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Qualitative Clinical Trial Exit Interviews Evaluating Treatment Benefit, Burden, and Satisfaction in Patients with Schizophrenia

Authors :
David P. Walling
David McDonnell
Leona Bessonova
April M. Foster
Olga Lapeyra
Michelle K. White
Julia Carpenter-Conlin
Cory Saucier
Amy K O'Sullivan
Adam Simmons
Jakob B. Bjorner
Source :
CNS Spectrums. 26:156-157
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2021.

Abstract

ObjectiveAn open-label extension study (NCT02873208) evaluated the long-term tolerability, safety, and efficacy of combination olanzapine/samidorphan (OLZ/SAM) treatment in patients with schizophrenia. This qualitative sub study explored perceptions of benefit, burden, and satisfaction with previous medications and OLZ/SAM.MethodsSemi-structured interviews (60 minutes; audio-recorded) were conducted. Interviewer sensitivity training, senior interviewer oversight, and a list of common medications to aid recall supported data collection. Interview transcripts were content coded and analyzed (NVivo v11.0).ResultsAll 41 patients reported a lifetime burden with schizophrenia adversely impacting employment, relationships, emotional health, social activities, and daily tasks. Hospitalization for schizophrenia management was another reported aspect of disease burden. Although most (n=32) patients reported previous medication benefits, side effects affecting physical, emotional/behavioral, and cognitive functioning were reported by all (n=41). Following OLZ/SAM treatment, 39/41 patients (95%) reported improvements in symptoms including hallucinations, paranoia, depression, sleep, and concentration. Furthermore, patients described improvements in self-esteem, social activities, relationships, and daily activities. Twenty-three patients (56%) reported side effects attributed to OLZ/SAM; lack of energy (n=12 [29%]) and dry mouth (n= 5 [12%]) were most common. Twenty-four (59%) patients were “very satisfied” with OLZ/SAM; most (n=35 [85%]) preferred to continue OLZ/SAM vs switching to another medication. As most substudy patients (n=40; 98%) completed the extension study, satisfied patients may be overrepresented in this analysis.ConclusionThis qualitative interview approach provided valuable insight into patients’ experiences with previous medications and OLZ/SAM. Overall, most patients reported treatment satisfaction and improvements in symptoms, function, and health-related quality of life with OLZ/SAM.FundingAlkermes, Inc.

Details

ISSN :
21656509 and 10928529
Volume :
26
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
CNS Spectrums
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........82ffeff1ed027f94913d0702cb96efd1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/s1092852920002503