneity.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32329020 PMCID: PMC7340663 DOI: 10.1007/s40271-020-00420-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient ISSN: 1178-1653 Impact factor: 3.883
Fig. 1Example of a discrete choice question. The five attributes and their levels were organized into pairs of hypothetical medication profiles. Both options include all attributes: intake frequency, coagulation monitoring, drug/food interaction, pill intake, and pill type, but differ with regard to the attribute levels. Patients were asked repeatedly which anti-coagulant they would choose if the two profiles in each question were the only two anti-coagulants available and equal effectiveness and safety of the drugs presented in the profile was assumed
Characteristics of the study sample. Data reported as n (%), unless otherwise marked
| All patients ( | DOAC users ( | VKA users ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender, male | 315 (62.0) | 127 (67.6) | 188 (58.8) | |
| Mean age, years ± SD | 57.2 ± 15.0 | 57.0 ± 15.4 | 57.4 ± 14.7 | |
| United Kingdom | 100 (19.7) | 38 (38.0) | 62 (62.0) | |
| Germany | 100 (19.7) | 43 (43.0) | 57 (57.0) | |
| France | 103 (20.3) | 51 (49.5) | 52 (50.5) | |
| Italy | 103 (20.3) | 30 (29.1) | 73 (70.9) | |
| Spain | 102 (20.1) | 26 (25.5) | 76 (74.5) | |
| Low | 77 (15.2) | 34 (18.1) | 43 (13.4) | |
| Medium | 301 (59.3) | 119 (63.3) | 182 (56.9) | |
| High | 130 (25.6) | 35 (18.6) | 95 (29.7) | |
| Employed (full/part-time) | 223 (43.9) | 56 (29.8) | 167 (52.2) | |
| Unemployed | 24 (4.7) | 8 (4.3) | 16 (5.0) | |
| Retired | 261 (51.4) | 124 (66.0) | 137 (42.8) | |
| Independent | 494 (97.2) | 187 (99.5) | 307 (95.9) | |
| Care home/nursing home | 4 (0.8) | 0 (0.0) | 4 (1.3) | |
| Other | 10 (2.0) | 1 (0.5) | 9 (2.8) | |
| €0–€15,000 | 81 (15.9) | 34 (18.1) | 47 (14.7) | |
| €15, 001–€25,000 | 112 (22.0) | 45 (23.9) | 67 (20.9) | |
| €25,001–€50,000 | 164 (32.3) | 62 (33.0) | 102 (31.9) | |
| €50,001–€75,000 | 54 (10.6) | 23 (12.2) | 31 (9.7) | |
| €75,000 + | 66 (13.0) | 9 (4.8) | 57 (17.8) | |
| I do not wish to answer | 31 (6.1) | 15 (8.0) | 16 (5.0) | |
| Total no. of patients on VKA | 320 (63.0) | |||
| Warfarin | 127 (25.0) | – | 127 (39.7) | |
| Acenocoumarol | 52 (10.2) | – | 52 (16.3) | |
| Phenprocoumon | 76 (15.0) | – | 76 (23.8) | |
| Fluindione | 65 (12.8) | – | 65 (20.3) | |
| Total no. of patients on DOAC | 188 (37.0) | |||
| Dabigatran etexilate | 39 (7.7) | 39 (20.7) | – | |
| Rivaroxaban | 87 (17.1) | 87 (46.3) | – | |
| Apixaban | 51 (10.0) | 51 (27.1) | – | |
| Edoxaban | 11 (2.2) | 11 (5.9) | – | |
| Mean ± SD | 3.2 ± 1.2 | 3.1 ± 1.3 | 3.3 ± 1.1 | |
| < 1 year | 37 (7.3) | 20 (10.6) | 17 (5.3) | |
| 1–5 years | 284 (55.9) | 99 (52.7) | 185 (57.8) | |
| > 5 years | 184 (36.2) | 66 (35.1) | 118 (36.9) | |
| Don’t know | 3 (0.6) | 3 (1.6) | 0 (0.0) | |
| Mean ± SD | 3.0 ± 0.8 | 3.0 ± 0.8 | 3.1 ± 0.8 | |
| < 1 year | 123 (24.2) | 56 (29.8) | 68 (21.2) | |
| 1 year-5 years | 251 (49.4) | 104 (55.3) | 145 (45.3) | |
| > 5 years | 126 (24.8) | 25 (13.3) | 102 (31.9) | |
| I do not remember | 8 (1.6) | 3 (1.6) | 5 (1.6) | |
| No | 114 (22.4) | 114 (60.6) | – | |
| Yes | 74 (14.6) | 74 (39.4) | – | |
| Mean ± SD | 2.4 ± 1.5 | 2.4 ± 1.5 | 2.4 ± 1.5 | |
| HAS-BLED score 0–1 (“low” risk) | 150 (29.5) | 57 (30.3) | 93 (29.1) | |
