| Literature DB >> 33064273 |
Jennifer K Quint1, Caroline O'Leary2, Alessandra Venerus2, Melissa Myland2, Ulf Holmgren3, Precil Varghese4, Hartmut Richter5, Geoffray Bizouard6, Claudia Cabrera7,8.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Maintenance treatment strategies in COPD recommend inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) + long-acting muscarinic antagonist (LAMA) + long-acting β2-agonist (LABA) triple therapy after initial dual therapy. Little is known about how treatment pathways to triple therapy vary across countries in clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: Adherence; Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; Patient pathways; Real-world; Retrospective study; Stepping down; Treatment initiation; Triple therapy
Year: 2020 PMID: 33064273 PMCID: PMC7672143 DOI: 10.1007/s41030-020-00132-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pulm Ther ISSN: 2364-1754
Baseline characteristics for study populations across countries
| Characteristic | UK ( | Germany (GPs, | Germany (pneumologists, | Italy ( | France ( | Australia ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age at COPD diagnosis, years | ||||||
| Mean (SD) | 64.7 (10.6) | 65.9 (11.4) | 63.4 (10.4) | 69.8 (9.9) | 63.9 (11.6) | 66.7 (11.5) |
| Median (IQR) | 64.8 (57.4–72.4) | 67.0 (58.0–74.0) | 64.0 (56.0–71.0) | 71.0 (64.0–77.0) | 64.0 (55.0–73.0) | 67.0 (59.0–75.0) |
| Gender (male), | 43,889 (53.3) | 12,158 (54.8) | 3773 (55.4) | 6657 (63.8) | 4235 (65.0) | 1263 (51.0) |
| Comorbidities,a
| ||||||
| Cardiovascular disease | 55,076 (66.9) | 16,267 (73.3) | 1851 (27.2) | 7208 (69.0) | 3582 (55.0) | 285 (11.5) |
| Atrial fibrillation | 6711 (8.2) | 3311 (14.9) | 206 (3.0) | 990 (9.5) | 376 (5.8) | 37 (1.5) |
| Heart failure | 7216 (8.8) | 5359 (24.2) | 263 (3.9) | 847 (8.1) | 417 (6.4) | 42 (1.7) |
| Depression/anxiety | 30,810 (37.4) | 6357 (28.7) | 174 (2.6) | 1168 (11.2) | 2687 (41.3) | 118 (4.8) |
| Osteoporosis | 6519 (7.9) | 3294 (14.9) | 212 (3.1) | 1808 (17.3) | 532 (8.2) | 29 (1.2) |
| Diabetes | 11,978 (14.6) | 5175 (23.3) | 264 (3.9) | 1176 (11.3) | 1027 (15.8) | 50 (2.0) |
| Gastroesophageal reflux disease | 18,846 (22.9) | 5180 (23.4) | 463 (6.8) | 1903 (18.2) | 1483 (22.8) | 135 (5.5) |
| BMI (closest value to COPD diagnosis) | ||||||
| | 79,564 (96.7) | 7964 (35.9) | 1283 (18.8) | 7948 (76.1) | 3974 (61.0) | 1124 (45.4) |
| Mean (SD) | 27.1 (6.3) | 28.5 (6.5) | 28.2 (5.9) | 27.9 (5.3) | 27.0 (6.0) | 28.2 (7.1) |
| Median (IQR) | 26.3 (22.7–30.5) | 27.8 (24.2–31.9) | 27.5 (24.2–31.4) | 27.4 (24.4–30.7) | 26.3 (23.0–30.1) | 27.0 (23.0–32.0) |
| Phenotype (asthma), | ||||||
| Asthmatic | 18,800 (22.8) | 7271 (32.8) | 2503 (36.7) | 1083 (10.4) | 2364 (36.3) | 883 (35.6) |
| Non-asthmatic | 63,500 (77.2) | 14,907 (67.2) | 4313 (63.3) | 9360 (89.6) | 4150 (63.7) | 1595 (64.4) |
| Age at first triple therapy, years | ||||||
