| Literature DB >> 35193653 |
Gwenda Simons1, Joshua Caplan2, Rachael L DiSantostefano3, Jorien Veldwijk4,5,6, Matthias Englbrecht7, Karin Schölin Bywall8, Ulrik Kihlbom8, Karim Raza2,9,10, Marie Falahee2.
Abstract
Treatments used for rheumatoid arthritis (RA) are under investigation for their efficacy to prevent RA in at risk groups. It is therefore important to understand treatment preferences of those at risk. We systematically reviewed quantitative preference studies of drugs to treat, or prevent RA, to inform the design of further studies and trials of RA prevention. Stated preference studies for RA treatment or prevention were identified through a search of five databases. Study characteristics and results were extracted, and the relative importance of different types of treatment attributes was compared across populations. Twenty three studies were included 20 of RA treatments (18 of patients; 2 of the general public) and 3 prevention studies with first-degree relatives (FDRs). Benefits, risks, administration method and cost (when included) were important determinants of treatment choice. A benefit was more important than a risk attribute in half of the studies of RA treatment that included a benefit attribute and 2/3 studies of RA prevention. There was variability in the relative importance of attributes across the few prevention studies. In studies with non-patient participants, attributes describing confidence in treatment effectiveness/safety were more important determinants of choice than in studies with patients. Most preference studies relating to RA are of treatments for established RA. Few studies examine preferences for treatments to prevent RA. Given intense research focus on RA prevention, additional preference studies in this context are needed. Variation in treatment preferences across different populations is not well understood and direct comparisons are needed.Entities:
Keywords: Attributes; Preventive treatment; Rheumatoid arthritis; Systematic review; Treatment preferences
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35193653 PMCID: PMC8862509 DOI: 10.1186/s13075-021-02707-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arthritis Res Ther ISSN: 1478-6354 Impact factor: 5.156
Extracted information
| Information extracted for each source (where available) | |
|---|---|
| • Full reference of publication | |
| • Study objective | |
| • Stated preference methodology | |
| • Number and type of participants (patient, FDR or member of the public) | |
| • Participant characteristics and inclusion criteria | |
| • Country the study took place in | |
| • Description of attributes and attribute levels | |
| • Absolute rank order of relative importance of the attributes | |
| • Basis for attribute selection and presentation | |
| • Involvement of stakeholders in selection of attributes |
Fig. 1Study selection results
Overview included studies including PREFS assessment
| Source | Method | Participants | Country | PREFS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1) Alten et al. [ | Best-Worst scaling | 1588 RA patients | Germany | 3 |
| 2) Augustovski et al. [ | DCE | 240 RA patients | Argentina | 3 |
| 3) Bywall et al. [ | DCE | 358 patients with RA | Sweden | 4 |
| 4) Constantinescu et al. [ | Conjoint analysis | 136 RA patients | USA | 4 |
| 5) Díaz-Torné et al. [ | DCE | 137 RA patients | Spain | 3 |
| 6) Fraenkel et al. [ | Conjoint analysis | 120 RA patients | USA | 3 |
| 7) Fraenkel et al. [ | Conjoint analysis | 156 RA patients | USA | 3 |
| 8) Fraenkel et al. [ | Conjoint analysis | 1273 RA patients | USA & Puerto Rico | 4 |
| 9) Hazlewood et al. [ | DCE | 152 Early RA patients | Canada | 5 |
| 10) Ho et al. [ | DCE | RA patients | Australia | 4 |
| 11) Husni et al. [ | DCE | 510 RA Patients | USA | 4 |
| 12) Louder et al. [ | Conjoint analysis | 380 RA patients | USA | 5 |
| 13) Nolla et al. [ | Conjoint analysis | 165 RA patients | Spain | 3 |
| 14) Ozdemir et al. [ | DCE | 463 RA patients (233 Cheap-talk and 230 Control) | USA | 3 |
| 15) Poulos et al. [ | Conjoint Analysis | 836 RA patients | USA | 5 |
| 16) Scalone et al. [ | DCE | 174 RA patients | Italy | 3 |
| 17) Skjoldborg et al. [ | DCE | 178 RA patients (145 survey 2; 130 survey 3) | Denmark | 4 |
| 18) van Heuckelum et al. [ | DCE | 325 RA patients | The Netherlands | 4 |
| 19) Bansback et al. [ | DCE | 2663 General population asked to imagine they have RA | Canada | 4 |
