Donohue Julie M, Berndt Ernst R, Rosenthal Meredith, Epstein Arnold M, Frank Richard G
Department of Health Policy and Management, University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15261, USA.
Med Care. 2004 Dec;42(12):1176-85. doi: 10.1097/00005650-200412000-00004.
We sought to examine the impact of direct-to-consumer advertising (DTCA) and pharmaceutical promotion to physicians on the likelihood that (1) an individual diagnosed with depression received antidepressant medication and that (2) antidepressant medication was used for the appropriate duration.
A quasiexperimental design was used to examine treatment patterns of 30,621 depressed individuals whose insurance claims were included in the MarketScan database from 1997 through 2000. The main explanatory variables were spending on DTCA, detailing to physicians, and free samples for 6 antidepressant medications.
Individuals diagnosed with depression during periods when class-level antidepressant DTCA spending was highest (cumulative spending more than US 18.5 million dollars) had 32% higher relative odds of initiating medication therapy compared with those diagnosed during periods when DTCA spending was lowest (P < 0.0001). Free samples of medications dispensed to physicians had no effect on odds of initiating antidepressant use. Class-level DTCA spending on antidepressants had a small positive effect on the duration of antidepressant use, whereas DTCA spending for the specific medication taken by an individual had no effect on treatment duration. Detailing spending at the class or product level had no significant effect on duration of treatment with an antidepressant medication.
Our results suggest that DTCA of antidepressants was associated with an increase in the number of people diagnosed with depression who initiated medication therapy. DTCA was associated with a small increase in the number of individuals treated with antidepressants who received the appropriate duration of therapy. Promotion to physicians was not associated with either the initiation of treatment with an antidepressant or with the duration of therapy.
我们试图研究直接面向消费者的广告(DTCA)以及针对医生的药品推广对以下情况可能性的影响:(1)被诊断为抑郁症的个体接受抗抑郁药物治疗;(2)抗抑郁药物的使用时长是否合适。
采用准实验设计,研究1997年至2000年期间保险理赔信息纳入MarketScan数据库的30621名抑郁症患者的治疗模式。主要解释变量包括DTCA支出、面向医生的药品推广活动以及6种抗抑郁药物的免费样品。
在抗抑郁药物DTCA支出处于最高水平(累计支出超过1850万美元)的时期被诊断为抑郁症的个体,开始药物治疗的相对几率比DTCA支出最低时期被诊断的个体高32%(P<0.0001)。分发给医生的免费药品样品对开始使用抗抑郁药物的几率没有影响。抗抑郁药物的类水平DTCA支出对抗抑郁药物的使用时长有较小的正向影响,而个体所服用特定药物的DTCA支出对治疗时长没有影响。类水平或产品水平的推广活动支出对抗抑郁药物的治疗时长没有显著影响。
我们的结果表明,抗抑郁药物的DTCA与开始药物治疗的抑郁症患者数量增加有关。DTCA与接受适当治疗时长的抗抑郁药物治疗的个体数量略有增加有关。针对医生的推广活动与抗抑郁药物治疗的开始或治疗时长均无关。