Characteristics, Treatment Patterns and Burden of Illness in US Patients with Asthma Newly Initiating Multiple-inhaler Triple Therapy
Overview
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Introduction: For patients with asthma who remain symptomatic on medium-dose inhaled corticosteroid/long-acting β-agonist, add-on long-acting muscarinic antagonist is a treatment option, which can be administered as multiple-inhaler triple therapy (MITT). A high proportion of patients (61.5%-88.2%) discontinue MITT use within 1 year postinitiation; however, which patients discontinue and their treatment patterns at initiation are unknown. This study aimed to understand the demographic, clinical and treatment-related characteristics of patients with asthma who newly initiated MITT, by discontinuation status.
Methods: This retrospective cohort study used administrative data from IBM Truven MarketScan Commercial Claims and Encounters Database with Medicare supplement between 1 January 2016 and 31 December 2019. Adult patients with asthma who initiated MITT between 1 January 2017 and 31 March 2019 were included and were classified based on their discontinuation status. 'Continuous users' had continuous use of MITT and 'discontinuers' discontinued treatment within the 6-month period postinitiation. Demographics and clinical characteristics, asthma treatment use prior to MITT initiation (12-month baseline period), mode of MITT initiation and complexity of regimen were described.
Results: Of 4132 patients (mean age: 49.0 years, 67.9% female), 78.0% (n=3224) were discontinuers; 22.0% (n=908) were continuous users. Demographic and other clinical and treatment-related characteristics during baseline were broadly similar between cohorts. A significantly higher proportion of continuous users versus discontinuers had ≥6 dispensed claims for short-acting β-agonist canisters (16.0% vs 12.5%; p=0.006) during baseline and initiated a once-daily MITT regimen (35.2% vs 26.2%; p<0.001). Fewer continuous MITT users used a mix of once-daily and twice-daily regimens than those who discontinued MITT (64.3% vs 72.3%; p<0.001).
Conclusions: Most patients with asthma discontinued MITT within 6 months. Results indicate that patients with a history of uncontrolled, symptomatic asthma and those using less complex triple therapy regimens at initiation are less likely to discontinue MITT than patients with controlled asthma and those using a complex MITT regimen.
Baptist A, Germain G, Klimek J, Laliberte F, Schell R, Forero-Schwanhaeuser S Adv Ther. 2024; 42(2):1061-1074.
PMID: 39714547 PMC: 11787182. DOI: 10.1007/s12325-024-03083-6.