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Treatment patterns following initiation of generic glatiramer acetate among patients with multiple sclerosis from two large real-world databases in the United States.

Authors :
Alexander, Jessica K.
Ariely, Rinat
Wu, Ying
Hulbert, Erin
Bryant, Allison
Su, Zhaohui
Vardi, Michaela
Kasturi, Jyotsna
Source :
Current Medical Research & Opinion. Aug2021, Vol. 37 Issue 8, p1323-1329. 7p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

To better understand treatment patterns in US patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) initiating generic glatiramer acetate (GA), this study examined adherence, discontinuation and switching patterns from generic follow-on glatiramer acetate (FOGA) therapy in real-world patient cohorts. Retrospective analyses utilized data from two large US databases (administrative claims and linked electronic medical records). Eligible adult MS patients had ≥1 pharmacy claim for FOGA during the identification period; the first FOGA claim was the index date. All analyses were descriptive; proportion of days covered (PDC) was calculated as a measure of adherence to FOGA during the follow-up period. The first cohort consisted of 95 patients, with 93.6% having a branded GA claim for Copaxone during the baseline period. Half these patients (48.4%) had high adherence to FOGA therapy (PDC: 0.8–1.0). Fifty-five patients (57.9%) initially discontinued FOGA with a mean persistence of 112 days. Of those who discontinued, 7.3% had no subsequent disease-modifying therapy (DMT), 30.9% restarted FOGA and 61.8% did not restart FOGA. The second cohort consisted of 1957 patients, with 63.8% having a branded GA claim for Copaxone during the baseline period and 33.5% were treatment naïve. The majority of patients (61.9%) had high adherence to FOGA therapy. A total of 1597 patients (81.6%) initially discontinued FOGA with a mean persistence of 93 days. Of those who discontinued, 55.8% switched to another DMT, 16.7% restarted FOGA and 37.5% had no subsequent DMT. Adherence to FOGA therapy was reasonably high across cohorts; however, most patients discontinued their initial FOGA within four months of the index date and most switches from FOGA were to branded GA products. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03007995
Volume :
37
Issue :
8
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Current Medical Research & Opinion
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
151552742
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/03007995.2021.1929135