| Mean (SD) | 69.0 (10.6) | 69.2 (11.2) | 66.8 (10.5) | 72.5 (9.9) | 65.5 (11.8) | 67.7 (11.7) |
| Median (IQR) | 69.5 (61.8–76.8) | 70.0 (61.0–78.0) | 68.0 (59.0–75.0) | 74.0 (66.0–80.0) | 66.0 (57.0–75.0) | 68.0 (60.0–77.0) |
| Follow-up period, months | ||||||
| Mean (SD) | 46.6 (33.2) | 39.8 (30.3) | 35.6 (27.3) | 55.0 (37.4) | 47.8 (33.3) | 44.3 (31.5) |
| Median (IQR) | 40.0 (19.3–68.4) | 32.6 (16.1–55.9) | 28.5 (15.0–49.1) | 49.8 (22.5–83.6) | 42.8 (18.2–72.5) | 38.3 (18.2–65.3) |
| Initiation of triple therapy, | ||||||
| Before COPD diagnosis | 6787 (8.2) | 2109 (9.5) | 377 (5.5) | 1604 (15.4) | 1052 (16.2) | 342 (13.8) |
| At COPD diagnosis | 4641 (5.6) | 1481 (6.7) | 356 (5.2) | 457 (4.4) | 1164 (17.9) | 589 (23.8) |
| After COPD diagnosis | 70,872 (86.1) | 18,588 (83.8) | 6083 (89.2) | 8382 (80.3) | 4298 (66.0) | 1547 (62.4) |
BMI body mass index, COPD chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, GP general practitioner, IQR inter-quartile range, SD standard deviation
aProportions reflect those with non-missing values
Time to triple therapy, duration of triple therapy, and adherence to triple therapy
| Variable | UK ( | Germany (GPs, | Germany (pneumologists, | Italy ( | France ( | Australia ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Time to triple therapy, monthsa | ||||||
| | 70,872 (86.1) | 18,588 (83.8) | 6083 (89.2) | 8382 (80.3) | 4298 (66.0) | 1547 (62.4) |
| Mean (SD) | 60.9 (63.1) | 48.6 (47.7) | 46.5 (38.2) | 46.1 (37.1) | 36.1 (32.7) | 26.0 (27.3) |
| 95% CI | 60.4–61.3 | 47.9–49.3 | 45.6–47.5 | 45.3–46.9 | 35.1–37.1 | 24.6–27.3 |
| Median (IQR) | 42.5 (13.9–87.4) | 33.6 (14.6–66.7) | 35.4 (19.3–62.7) | 36.4 (15.8–69.3) | 26.2 (11.4–52.6) | 16.9 (5.7–36.2) |
| Duration of triple therapy, monthsb (Kaplan–Meier estimates) | ||||||
| Events, | 48,616 (59.1) | 17,751 (80.0) | 5526 (81.1) | 8865 (84.9) | 5137 (78.9) | 2028 (81.8) |
| Censored,c
| 33,684 (40.9) | 4427 (20.0) | 1290 (18.9) | 1578 (15.1) | 1377 (21.1) | 450 (18.2) |
| Median (95% CI) | 18.2 (17.8–18.5) | 3.6 (3.5–3.7) | 2.7 (2.6–2.8) | 2.7 (2.6–2.9) | 4.7 (4.4–5.0) | 5.9 (5.9–5.9) |
| IQR | 3.5–86.9 | 1.4–13.5 | 1.3–9.8 | 1.0–11.1 | 1.3–18.2 | 4.2–13.9 |
| Adherence to triple therapy, measured as proportion of days covered, % | ||||||
| Mean (SD) | 81.8 (15.5) | 93.8 (9.6) | 90.2 (13.0) | 88.4 (14.3) | 91.1 (13.5) | 96.6 (6.7) |
| 95% CI | 81.7–81.9 | 93.7–93.9 | 89.9–90.5 | 88.1–88.7 | 90.7–91.4 | 96.3–96.9 |
| Median (IQR) | 84.4 (70.5–95.7) | 99.0 (90.8–100.0) | 98.5 (82.5–100.0) | 93.7 (81.0–100.0) | 99.2 (86.1–100.0) | 100.0 (95.7–100.0) |
CI confidence interval, COPD chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, GP general practitioner, IQR inter-quartile range, SD standard deviation
aOnly includes patients with index date after COPD diagnosis
bPatients who stepped down or discontinued triple therapy during the study period
