Stewart Hayden, Mitchell Brian G, Ayanga Daniel, Walder Annette
Clinical Pharmacy Specialist, Michael E. DeBakey Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Houston, Texas; Assistant Professor, Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas.
Addiction Psychiatrist, Michael E. DeBakey Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Houston, Texas; Assistant Professor, Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas.
Ment Health Clin. 2021 May 12;11(3):194-199. doi: 10.9740/mhc.2021.05.194. eCollection 2021 May.
AUD medication treatment has been shown to improve outcomes compared with placebo when confined to per-protocol analysis. The same outcomes, however, have not always been maintained in intent-to-treat analysis, thus suggesting adherence may have a significant impact on efficacy outcomes. There is conflicting evidence present in the literature comparing adherence to oral versus injectable AUD pharmacotherapy and a paucity of information in the veteran population on risk factors for low adherence.
The primary end point of this retrospective chart review was to determine whether adherence rates differ between oral and injectable AUD treatments in veterans during the first year of treatment (at 3, 6, 9, and 12 months) using the portion of days covered model. Secondary end points were to determine differing characteristics between patients with high versus low adherence and compare alcohol-related readmission rates and discontinuation rates between groups.
Adherence to injectable extended-release (XR) naltrexone was significantly higher than oral naltrexone at all time points and was significantly higher than disulfiram at 3, 6, and 9 months, but it was not significantly different from acamprosate at any time point. At months 9 and 12, acamprosate had significantly higher adherence compared with oral naltrexone. Patients with higher adherence were seen more frequently in the mental health clinic and had previously tried more AUD medications. The discontinuation rates and alcohol-related admission rates were not significantly different between groups at 1 year.
XR naltrexone may improve adherence rates compared with oral naltrexone or disulfiram, but not acamprosate based on these outcomes. Patients may have increased adherence if they are seen more often in clinic and have trialed more AUD medications.
在符合方案分析中,酒精使用障碍(AUD)药物治疗已显示出与安慰剂相比能改善治疗结果。然而,在意向性分析中,同样的结果并非总能维持,这表明依从性可能对疗效结果有重大影响。文献中关于口服与注射用AUD药物治疗依从性的比较存在相互矛盾的证据,且退伍军人人群中关于低依从性风险因素的信息匮乏。
本次回顾性病历审查的主要终点是使用覆盖天数模型确定退伍军人在治疗的第一年(3、6、9和12个月)口服和注射用AUD治疗的依从率是否存在差异。次要终点是确定高依从性和低依从性患者之间的不同特征,并比较两组之间与酒精相关的再入院率和停药率。
在所有时间点,注射用长效(XR)纳曲酮的依从性均显著高于口服纳曲酮,且在3、6和9个月时显著高于双硫仑,但在任何时间点与阿坎酸无显著差异。在9个月和12个月时,阿坎酸的依从性显著高于口服纳曲酮。在心理健康诊所就诊更频繁且之前尝试过更多AUD药物的患者依从性更高。1年时两组之间的停药率和与酒精相关的入院率无显著差异。
基于这些结果,与口服纳曲酮或双硫仑相比,XR纳曲酮可能提高依从率,但与阿坎酸相比则不然。如果患者在诊所就诊更频繁且尝试过更多AUD药物,他们的依从性可能会提高。