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Medication adherence and fracture risk among patients on bisphosphonate therapy in a large United States health plan

Authors :
Jeffrey White
Bradley S. Stolshek
Jingbo Yu
Sally W. Wade
John L. Adams
Akhila Balasubramanian
Joel Kallich
Hema N. Viswanathan
Claire Merinar
Jeffrey R. Curtis
Source :
Bone. 50:870-875
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2012.

Abstract

The association between bisphosphonate adherence in the first 12 months after therapy initiation and subsequent fracture risk was examined. Patients were identified from a large, commercially-insured population with integrated pharmacy and medical claims. Eligible patients were aged ≥45 years, were new to osteoporosis therapy (no osteoporosis medication claims in prior year) with first (index) bisphosphonate claim between 1/1/2005 and 4/30/2008, and had continuous insurance coverage for ≥12 months pre- and post-index. Patients with fracture claims ≤12-months post-index were excluded. Adherence was assessed using the medication possession ratio (MPR) over 12-months post-index (i.e., sum of days' supply dispensed divided by 365 days). Patients with a MPR0.8 were considered adherent. The follow-up period to assess incident fracture began at month 13. The analysis included 33,558 new bisphosphonate users with mean age (SD) 59.5 (9.3) years; 94.0% were female. Median MPR at 12 months was 0.61 for alendronate and risedronate; 0.58 for ibandronate. Proportionally more nonfracture patients (39.3%) had a MPR0.8 compared with fracture patients (34.9%, p0.001). In multivariate modeling of bisphosphonate users' experience, those with a MPR0.8 had a 14% lower risk of subsequent fracture than those with MPR0.5, after controlling for demographics, insurance type, select comorbidities, and other potential confounders (p=0.0459). In a large, commercially-insured population, suboptimal adherence with bisphosphonate treatment was associated with increased fracture risk even after controlling for potential confounders.

Details

ISSN :
87563282
Volume :
50
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Bone
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1b684d95ccf73c8994b105df9770a80c