| 20) Harrison et al. [ | DCE | 733 General population asked to imagine they have RA | Canada | 4 |
| 21) Finckh et al. [ | Best worst scaling | 32 FDRs | Switzerland | 4 |
| 22) Harrison et al. [ | DCE | 288 FDRs | USA | 4 |
| 23) Harrison et al. [ | DCE | 30 FDRs 78 RA patients | Canada | 4 |
Method of attribute selection
| Source | Method of attribute selection | Stakeholder involvementa |
|---|---|---|
| 1 [ | Review of existing literature and/or other sources, and qualitative research | Yes |
| 2 [ | Review of existing literature or other sources, expert opinion and qualitative research | Yes |
| 3 [ | Review of existing literature or other sources, expert opinion and qualitative research | Yes |
| 4 [ | Review of existing literature and/or other sources | No |
| 5 [ | Review of existing literature and/or other sources, expert opinion, and qualitative research | Yes |
| 6 [ | Review of existing literature and/ or other sources | No |
| 7 [ | Review of existing literature and/or other sources, and review of selected attributes by clinicians and stakeholders | Yes |
| 8 [ | Review of existing literature and/or other sources, and review of selected attributes by clinicians and stakeholders | Yes |
| 9 [ | Expert opinion and qualitative research | Yes |
| 10 [ | Review of existing literature and/or other sources and qualitative research | Yes |
| 11 [ | Review of existing literature and/or other sources, and review of selected attributes by clinicians and stakeholders | Yes |
| 12 [ | Review of existing literature and/or other sources | No |
| 13 [ | Review of existing literature and/or other sources | No |
| 14 [ | Review of existing literature and/or other sources and qualitative research | Yes |
| 15 [ | Review of existing literature and/or other sources | RA patients were involved in pre-testing only |
| 16 [ | Review of existing literature and/or other sources and qualitative research | Yes |
| 17 [ | Review of existing literature and/or other sources | No |
| 18 [ | Review of existing literature or other sources, expert opinion and qualitative research | Yes |
| 19 [ | Review of existing literature and/or other sources and qualitative research | Yes |
| 20 [ | Review of existing literature and/or other sources and qualitative research | Yes |
| 21 [ | Review of existing literature and/or other sources and qualitative research | Yes |
| 22 [ | Review of existing literature and/or other sources, expert opinion and qualitative research [ | Yes |
| 23 [ | Review of existing literature and/or other sources, expert opinion and qualitative research [ | Yes |
aStakeholders: RA patients in RA treatment studies, FDRs in preventive treatment studies
Order of relative importance
| Source | Order of relative importance attributes (type of attribute) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 [ | (1) Route of administration (TA); (2) combination therapy (O); (3) frequency of administration (TA); (4) possible side effects (R); and (5) time till onset drug effect (B) | ||
| 2 [ | (1) Cost per month (C); (2) general adverse events (R); (3) frequency of administration (TA); (4) efficacy patient global assessment (B); (5) route of administration (TA); (6) local adverse events (R); and (7) serious infection (R) | ||
| 3 [ | (1) Treatment effectiveness (B); (2) severe side effects (R); (3) psychological side effects (R); (4) route of administration (TA); (5) frequency of administration (TA); (6) side effects changing appearance (R); and (7) mild side effects (R) | ||
| 4 [ | (1) Risk of cancer (R); (2) likelihood of remission (B); (3) risk of lung injury (R); (4) route of administration (TA); (5) likelihood of symptoms improving (B); (6) likelihood of arresting radiographic progression (B); (7) risk of injection reaction (R); (8) risk of tuberculosis (R); (9) risk of neurologic disease or heart failure (R); and (10) reversible adverse events (R) | (1) Likelihood of remission (B); (2) likelihood of arresting radiographic progression (B); (3) likelihood of symptoms improving (B); (4) risk of cancer (R); (5) risk of lung injury (R); (6) route of administration (TA); (7) risk of injection reaction (R); (8) risk of neurologic disease or heart failure (R); (9) reversible adverse events (R.); and (10) risk of tuberculosis (R) | |
| 5 [ | (1) Time with optimal quality of life (B); (2) mode of administration (TA); (3) onset of treatment action (B); (4) probability of severe adverse events (R); (5) monthly co-pay (C); (6) substantial Improvement in symptoms (B); and (7) Probability of mild adverse events (R) | ||
