Journal of Dermatological Treatment (Apr 2022)

Exploring determinants of psoriasis patients’ treatment choices: a discrete-choice experiment study in the United States and Germany

  • Steven R. Feldman,
  • Christine Poulos,
  • Isabelle Gilloteau,
  • Brennan Mange,
  • Katharina Boehm,
  • Marco Boeri,
  • Mandy Naatz,
  • Matthias Augustin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/09546634.2020.1839007
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 33, no. 3
pp. 1511 – 1520

Abstract

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Background Biologic psoriasis treatments are differentiated by efficacy, side effects, and other attributes. Objective Determine attributes of biologic psoriasis treatments that drive patients’ treatment choices. Methods Respondents (USA: n = 300; Germany: n = 300) with moderate-to-severe psoriasis completed a discrete-choice–experiment survey, choosing between hypothetical treatments characterized by attributes with varying levels: chance of clear skin after 1 year, number of first-year treatments, first-year risks of mild-to-moderate injection site reaction (ISR) and serious infection, and years of proven efficacy/safety. Results U.S. respondents most valued clear skin (conditional relative importance, 1.88; p < .05). While other attributes were of generally equivalent importance, ISR risk outweighed serious-infection risk (1.06 vs. 0.70; p < .05). German respondents placed greatest importance on ISR risk (1.61; p < .05) and clear skin (1.49; p < .05). Limitations Respondents evaluated hypothetical treatments and were recruited from web panels. Conclusions Clear skin and ISR risk are stronger drivers of treatment choice than injection frequency and infection risk.

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