| HAS-BLED score 2 (“moderate” risk) | 128 (25.2) | 47 (25.0) | 81 (25.3) | |
| HAS-BLED score ≥ 3 (“high” risk) | 230 (45.3) | 84 (44.7) | 146 (45.6) | |
| Mean ± SD | 2.4 ± 1.4 | 2.4 ± 1.4 | 2.4 ± 1.5 | |
| CHA2DS2-VASc score 0, 1 (“low” risk) | 154 (30.3) | 57 (30.3) | 97 (30.3) | |
| CHA2DS2-VASc score 2 (“moderate” risk) | 130 (25.6) | 51 (27.1) | 79 (24.7) | |
| CHA2DS2-VASc score ≥ 3 (“high” risk) | 224 (44.1) | 80 (42.6) | 144 (45.0) | |
| Mean ± SD (range) | 5.8 ± 5.1 (0.5–50) | 6.5 ± 4.4 (1–20) | 5.4 ± 5.4 (0.5–50) |
The CHA2DS2-VASc [Cardiac failure or dysfunction, Hypertension, Age ≥ 75 years (Doubled), Diabetes, Stroke (Doubled)–Vascular disease, Age 65–74 years and Sex category (Women)] risk index estimates stroke risk in AF patients. Low-risk patients may not require anti-coagulation; moderate-risk patients should consider anti-coagulation, and high-risk patients are an anti-coagulation candidate. The HAS-BLED (Hypertension, Abnormal renal/liver function, Stroke, Bleeding history or predisposition, Labile INR, Elderly, and Diabetes) risk index estimates bleed risk in AF patients. Low-risk patients should consider anti-coagulation; in moderate-risk patients, anti-coagulation can be considered, but for high-risk patients, alternatives to anti-coagulation should be considered
AF atrial fibrillation, DOAC direct-acting oral anti-coagulant, OAC oral anti-coagulant, SD standard deviation, VKA vitamin K antagonist
Patient preference for attributes of convenience (mixed logit analysis without correlations)
| Attribute | Level | SE | Sig (SE) | SD | Sig (SD) | Importance (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pill intake | Without food | 0.197 | 0.037 | 0.000 | 0.275 | 0.001 | 9 |
| With food* | 0.000 | ||||||
| Intake frequency | Once daily | 0.571 | 0.052 | 0.000 | 0.836 | 0.000 | 27 |
| Twice daily* | 0.000 | ||||||
| Pill type | Tablet | 0.121 | 0.050 | 0.016 | 0.305 | 0.001 | 6 |
| Melting tablet | 0.079 | 0.051 | 0.123 | 0.290 | 0.005 | ||
| Capsule* | 0.000 | ||||||
| Coagulation monitoring | Not required | 0.806 | 0.076 | 0.000 | 1.542 | 0.000 | 37 |
| Required* | 0.000 | ||||||
| Drug/food interactions | Unlikely | 0.456 | 0.053 | 0.000 | 0.886 | 0.000 | 21 |
| Likely* | 0.000 |
Part-worth utility coefficients (B) and variation within part-worth utility coefficients (SD) of attribute levels of convenience of AF therapy
AF atrial fibrillation, SD standard deviation, SE standard error
*Reference level. Higher part-worth utility indicates higher preference for this level
Patient preference patterns for attributes of convenience (latent class analysis)
| Class size | Class 1 (%) | Class 2 (%) | Class 3 (%) | Class 4 (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| sClass 1 (strong) | 25 | 9 | 7 | 3 | 44 | |
| sClass 2 (weak) | 32 | 11 | 9 | 4 | 56 | |
| Total | 57 | 20 | 16 | 7 | 100 |
sClass number of scale class
| The most important attributes of anti-coagulation therapy are the need for monitoring and intake frequency. |
| Preferences for anti-coagulation therapy in patients with atrial fibrillation differed between patients from the UK, Spain, Germany, France, and Italy, between men and woman, and between current users of vitamin K antagonists and direct-acting oral anti-coagulants. |
| Similar covariates that explained heterogeneity in preferences were identified with the latent class analysis and mixed logit analysis. |