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Disease-modifying drug initiation patterns in commercially insured multiple sclerosis patients: a retrospective cohort study

Authors :
Kassed Cheryl A
Johnson Barbara H
Fowler Robert
Margolis Jay M
Kahler Kristijan
Source :
BMC Neurology, Vol 11, Iss 1, p 122 (2011)
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
BMC, 2011.

Abstract

Abstract Background The goal of this research was to compare the demographics, clinical characteristics and treatment patterns for newly diagnosed multiple sclerosis (MS) patients in a commercial managed care population who received disease-modifying drug (DMD) therapy versus those not receiving DMD therapy. Methods A retrospective cohort study using US administrative healthcare claims identified individuals newly diagnosed with MS (no prior MS diagnosis 12 months prior using ICD-9-CM 340) and ≥ 18 years old during 2001-2007 to characterize them based on demographics, clinical characteristics, and pharmacologic therapy for one year prior to and a minimum of one year post-index. The index date was the first MS diagnosis occurring in the study period. Follow-up of subjects was done by ICD-9-CM code identification and not by actual chart review. Multivariate analyses were conducted to adjust for confounding variables. Results Patients were followed for an average of 35.7 ± 17.5 months after their index diagnosis. Forty-three percent (n = 4,462) of incident patients received treatment with at least one of the DMDs during the post-index period. Treated patients were primarily in the younger age categories of 18-44 years of age, with DMD therapy initiated an average of 5.3 ± 9.1 months after the index diagnosis. Once treatment was initiated, 27.7% discontinued DMD therapy after an average of 17.6 ± 14.6 months, and 16.5% had treatment gaps in excess of 60 days. Conclusions Nearly 60% of newly-diagnosed MS patients in this commercial managed care population remained untreated while over a quarter of treated patients stopped therapy and one-sixth experienced treatment gaps despite the risk of disease progression or a return of pre-treatment disease activity.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14712377
Volume :
11
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
BMC Neurology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.b52cee4311042669eaf782b5fd12854
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2377-11-122