| 6 [ | (1) Less common, but serious AE (R; separate attributes: kidney damage/liver damage/cancer/lung damage); (2) common, but reversible AE (R; separate attributes: alopecia/oral ulcers/nausea/injection reaction/rash/diarrhoea); (3) route and frequency of administration (TA); (4) drug onset (B); (5) monthly co-pay (C); (6) physician experience (O); (7) chance of benefit (B) and (8) no new bone damage at year1 (B) | ||
| 7 [ | |||
| 8 [ | (1) Cost (C); (2) bothersome side effects (R); (3) very rare side effects (R); (4) onset of action (B); (5) serious infection (R); (6) route of administration (TA); and (7) amount of information available (O) | ||
| 9 [ | (1) Major symptom improvement by 6 month (B); (2) reduction in chance of serious joint damage (B); (4) route and frequency of administration (TA); (5) small risk of serious infection/possible increased risk of cancer (R); (6) stopping due to side effect by 6 months (R); (7) lung/liver reaction (O); (8) alcohol restriction (O); and (9) eye screening (O) | ||
| 10 [ | |||
(1) Efficacy (B); (2) slowing of disease progression (B); (3) mild-moderate side effects (R); and (4) nurse support (O) | (1) Efficacy (B); (2) slowing of disease progression (B); (3) mild-moderate side effects (R); (4) nurse support (O); and (5) serious side effects (R) | (1) Efficacy (B); (2) slowing of disease progression (B); (3) mild-moderate side effects (R); (4) frequency of administration (TA); (5) serious side effects (R); and (6) nurse support (O) | |
| 11 [ | (1) Improvement in physical function (B); (2) reduction in pain (B); (3) reduction in number of swollen joints (B); (4) route of administration (TA); (5) risk of cancer (R); (6) monthly co-pay (C); (7) frequency of administration (TA); (8) abnormal lab results (R); and (9) risk of serious infection (R) | ||
| 12 [ | (1) Route of administration (TA); (2) frequency of administration (TA); (3) serious adverse events (R); (4) monthly co-pay (C); (5) medication burden (O); (6) joint pain reduction (B); and (7) daily task improvement (B) | ||
| 13 [ | (1) Pain relief and improvement in functional capacity (B); (2) risk of adverse events (R); (3) route of administration (TA); and (4) duration of effect (B) | ||
| 14 [ | |||
| 15 [ | (1) Immediate serious reaction (R); (2) medication working well (B); (3) frequency of administration (TA); (4) time for infusion (TA); (5) immediate mild reaction (R); and (6) route of administration (TA) | ||
| 16 [ | (1) Frequency of reactions at the site of drug administration (R); (2) additional costs through taxes (C); (3) manner, helpfulness, efficiency and courtesy of health personnel (O); (4) generalised undesired reactions or allergic reactions (R); (5) Route and place of administration (T); and (6) frequency of administration (TA) | ||
| 17 [ | |||
| 18 [ | |||
| 19 [ | (1) How many people receiving the drug are likely to feel better within 6 months (B); (2) route and duration of administration (TA); (3) life-expectancy (B)c; (4) minor side effects (R); (5) frequency of administration (TA); and (6) serious side effect: number of people have to stop medication (R) | ||
| 20 [ | (1) How many people receiving the drug are likely to feel better within 6 months (B); (2) confidence in risk/benefit estimates (O); (3) serious side effect: number of people have to stop medication (R); (4) route of administration (TA); and (6) frequency of administration (TA) | ||
| 21 [ | (1) Reduction in RA risk (B); (2) risk of SAE (R); (3) mild AE (R); and (4) mode of administration (TA) | ||
| 22 [ | (1) Route of administration (TA); (2) reduction in RA risk (B); (3) health care professional preference (O); (4) chance of side effects (R); and (5) certainty in evidence (O) | ||
| 23 [ | |||
Type of attribute: risk (R), benefit (B), treatment administration (TA), cost (C), or other (O); IV intravenous infusion
a Attribute order of importance not available
b It was not possible to establish the order of importance for the RA patients alone, so results presented are for the whole sample (RA, AS and PsA). Further as the model used was a restricted latent class model with parameters that were non-significant in the preliminary models restricted to zero, they are not reported here as they were deemed not to impact on preferences
c Life expectancy was assumed to be linear over the 4-year range in the study