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Medication adherence, healthcare resource utilization, and costs among Medicaid beneficiaries with schizophrenia treated with once-monthly paliperidone palmitate or once-every-three-months paliperidone palmitate

Authors :
Dominic Pilon
Marie-Hélène Lafeuille
Kruti Joshi
Patrick Lefebvre
Maude Vermette-Laforme
Maryia Zhdanava
Aurélie Côté-Sergent
Dee Lin
Source :
Current Medical Research and Opinion. 37:675-683
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Informa UK Limited, 2021.

Abstract

Antipsychotics with reduced dosing frequency may improve adherence and clinical outcomes for patients with schizophrenia. This study compared treatment patterns, healthcare resource utilization (HRU), and costs between Medicaid beneficiaries with schizophrenia treated with once-monthly paliperidone palmitate (PP1M) and those who transitioned to once-every-three-months paliperidone palmitate (PP3M).Adults with schizophrenia were identified in a four-state Medicaid database (18 May 2014 to 31 March 2019). The index date was the first PP3M claim (PP3M cohort), or a random PP1M claim (PP1M cohort), following ≥4 months of continuous PP1M treatment among patients with ≥12 months of continuous Medicaid enrollment pre- and post-index. Adherence (proportion of days covered by the index treatment ≥80%), persistence (no gap90/30 days in the PP3M/PP1M supply), HRU, and costs were compared during the 12-month post-index period between cohorts matched 1:1.Among 2374 patients identified, 374 remained in each cohort after matching (mean age 42 years; 30.5% female). Compared to the PP1M cohort, the PP3M cohort was 2.39 times more likely to be adherent (Medicaid beneficiaries who transitioned to PP3M had higher adherence and persistence, and a reduced likelihood of hospitalization relative to those who continued treatment with PP1M. The results suggest potential clinical value to transitioning eligible patients to PP3M.

Details

ISSN :
14734877 and 03007995
Volume :
37
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Current Medical Research and Opinion
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....aa586960064ce0ba5692c512317ed3ec
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/03007995.2021.1882412