cPatients who remained on triple therapy until they finished the study
Most frequently recorded treatment pathways prior to triple therapy in each country
| Pathway, | UK ( | Germany (GPs, | Germany (pneumologists, | Italy ( | France ( | Australia ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ICS + LABA | 21,042 (27.9) | 6065 (30.2) | 1759 (27.3) | 2794 (31.6) | 1539 (28.2) | 514 (24.1) |
| LAMA | 9882 (13.1) | 2529 (12.6) | 559 (8.7) | 633 (7.2) | 558 (10.2) | 490 (22.9) |
| No previous therapy | 9139 (12.1) | 3885 (19.4) | 1504 (23.4) | 1593 (18.0) | 1773 (32.5) | 810 (37.9) |
| ICS → ICS + LABA | 7734 (10.2) | 456 (2.3) | 83 (1.3) | 346 (3.9) | 97 (1.8) | – |
| ICS | 1929 (2.6) | 326 (1.6) | – | 350 (4.0) | 70 (1.3) | – |
| ICS + LABA → LAMA | 1691 (2.2) | 512 (2.6) | 160 (2.5) | 225 (2.6) | 113 (2.1) | 54 (2.5) |
| LABA → ICS + LABA | 1639 (2.2) | 469 (2.3) | 110 (1.7) | 182 (2.1) | 74 (1.4) | – |
| ICS → ICS + LAMA | 1586 (2.1) | – | – | – | – | – |
| LAMA → ICS + LABA | 1055 (1.4) | 413 (2.1) | 146 (2.3) | 107 (1.2) | 66 (1.2) | 78 (3.7) |
| ICS → ICS + LABA → ICS → ICS + LABA | 883 (1.2) | – | – | – | – | – |
| LAMA → LABA + LAMA | 792 (1.0) | 239 (1.2) | 72 (1.1) | – | – | – |
| ICS + LAMA | 760 (1.0) | – | – | – | – | – |
| ICS + LABA → ICS → ICS + LABA | – | – | – | 159 (1.8) | 53 (1.0) | – |
| LABA → LABA + LAMA | – | 269 (1.3) | 64 (1.0) | – | – | – |
| LABA | – | 328 (1.6) | 90 (1.4) | 115 (1.3) | 52 (1.0) | – |
| LABA + LAMA | – | 463 (2.3) | 215 (3.3) | – | 143 (2.6) | – |
| ICS + LABA → LABA → ICS + LABA | – | – | – | 117 (1.3) | – | – |
| Other | 17,381 (23.0) | 4663 (23.2) | 1677 (26.0) | 2218 (25.1) | 924 (16.9) | 190 (8.9) |
Only patients whose first instance of triple therapy was on or after COPD diagnosis were included, and only the period on and after COPD diagnosis was considered
Short-acting bronchodilators were omitted from the treatment pathways
Pathways with ≥ 1% of patients in each respective country were reported; ‘–’ reflects pathways occupied by < 1% of patients in that country (these patients are included in the ‘Other’ row, along with pathways reported by < 1% of patients in all countries and are therefore not listed in the table)
COPD chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, GP general practitioner, ICS inhaled corticosteroids, LABA long-acting β2-agonist, LAMA long-acting muscarinic antagonist
Fig. 1Treatment pathways across countries. Only patients whose first instance of triple therapy was on or after COPD diagnosis were included, and only the period on and after COPD diagnosis was considered. Short-acting bronchodilators were omitted from the treatment pathways. Column width reflects the number of patients from each country. aPathways with ≥ 1%–2.5% of patients in each country. bPathways with < 1% of patients in each country. GP general practitioner, ICS inhaled corticosteroids, LABA long-acting β2-agonist, LAMA long-acting muscarinic antagonist
