| Literature DB >> 32547732 |
William Ferguson1, Lesley Clapshaw2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The antidepressant venlafaxine has been available in New Zealand for two decades and is funded by the New Zealand Drug Purchasing Agency PHARMAC. This audit aimed to determine whether change to a different funded generic formulation of venlafaxine affected patient responses to venlafaxine.Entities:
Keywords: depression; generic; mental health outcomes; real-world; venlafaxine
Year: 2020 PMID: 32547732 PMCID: PMC7273550 DOI: 10.1177/2045125320927309
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ther Adv Psychopharmacol ISSN: 2045-1253
Figure 1.Patient disposition. Of the 15 patients identified, 1 had no prior treatment with antidepressants before initiation of venlafaxine, 3 patients had been previously exposed to one antidepressant, 6 patients had been trialled on two other antidepressants, and 5 patients had been treated with three to five prior antidepressants (Table 1). In the audit sample, 12 patients were stable and well on ‘Efexor XR’ and 3 on ‘Arrow-Venlafaxine XR’ before receiving ‘Enlafax XR’. Patients were receiving a daily dose of venlafaxine ranging from 37.5 mg to 225 mg (average daily dose was 167.5 mg; Table 1).
Patients who had experienced a stable positive clinical response to either of the two previously funded venlafaxine brands and who were switched to the newly funded brand and were included in the audit.
| Patient | Age (years)[ | Brand and daily dose prior to change | Prior antidepressant treatment | Duration of treatment pre-switch (months) | Pre-switch treatment effective? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male 1 | 54 | Efexor XR 225 mg | 72 | Yes | |
| Male 2 | 50 | Arrow-Venlafaxine XR 187.5 mg | Amitriptyline, citalopram | 14 | Yes |
| Male 3 | 52 | Efexor XR 225 mg | Fluoxetine | 108 | Yes |
| Female 1 | 36 | Efexor XR 75 mg | Escitalopram, bupropion | 50 | Yes |
| Male 4 | 31 | Efexor XR 225 mg | Fluoxetine, nortriptyline, citalopram | 93 | Partial response[ |
| Male 5 | 72 | Efexor XR 150 mg | Citalopram, escitalopram | 80 | Partial response |
| Female 2 | 61 | Efexor XR 150 mg | Paroxetine, citalopram, fluoxetine | 112 | Yes |
| Male 6 | 26 | Efexor 225 mg | Methylphenidate, citalopram | Unknown | Yes |
| Male 7 | 26 | Arrow-Venlafaxine XR 75 mg | Methylphenidate, venlafaxine, nortriptyline, escitalopram, mirtazepine | 4 | Yes |
| Male 8 | 58 | Efexor XR 150 mg | Citalopram, nortriptyline | 85 | Yes |
| Female 3 | 23 | Arrow-Venlafaxine XR 37.5 mg | Fluoxetine, mirtazapine | unknown | Yes |
| Female 4 | 51 | Efexor XR 150 mg | Paroxetine | 76 | Yes |
| Male 9 | 53 | Efexor XR 225 mg | Paroxetine, nortriptyline, citalopram | unknown | Yes |
| Female 5 | 33 | Efexor XR 112.5 mg | Bupropion | 1 | Yes |
| Female 6 | 50 | Efexor XR 300 mg | Fluoxetine, nortriptyline, citalopram, venlafaxine | 134 | Yes |
Age at the time of review of medical records (3 October 2018).
The patient was responding to venlafaxine but experienced a reactive depression following the death of a close relative. Recovery from this episode was occurring during the lead-in period prior to switching to the newly funded brand.
Clinical response of patients since commencement the newly funded brand of venlafaxine, initiated at the pre-switch daily dose.
