D'Souza Anna O, Smith Michael J, Miller Lesley-Ann, Doyle Joseph, Ariely Rinat
Xcenda, LLC, Cincinnati, OH 45255, USA. anna.dsouza @xcenda.com
J Manag Care Pharm. 2008 Apr;14(3):291-301. doi: 10.18553/jmcp.2008.14.3.291.
Pharmacotherapy constitutes an important adjunct to behavioral therapy for the treatment of overactive bladder (OAB). Tolterodine and oxybutynin are commonly prescribed drugs for OAB treatment that exert their beneficial effect by suppressing bladder muscle contractions. However, high discontinuation rates have been observed for these drugs in clinical trials, as well as in real-world settings, in part due to adverse effects. Extended-release (ER) formulations were introduced with an improved tolerability profile over immediate-release (IR) versions of the 2 drugs. No study has compared persistence and adherence to therapy for both the ER and IR versions of tolterodine and oxybutynin.
To compare persistence, adherence, and switch rates for the IR and ER formulations of oxybutynin and tolterodine for patients enrolled in a regional managed care plan.
Study patients were adults (aged e 18 years), with at least 1 pharmacy claim for either tolterodine extended-release (tol-ER), oxybutynin extended-release (oxy-ER), tolterodine immediate-release (tol-IR), or oxybutynin immediate-release (oxy-IR) during the period from July 1, 1999, to December 31, 2003, and were continuously eligible for benefits from 6 months before through 12 months after the initial OAB pharmacy claim (index) date. A retrospective cohort study design was used following patients from the index date to the occurrence of non-persistence with the index medication (i.e., a gap of > 45 days between successive prescription fills or a switch to any other OAB medication), or the end of a 1-year follow-up period, through December 31, 2004. Switching was defined as any change from the index medication, including a change in dose form (e.g., tol-IR to tol-ER), to one of the other 3 study drugs, or to a different OAB treatment (e.g., trospium chloride, oxybutynin patch, flavoxate, hyoscyamine sulfate, or propantheline bromide) during the follow-up period. Adherence was measured as the proportion of patients with a medication possession ratio (MPR) of at least 80%. MPR was calculated as (1) the sum of days supply for all pharmacy claims except the last pharmacy claim, divided by (2) the total number of days from the first fill date to the fill date of the last pharmacy claim. The association of drug therapy with study outcomes was assessed with bivariate and adjusted (multivariate) analyses. Multivariate analyses controlled for demographic and clinical characteristics, plan type, patient out-of-pocket cost for the index medication, and year of therapy initiation.
1,117 patients had at least 1 pharmacy claim for an OAB study drug (n = 454 for tol-ER [40.6%], n = 249 for oxy-ER [22.3%], n = 306 for tol-IR [27.4%], n = 108 for oxy-IR [9.7%]), of whom 81.6% were women. The mean (standard deviation [SD]) age of the study population was 55.7 (14.5) years. Only 53.7% had at least 1 OAB diagnosis recorded during the 18-month eligibility period. 44.5% of patients did not have a refill after the initial (index) pharmacy claim (39.4% for oxy-ER, 42.7% for tol-ER, 46.1% for tol-IR, and 59.3% for oxy-IR; P = 0.004). Only 13.2% persisted with treatment for at least 1 year (tol-ER = 15.0%, oxy-ER = 15.3%, tol-IR = 11.4%, oxy-IR = 6.5%; P = 0.050). The median days to discontinuation (non-persistency) were 31.0 overall, 33.0 for tol-ER, 34.0 for oxy-ER, 32.0 for tol-IR, and 0 for oxy-IR; P = 0.010. The overall switch rate as a percentage of all study patients was 13.3%, ranging from 9.9% for tol-ER, 13.7% for tol-IR, 16.5% for oxy-ER, and 19.4% for oxy-IR; P = 0.020. Of patients who refilled their initial prescription at least once, 24.0% made a medication switch. Adherence rates as measured by percentage of patients with MPR >or= 80% were 30.3% overall and higher for the ER formulations: 35.2% for tol-ER, 36.1% for oxy-ER, 23.5% for tol-IR, and 14.8% for oxy-IR; P < 0.001.
