| Literature DB >> 35411151 |
Fraence Hardtstock1, Julia Krieger1, Thomas Wilke1, Marco Lukas2, Bernhard Ultsch2, Robert Welte2, Renate Quinzler3, Ulf Maywald4, Hartmut Timmermann5.
Abstract
Background: Asthma is one of the most common chronic diseases in Germany. While many patients achieve asthma control under standard therapies, some patients still experience exacerbations and persistent airway obstructions. Thus, further pharmacological treatment is needed, and biologics could fill this gap, as they have shown clinical benefit in patients with severe asthma. Therefore, this real-world study aimed to compare healthcare resource utilization (HCRU) and associated costs before and after biologic therapy initiation.Entities:
Keywords: Germany; biologics; claims data; real-world evidence; treatment pattern
Year: 2022 PMID: 35411151 PMCID: PMC8994596 DOI: 10.2147/JAA.S354062
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Asthma Allergy ISSN: 1178-6965
Figure 1Selection of patients with asthma, starting a biologic therapy.
Baseline Characteristics of Observed Patients
| Patients with Confirmed Asthma N = 388,932 | Asthma Patients Initiating Therapy with Biologics N = 571 | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Mean (SD) | Median | – | 362.89 (23.8) | 365 | |
| 2015 | N (%) | – | 86 (15.06%) |
| 2016 | N (%) | – | 158 (27.67%) |
| 2017 | N (%) | – | 239 (41.86%) |
| 2018 | N (%) | – | 88 (15.41%)* |
| Mean (SD) | 54.82 (19.56) | 54.86 (13.96) | |
| Median (Min-Max) | 56 (18–105) | 56 (18–90) | |
| Female (%) / Male (%) | 59.47% / 40.53% | 62.70% / 37.30% | |
| N (%) | 8167 (2.10%) | 5 (0.88%) | |
| N (%) | 33,729 (8.67%) | 159 (27.85%) | |
| Urticaria (ICD-10 L50) | N (%) | 7390 (1.90%) | 105 (18.39%) |
| Atopic dermatitis (ICD-10 L20) | N (%) | 27,586 (7.09%) | 80 (14.01%) |
Notes: For patients with confirmed asthma, the index date was set to 1 July 2018. *The inclusion period ended at June 30, 2018.
Figure 2Patient sample by index agent and index date (first prescription).
Medication Prescriptions During 12-Months Baseline and Follow-Up Period
| Number and Percentage of Patients with at Least One Prescription | Mean (SD)/Median Number of Prescriptions per Patient | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Medication | Baseline | Follow-Up | Baseline | Follow-Up |
| 445 (77.93%) | 354 (62.00%) | 2.84 (2.83)/2 | 2.26 (2.77) /1 | |
| Prednisolone | 357 (62.52%) | 280 (49.04%) | – | – |
| Prednisone | 72 (12.61%) | 46 (8.06%) | – | – |
| Methylprednisolone | 71 (12.43%) | 50 (8.76%) | – | – |
| 437 (76.53%) | 346 (60.60%) | 2.75 (2.77)/2 | 2.17 (2.70)/1 | |
| 426 (74.61%) | 449 (78.63%) | 3.07 (2.95)/3 | 3.07 (2.87)/3 | |
| Salmeterol + fluticasone | 159 (27.85%) | 149 (26.09%) | – | – |
| Formoterol + beclomethasone | 130 (22.77%) | 125 (21.89%) | – | – |
| Formoterol + budesonide | 96 (16.81%) | 94 (16.46%) | – | – |
| Formoterol + fluticasone | 80 (14.01%) | 78 (13.66%) | – | – |
| 360 (63.05%) | 335 (58.67%) | 2.58 (3.75)/1 | 2.25 (3.67)/1 | |
| Salbutamol | 298 (52.19%) | 366 (64.10%) | – | – |
