Adherence and persistence among multiple sclerosis patients after one immunomodulatory therapy failure: retrospective claims analysis
- PMID: 21870169
- DOI: 10.1007/s12325-011-0054-9
Adherence and persistence among multiple sclerosis patients after one immunomodulatory therapy failure: retrospective claims analysis
Abstract
Introduction: There are no published data on patient adherence to, and persistence with, disease-modifying therapies (DMT) for multiple sclerosis (MS) after one immunomodulatory failure. The present study compares secondline DMT adherence and persistence among patients with MS.
Methods: Patients with MS initiating a second-line treatment with natalizumab, intramuscular interferon beta-1a (i.m.-IFNβ-1a), subcutaneous (s.c.) IFNβ-1a, interferon beta-1b (IFNβ-1b), and glatiramer acetate (GA) from January 1, 2006 to October 4, 2008 were identified from a retrospective claims database associated with a large US health plan. Adherence was measured with medication possession ratio (MPR); adherence indicated MPR ≥ 0.80. Persistence was measured as time until a minimum 60-day gap in second-line therapy. Adherence and persistence were modeled with logistic and Cox proportional hazard regressions, respectively.
Results: The study population comprised 1381 patients. Multivariate analysis showed that the odds of adherence were significantly higher in the natalizumab cohort compared with all other second-line cohorts. The natalizumab cohort was more likely to be persistent compared with the i.m.-IFNβ-1a and IFNβ-1b cohorts.
Conclusion: The natalizumab cohort was more adherent compared with the other second-line DMT cohorts, likely due in large part to active physician involvement and monitoring. Adherence to DMT, even after first-line failure, is critical to achieving optimal therapeutic benefit.
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