Hampp Christian, Greene Patty, Pinheiro Simone P
Division of Epidemiology-I, Office of Pharmacovigilance and Epidemiology, Office of Surveillance and Epidemiology, Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, US Food and Drug Administration, 10903 New Hampshire Avenue, Silver Spring, MD, 20993, USA.
Division of Epidemiology-II, Office of Pharmacovigilance and Epidemiology, Office of Surveillance and Epidemiology, Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, US Food and Drug Administration, Silver Spring, MD, USA.
Drug Saf. 2016 Mar;39(3):261-70. doi: 10.1007/s40264-015-0382-9.
Free prescription drug samples provided in physician offices can lead to exposure misclassification in pharmacoepidemiologic studies that rely on pharmacy claims data.
We quantified drug-specific sample provision rates based on nationally projected data from a survey of over 3200 US office-based physicians for 1993-2013.
Between 2009 and 2013, a total of 44.7 % of newly initiated brand-only sitagliptin but only 3.6 % of generically available metformin therapy was provided as samples. We observed similar discrepancies between newly initiated rosuvastatin and simvastatin, dabigatran and warfarin, atomoxetine and methylphenidate, and between oral antibiotic drugs. During continued therapy, sample use was still present though to a lesser extent (sitagliptin 17.0 %, rosuvastatin 23.9 %), and remained high for some oral contraceptives (norethindrone 55.8 %). Oral contraceptives had the longest average days of sample supply (levonorgestrel, continued use 85.1 days). The average days of supply for all other chronically used study drugs ranged from 13.4 (dabigatran, new use) to 25.3 (exenatide, continued use) per sample provided. From 1993 to 2013, we found pronounced drops in sample provisions over time coinciding with more recent generic approval dates.
We observed markedly differential exposure to medication samples between branded and generic drugs. This can introduce bias in pharmacoepidemiologic studies, especially when adverse events that occur soon after drug initiation are of interest.
医生办公室提供的免费处方药样本可能会导致依赖药房报销数据的药物流行病学研究中出现暴露错误分类。
我们根据对3200多名美国门诊医生进行的1993 - 2013年全国性调查的预测数据,对特定药物的样本提供率进行了量化。
在2009年至2013年期间,新开始使用的仅品牌西他列汀中,共有44.7%是以样本形式提供的,而通用型二甲双胍治疗中只有3.6%是以样本形式提供的。我们在新开始使用的瑞舒伐他汀与辛伐他汀、达比加群与华法林、托莫西汀与哌甲酯之间,以及口服抗生素药物之间观察到了类似的差异。在持续治疗期间,样本使用仍然存在,尽管程度较轻(西他列汀为17.0%,瑞舒伐他汀为23.9%),而某些口服避孕药的样本使用率仍然很高(炔诺酮为55.8%)。口服避孕药的平均样本供应天数最长(左炔诺孕酮,持续使用85.1天)。提供的所有其他长期使用的研究药物的平均供应天数范围为每个样本13.4天(达比加群,新使用)至25.3天(艾塞那肽,持续使用)。从1993年到2013年,我们发现随着时间的推移,样本提供量明显下降,这与最近的仿制药批准日期相吻合。
我们观察到品牌药和仿制药在药物样本暴露方面存在明显差异。这可能会在药物流行病学研究中引入偏差,尤其是当关注药物开始使用后不久发生的不良事件时。