Adherence was significantly better for ER than IR agents. The high rate of non-persistence (44.5%) following the first (index) prescription highlights the need for medication counseling by health care professionals.
药物治疗是治疗膀胱过度活动症(OAB)行为疗法的重要辅助手段。托特罗定和奥昔布宁是常用于治疗OAB的药物,它们通过抑制膀胱肌肉收缩发挥有益作用。然而,在临床试验以及实际应用中,这些药物的停药率较高,部分原因是不良反应。缓释(ER)制剂相较于这两种药物的速释(IR)剂型,耐受性有所改善。尚无研究比较托特罗定和奥昔布宁的ER和IR剂型在治疗持续性和依从性方面的差异。
比较纳入区域管理式医疗计划的患者使用奥昔布宁和托特罗定IR和ER剂型的治疗持续性、依从性和换药率。
研究患者为成年人(年龄≥18岁),在1999年7月1日至2003年12月31日期间,至少有1次托特罗定缓释剂(tol-ER)、奥昔布宁缓释剂(oxy-ER)、托特罗定速释剂(tol-IR)或奥昔布宁速释剂(oxy-IR)的药房配药记录,并且在首次OAB药房配药(索引)日期前6个月至后12个月期间持续符合医保资格。采用回顾性队列研究设计,从索引日期开始追踪患者,直至出现对索引药物治疗不持续的情况(即连续两次处方取药间隔>45天,或换用任何其他OAB药物),或到2004年12月31日为期1年的随访期结束。换药定义为在随访期间从索引药物发生的任何变化,包括剂型改变(如tol-IR改为tol-ER),换用其他3种研究药物之一,或换用不同的OAB治疗方法(如曲司氯铵、奥昔布宁贴片、黄酮哌酯、硫酸阿托品或溴丙胺太林)。依从性通过药物持有率(MPR)至少为80%的患者比例来衡量。MPR计算方法为:(1)除最后一次药房配药外所有药房配药的供应天数总和,除以(2)从首次取药日期到最后一次药房配药取药日期的总天数。采用双变量分析和校正(多变量)分析评估药物治疗与研究结果之间的关联。多变量分析控制了人口统计学和临床特征、医保计划类型、患者自付索引药物的费用以及治疗开始年份。
1117例患者至少有1次OAB研究药物的药房配药记录(tol-ER组454例[40.6%],oxy-ER组249例[22.3%],tol-IR组306例[27.4%],oxy-IR组108例[9.7%]),其中81.6%为女性。研究人群的平均(标准差[SD])年龄为55.7(14.5)岁。在18个月的医保资格期内,只有53.7%的患者至少有1次OAB诊断记录。44.5%的患者在首次(索引)药房配药后未再取药(oxy-ER组为39.4%,tol-ER组为42.7%,tol-IR组为46.1%,oxy-IR组为59.3%;P = 0.004)。只有13.2%的患者持续治疗至少1年(tol-ER组为15.0%,oxy-ER组为15.3%,tol-IR组为11.4%,oxy-IR组为6.5%;P = 0.050)。停药(治疗不持续)的中位天数总体为31.0天,tol-ER组为33.0天,oxy-ER组为34.0天,tol-IR组为32.0天,oxy-IR组为0天;P = 0.010。在所有研究患者中,总体换药率为13.3%,其中tol-ER组为9.9%,tol-IR组为13.7%,oxy-ER组为16.5%,oxy-IR组为19.4%;P = 0.020。在至少重新取药1次的患者中, 24.0%进行了药物更换。以MPR≥80%的患者比例衡量的依从率总体为30.3%,ER剂型更高:tol-ER组为35.2%,oxy-ER组为36.1%,tol-IR组为23.5%,oxy-IR组为14.8%;P<0.001。
ER剂型的依从性显著优于IR剂型。首次(索引)处方后较高的治疗不持续率(44.5%)凸显了医疗保健专业人员进行用药咨询的必要性。