Loyola University, Stritch School of Medicine, 2160 First Avenue South, Maywood, IL 60153, USA.
Toxins (Basel). 2013 Apr 23;5(4):776-83. doi: 10.3390/toxins5040776.
Patients with cervical dystonia (CD) receive much of their care at university based hospital outpatient clinics. This study aimed to describe the clinical characteristics and treatment experiences of patients who continued care at our university based movement disorders clinic, and to document the reasons for which a subset discontinued care. Seventy patients (77% female) were recruited from all patients at the clinic (n = 323). Most (93%) were treated with botulinum neurotoxin (BoNT) injection, and onabotulinumtoxinA was initially used in 97%. The average dose of onabotulinumtoxinA was 270.4 U (range 50-500) and the median number of injections was 14 (range: 1-39). Twenty one patients later received at least one cycle of rimabotulinumtoxinB (33%); of those, 10 switched back to onabotulinumtoxinA (48%). The initial rimabotulinumtoxinB dose averaged 11,996 units (range: 3000-25,000 over 1-18 injections). Twenty one patients (30%) discontinued care. Reasons cited included suboptimal response to BoNT therapy (62%), excessive cost (24%), excessive travel burden (10%), and side effects of BoNT therapy (10%). Most patients (76%) did not seek further care after leaving the clinic. Patients who terminated care received fewer treatment cycles (5.5 vs. 13.0, p = 0.020). There were no other identifiable differences between groups in gender, age, disease characteristics, toxin dose, or toxin formulation. These results indicate that a significant number of CD patients discontinue care due to addressable barriers to access, including cost and travel burden, and that when leaving specialty care, patients often discontinue treatment altogether. These data highlight the need for new initiatives to reduce out-of-pocket costs, as well as training for community physicians on neurotoxin injection in order to lessen the travel burden patients must accept in order to receive standard-of-care treatments.
患者患有颈部肌张力障碍(CD),在大学附属医院的门诊接受了大量的治疗。本研究旨在描述继续在我们大学附属医院运动障碍诊所接受治疗的患者的临床特征和治疗经验,并记录部分患者停止治疗的原因。从诊所的所有患者(n=323)中招募了 70 名患者(93%为女性)。大多数患者(93%)接受肉毒毒素(BoNT)注射治疗,最初使用的是肉毒毒素 A(97%)。肉毒毒素 A 的平均剂量为 270.4U(范围为 50-500),中位数注射次数为 14(范围:1-39)。21 名患者随后至少接受了一轮利鲁唑毒素 B 治疗(33%);其中 10 名患者(48%)转回肉毒毒素 A。利鲁唑毒素 B 的初始剂量平均为 11996 单位(范围:3000-25000 个单位,注射 1-18 次)。21 名患者(30%)停止治疗。原因包括肉毒毒素治疗效果不理想(62%)、费用过高(24%)、旅行负担过重(10%)和肉毒毒素治疗副作用(10%)。大多数患者(76%)离开诊所后不再寻求进一步治疗。停止治疗的患者接受的治疗周期更少(5.5 次 vs. 13.0 次,p=0.020)。在性别、年龄、疾病特征、毒素剂量或毒素制剂方面,两组之间没有其他可识别的差异。这些结果表明,由于获得治疗的障碍,包括费用和旅行负担,许多 CD 患者停止治疗,而且当离开专科治疗时,患者通常会完全停止治疗。这些数据突出表明,需要采取新的举措来降低自付费用,并对社区医生进行肉毒毒素注射培训,以减轻患者为接受标准治疗而必须接受的旅行负担。