| Patient | Age (years)[ | Was replacement venlafaxine effective? | Duration of replacement venlafaxine treatment (weeks) | Comment since the change |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male 1 | 54 | No | 50 | Episodes of low moods every 3 weeks, increased irritability; no change with dose increase |
| Male 2 | 50 | No | 18 | A few low days |
| Male 3 | 52 | Yes | 68 | Didn’t notice any change |
| Female 1 | 36 | No | 21 | Feels down, low days, more easily stressed |
| Male 4 | 31 | No | 13 | Very low, feels angry and volatile, increased anxiety and fear |
| Male 5 | 72 | Yes | 24 | No change evident[ |
| Female 2 | 61 | No | 54 | Feels very tired, increasing depression since switching |
| Male 6 | 26 | No | 70 | Not as effective |
| Male 7 | 26 | No | 18 | Doesn’t feel new formulation is working |
| Male 8 | 58 | No | 21 | Not so good, needing to sleep more again |
| Female 3 | 23 | Yes | 49 | Probably not a significant change[ |
| Female 4 | 51 | No | 66 | More depressed |
| Male 9 | 53 | No | 12 | More irritable, more anxious, not sleeping so well |
| Female 5 | 33 | No | 5 | Drop in mood, still unhappy with increased dose, feels she is back where she was at the start; drinking more |
| Female 6 | 50 | No | 72 | Mood dropped since generic, anxiety got worse |
Age at the time of review of medical records (3 October 2018).
Despite no change in efficacy following the switch to the newly funded brand of venlafaxine, the patient chose to change back to the original brand of venlafaxine for the remainder of the 60-week follow up without further change in clinical response.
The patient changed back to the original brand of venlafaxine at 49 weeks because of a dip in mood that could not be directly attributed to the earlier switch in venlafaxine brand. The patient stabilised for the remainder of the 65-week follow up.
Temporal information regarding the prescription of venlafaxine in patients who had a poor response to the replacement funded venlafaxine and patient perceptions of the replacement brand.
| Patient | Date ‘Enlafax XR’ prescribed | Date loss of efficacy reported in patient notes | Approximate time to detection of change in efficacy
by patient[ | Patient awareness of adverse publicity to change in venlafaxine brand | Patient concerns regarding change in venlafaxine brand |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male 1 | 25 May 2017 | 17 October 2017 | 5 months | No | No |
| Male 2 | 7 June 2017 | 4 October 2017 | 4 months | No | No |
| Female 1 | 12 September 2017 | 11 December 2017 | 3 months | No | No |
| Male 4 | 8 May 2017 | 12 August 2017 | 2 months | No | No |
| Female 2 | 19 September 2017 | 13 March 2018 | ⩽1 month | No | Yes |
| Male 6 | 30 May 2017 | 13 November 2017 | ⩽1 month | No | No |
| Male 7 | 16 June 2017 | 24 October 2017 | 2 months | No | No |
| Male 8 | 14 June 2017 | 13 November 2017 | 2–3 months | No | No |
| Female 4 | 20 June 2017 | 25 September 2018 | ⩽3 months | No | No |
| Male 9 | 13 July 2017 | 4 October 2017 | ⩽3 months | No | No |
| Female 5 | 16 June 2017 | 26 June 2017 | ⩽2 weeks | No reply | No reply |
| Female 6 | 12 May 2017 | 20 October 2017 | ⩽1–2 Months | No | No |
Time from first dose of replacement brand venlafaxine.
Results for patients who had a poor response to the replacement funded venlafaxine.
| Patient | Brand at the end of audit | Daily dose | Duration of follow up on final venlafaxine brand (weeks) | Duration of follow up post-switch to replacement funded venlafaxine (weeks) | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male 1 | Enlafax XR | 225 mg | 50 | 54[ | Restricted by cost. Would prefer to switch to Efexor XR as had experienced immediate improvement when initiated on that formulation |
| Male 2 | Efexor XR | 150 mg | 46 | 64 | All good; no problems |
| Female 1 | Efexor XR | 75 mg | 42 | 63 | Mentally very good |
| Male 4 | Efexor XR | 225 mg | 60 | 73 | Doing quite well |
| Female 2 | Efexor XR | 150 mg | 29 | 54 | Mental health good |
| Male 6 | Enlafax XR | 225 mg | 70 | 70 | Not as effective; restricted by cost |
| Male 7 | Efexor XR | 75 mg | 51 | 69 | Felt better overnight |
| Male 8 | Efexor XR | 150 mg | 47 | 68 | Feel less tired, happy with switch back and wants to stick to it |
| Female 4 | Efexor XR | 150 mg | 4 | 70 | Noticed positive change since switching back: ‘know I am not losing my mind’ |
| Male 9 | Efexor XR | 150 mg | 51 | 63 | Helped him, happy with how his management had gone; no overt side effects |
| Female 5 | Efexor XR | 150 mg | 15 | 20 | Better |
| Female 6 | Enlafax XR | 300 mg | 72 | 72 | Dose increased to 300 mg to manage symptoms |
It appears that the patient did not collect the final venlafaxine prescription, as per the audit.