| Fenoterol | 76 (13.31%) | 75 (13.13%) | – | – |
| Formoterol | 62 (10.86%) | 47 (8.23%) | – | – |
| 301 (52.71%) | 299 (52.36%) | 1.79 (2.39)/1 | 1.82 (2.34)/1 | |
| Tiotropium bromide | 256 (44.83%) | 256 (44.83%) | – | – |
| Ipratropium bromide | 55 (9.63%) | 30 (5.25%) | – | – |
| 226 (39.58%) | 191 (33.45%) | 0.98 (1.50)/0 | 0.92 (1.58)/0 | |
| Montelukast | 226 (39.58%) | 191 (33.45%) | – | – |
| 158 (27.67%) | 132 (23.12%) | 0.80 (1.85)/0 | 0.75 (1.99)/0 | |
| Budesonide | 104 (18.21%) | 85 (14.89%) | – | – |
| 98 (17.16%) | 85 (14.89%) | 0.62 (1.70)/0 | 0.58 (1.70)/0 | |
| Theophylline | 96 (16.81%) | 84 (14.71%) | – | – |
| 19 (3.33%) | 14 (2.45%) | 0.08 (0.52)/0 | 0.08 (0.66)/0 | |
| 14 (2.45%) | 571 (100%) | 0.06 (0.44)/0 | 6.30 (4.43)/5 | |
OCS Supply During 12-Months Baseline and Follow-Up Period
| Number of Days with Available Medication Supply | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N = 571 Treatment Starter | At Least One Prescription | Baseline | Follow-Up | ||
| N (%) | Mean (SD) | Median | Mean (SD) | Median | |
| Patients who received | 84 (14.71%) | – | – | – | – |
| Patients who received OCS during the baseline | 295 (51.66%) | – | – | – | – |
| I.Less or the same medication supply during the follow-up period | 186 (32.57%) | 332.31 (256.18) | 267 | 167.49 (165.28) | 110 |
| II.More medication supply during the follow-up period | 109 (19.09%) | 188.28 (163.28) | 150 | 364.65 (317.64) | 300 |
| Patients who received OCS only during the baseline period | 142 (24.87%) | 142.53 (139.78) | 100 | – | – |
| Patients who received OCS only during the follow-up period | 50 (8.71%) | – | – | 180.14 (295.73) | 100 |
Hospitalizations and Sick Leave Days During Baseline and Follow-Up Period
| N = 571 Treatment Starter | 12-Month Baseline | 12-Month Follow-Up | p-value |
|---|---|---|---|
| N (%) of patients with at least one hospitalization | 242 (42.38%) | 182 (31.87%) | <0.001 |
| Number of hospitalized days (Mean | SD | Median) | 6.95 | 14.74 | 0 | 5.07 | 13.92 | 0 | <0.001 |
| N (%) of patients with at least one hospitalization | 152 (26.62%) | 75 (13.13%) | <0.001 |
| Number of hospitalized days (Mean | SD | Median) | 4.06 | 11.49 | 0 | 1.90 | 8.34 | 0 | <0.001 |
| N (%) of patients with at least one hospitalization | 97 (16.99%) | 41 (7.18%) | <0.001 |
| Number of hospitalized days (Mean | SD | Median) | 2.06 | 7.25 | 0 | 1.15 | 6.81 | 0 | <0.001 |
| Patients within the working age (defined as age < 64 years) | 456 | 427 | |
| N (%) of patients with at least one sick leave | 230 (50.44%) | 211 (49.41%) | 0.180 |
| Number of sick days of those patients with at least one documented sick leave (Mean | SD | Median) | 68 | 112 | 31 | 54 | 95 | 21 | 0.123 |
| N (%) of patients with at least one sick leave | 128 (28.07%) | 86 (20.14%) | <0.001 |
| Number of sick days of those patients with at least one documented sick leave (Mean | SD | Median) | 73 | 128 | 25 | 73 | 125 | 22 | 0.409 |
Figure 3All-cause healthcare expenditures per patient during 12-month baseline and follow-up period.