BMJ Open Respiratory Research (Jul 2024)
Characteristics, treatment patterns and burden of illness in US patients with asthma newly initiating multiple-inhaler triple therapy
Abstract
Introduction For patients with asthma who remain symptomatic on medium-dose inhaled corticosteroid/long-acting β2-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 β2-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.