Fig. 2Proportion of patients occupying the pathway of a no treatment, b ICS/LABA, and c LAMA only prior to triple therapy. Open/unfilled diamonds indicate pooled estimates across countries. Values on the right represent the proportion of patients occupying the pathway of interest in each country. GP general practitioner, ICS inhaled corticosteroids, LABA long-acting β2-agonist, LAMA long-acting muscarinic antagonist
Most frequent pathways following step down from triple therapy
| Pathway, | UK ( | Germany (GPs, | Germany (pneumologists, | Italy ( | France ( | Australia ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ICS + LABA | 5120 (6.2%) | 9145 (41.2%) | 2972 (43.6%) | 3112 (29.8%) | 943 (14.5%) | 613 (24.7%) |
| LAMA | 9301 (11.3%) | 4270 (19.3%) | 916 (13.4%) | 1826 (17.5%) | 815 (12.5%) | 613 (24.7%) |
| ICS + LABA + SABA | 14,785 (18.0%) | † | † | 373 (3.6%) | 319 (4.9%) | 185 (7.5%) |
| LAMA + SABA | 10,677 (13.0%) | † | † | 118 (1.1%) | 105 (1.6%) | 116 (4.7%) |
| ICS + LABA + SABA + SAMA | 3144 (3.8%) | † | † | 483 (4.6%) | 136 (2.1%) | 33 (1.3%) |
| LABA + LAMA | – | 1977 (8.9%) | 499 (7.3%) | 496 (4.7%) | 296 (4.5%) | 29 (1.2%) |
| ICS + LAMA | – | 572 (2.6%) | 182 (2.7%) | 235 (2.3%) | 97 (1.5%) | – |
| LABA + LAMA + SABA | 1403 (1.7%) | † | † | – | 74 (1.1%) | – |
| ICS | – | 310 (1.4%) | 189 (2.8%) | – | 72 (1.1%) | – |
| ICS + LAMA + SABA + SAMA | – | † | † | 113 (1.1%) | – | – |
| ICS + LAMA + SABA | 1154 (1.4%) | † | † | – | – | – |
| Censoreda | 33,684 (40.9%) | 4427 (20.0%) | 1290 (18.9%) | 1578 (15.1%) | 1377 (21.1%) | 450 (18.2%) |
| Discontinued | 1107 (1.3%) | 1356 (6.1%) | 722 (10.6%) | 1518 (14.5%) | 2122 (32.6%) | 385 (15.5%) |
Pathways with ≥ 1% of patients in each respective country were reported;—reflects pathways occupied by < 1% of patients in that country
GP general practitioner, ICS inhaled corticosteroids, LABA long-acting β2-agonist, LAMA long-acting muscarinic antagonist
†Represents pathways not recorded in that country
aPatients who remained on triple therapy until they finished the study
| In COPD, escalation to triple therapy is recommended for some patients with inadequate response to dual therapy; however, little is known about how treatment pathways vary across countries in clinical practice. |
| This study aimed to examine the treatment pathways to triple therapy to help inform real-world routine clinical practice across selected European countries and Australia. |
| The three most common maintenance treatment pathways to triple therapy were ICS + LABA, no previous therapy, and LAMA alone. |
| A large number of different pathways were observed both within and across countries. Future research should investigate the factors that influence pathways to triple therapy and disease outcomes related to these choices. |