PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

Time trends of period prevalence rates of patients with inhaled long-acting beta-2-agonists-containing prescriptions: a European comparative database study.

  • Marietta Rottenkolber,
  • Eef Voogd,
  • Liset van Dijk,
  • Paola Primatesta,
  • Claudia Becker,
  • Raymond Schlienger,
  • Mark C H de Groot,
  • Yolanda Alvarez,
  • Julie Durand,
  • Jim Slattery,
  • Ana Afonso,
  • Gema Requena,
  • Miguel Gil,
  • Arturo Alvarez,
  • Ulrik Hesse,
  • Roman Gerlach,
  • Joerg Hasford,
  • Rainald Fischer,
  • Olaf H Klungel,
  • Sven Schmiedl

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0117628
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 2
p. e0117628

Abstract

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BACKGROUND:Inhaled, long-acting beta-2-adrenoceptor agonists (LABA) have well-established roles in asthma and/or COPD treatment. Drug utilisation patterns for LABA have been described, but few studies have directly compared LABA use in different countries. We aimed to compare the prevalence of LABA-containing prescriptions in five European countries using a standardised methodology. METHODS:A common study protocol was applied to seven European healthcare record databases (Denmark, Germany, Spain, the Netherlands (2), and the UK (2)) to calculate crude and age- and sex-standardised annual period prevalence rates (PPRs) of LABA-containing prescriptions from 2002-2009. Annual PPRs were stratified by sex, age, and indication (asthma, COPD, asthma and COPD). RESULTS:From 2002-2009, age- and sex-standardised PPRs of patients with LABA-containing medications increased in all databases (58.2%-185.1%). Highest PPRs were found in men ≥ 80 years old and women 70-79 years old. Regarding the three indications, the highest age- and sex-standardised PPRs in all databases were found in patients with "asthma and COPD" but with large inter-country variation. In those with asthma or COPD, lower PPRs and smaller inter-country variations were found. For all three indications, PPRs for LABA-containing prescriptions increased with age. CONCLUSIONS:Using a standardised protocol that allowed direct inter-country comparisons, we found highest rates of LABA-containing prescriptions in elderly patients and distinct differences in the increased utilisation of LABA-containing prescriptions within the study period throughout the five European countries.