Cargando…
Treatment discontinuation and clinical outcomes in the 1-year naturalistic treatment of patients with schizophrenia at risk of treatment nonadherence
BACKGROUND: This study aimed to improve physicians’ understanding of the treatment circumstances and needs of outpatients with schizophrenia at risk of nonadherence, by naturalistically assessing antipsychotic treatment patterns, clinical outcomes, and health care service use in this little-studied...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Formato: | Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Dove Medical Press
2011
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3105874/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21660103 http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/PPA.S16800 |
_version_ | 1782204737281589248 |
---|---|
author | Kelin, Katarina Lambert, Timothy JR Brnabic, Alan JM Newton, Richard Ye, Wendy Escamilla, Raúl I Chen, Kuang-Peng Don, Liana Montgomery, William Karagianis, Jamie Ascher-Svanum, Haya |
author_facet | Kelin, Katarina Lambert, Timothy JR Brnabic, Alan JM Newton, Richard Ye, Wendy Escamilla, Raúl I Chen, Kuang-Peng Don, Liana Montgomery, William Karagianis, Jamie Ascher-Svanum, Haya |
author_sort | Kelin, Katarina |
collection | PubMed |
description | BACKGROUND: This study aimed to improve physicians’ understanding of the treatment circumstances and needs of outpatients with schizophrenia at risk of nonadherence, by naturalistically assessing antipsychotic treatment patterns, clinical outcomes, and health care service use in this little-studied patient population. METHODS: In this one-year, prospective, multicenter, noninterventional, observational study, patients considered at risk of nonadherence by their physicians were switched from their primary oral antipsychotic to another oral or a depot antipsychotic at study entry. All cause treatment discontinuation (antipsychotic switch, augmentation, or discontinuation) during the study was assessed using Kaplan–Meier survival analyses and descriptive statistics. Patients’ illness severity, quality of life, attitude towards medication, patient-reported adherence, and health care resource utilization were assessed during the study. RESULTS: Of the 406 enrolled patients, 43 (10.6%) were switched to depot and 363 (89.4%) were switched to oral antipsychotics at study entry. During the study, 99 (24.4%) patients switched, augmented, or discontinued their antipsychotic (all cause treatment discontinuation). Of the 99 patients who switched, augmented, or discontinued their antipsychotic, 8 (18.6%) were taking depot and 91 (25.0%) were taking oral antipsychotics. These patients were switched to either depot (n = 15) or oral (n = 78) antipsychotics, or discontinued their antipsychotic medication (n = 6). Inadequate response was the most frequently reported reason for medication discontinuation. During the study, patients’ clinical and functional status improved significantly and service use was low. Most patients considered themselves to be adherent at study entry, and this favorable self-perception increased during the study (from 68.5% to 88.1%). CONCLUSION: Although identified as at risk of nonadherence, few patients in this naturalistic study discontinued their prescribed antipsychotic medication during the study. The discrepancy between the physicians’ perception of their patient’s medication adherence and the patients’ self-perceived adherence highlights the need to better understand the underlying reasons for this phenomenon. |
format | Text |
id | pubmed-3105874 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2011 |
publisher | Dove Medical Press |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-31058742011-06-09 Treatment discontinuation and clinical outcomes in the 1-year naturalistic treatment of patients with schizophrenia at risk of treatment nonadherence Kelin, Katarina Lambert, Timothy JR Brnabic, Alan JM Newton, Richard Ye, Wendy Escamilla, Raúl I Chen, Kuang-Peng Don, Liana Montgomery, William Karagianis, Jamie Ascher-Svanum, Haya Patient Prefer Adherence Original Research BACKGROUND: This study aimed to improve physicians’ understanding of the treatment circumstances and needs of outpatients with schizophrenia at risk of nonadherence, by naturalistically assessing antipsychotic treatment patterns, clinical outcomes, and health care service use in this little-studied patient population. METHODS: In this one-year, prospective, multicenter, noninterventional, observational study, patients considered at risk of nonadherence by their physicians were switched from their primary oral antipsychotic to another oral or a depot antipsychotic at study entry. All cause treatment discontinuation (antipsychotic switch, augmentation, or discontinuation) during the study was assessed using Kaplan–Meier survival analyses and descriptive statistics. Patients’ illness severity, quality of life, attitude towards medication, patient-reported adherence, and health care resource utilization were assessed during the study. RESULTS: Of the 406 enrolled patients, 43 (10.6%) were switched to depot and 363 (89.4%) were switched to oral antipsychotics at study entry. During the study, 99 (24.4%) patients switched, augmented, or discontinued their antipsychotic (all cause treatment discontinuation). Of the 99 patients who switched, augmented, or discontinued their antipsychotic, 8 (18.6%) were taking depot and 91 (25.0%) were taking oral antipsychotics. These patients were switched to either depot (n = 15) or oral (n = 78) antipsychotics, or discontinued their antipsychotic medication (n = 6). Inadequate response was the most frequently reported reason for medication discontinuation. During the study, patients’ clinical and functional status improved significantly and service use was low. Most patients considered themselves to be adherent at study entry, and this favorable self-perception increased during the study (from 68.5% to 88.1%). CONCLUSION: Although identified as at risk of nonadherence, few patients in this naturalistic study discontinued their prescribed antipsychotic medication during the study. The discrepancy between the physicians’ perception of their patient’s medication adherence and the patients’ self-perceived adherence highlights the need to better understand the underlying reasons for this phenomenon. Dove Medical Press 2011-05-09 /pmc/articles/PMC3105874/ /pubmed/21660103 http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/PPA.S16800 Text en © 2011 Kelin et al, publisher and licensee Dove Medical Press Ltd. This is an Open Access article which permits unrestricted noncommercial use, provided the original work is properly cited. |
spellingShingle | Original Research Kelin, Katarina Lambert, Timothy JR Brnabic, Alan JM Newton, Richard Ye, Wendy Escamilla, Raúl I Chen, Kuang-Peng Don, Liana Montgomery, William Karagianis, Jamie Ascher-Svanum, Haya Treatment discontinuation and clinical outcomes in the 1-year naturalistic treatment of patients with schizophrenia at risk of treatment nonadherence |
title | Treatment discontinuation and clinical outcomes in the 1-year naturalistic treatment of patients with schizophrenia at risk of treatment nonadherence |
title_full | Treatment discontinuation and clinical outcomes in the 1-year naturalistic treatment of patients with schizophrenia at risk of treatment nonadherence |
title_fullStr | Treatment discontinuation and clinical outcomes in the 1-year naturalistic treatment of patients with schizophrenia at risk of treatment nonadherence |
title_full_unstemmed | Treatment discontinuation and clinical outcomes in the 1-year naturalistic treatment of patients with schizophrenia at risk of treatment nonadherence |
title_short | Treatment discontinuation and clinical outcomes in the 1-year naturalistic treatment of patients with schizophrenia at risk of treatment nonadherence |
title_sort | treatment discontinuation and clinical outcomes in the 1-year naturalistic treatment of patients with schizophrenia at risk of treatment nonadherence |
topic | Original Research |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3105874/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21660103 http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/PPA.S16800 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT kelinkatarina treatmentdiscontinuationandclinicaloutcomesinthe1yearnaturalistictreatmentofpatientswithschizophreniaatriskoftreatmentnonadherence AT lamberttimothyjr treatmentdiscontinuationandclinicaloutcomesinthe1yearnaturalistictreatmentofpatientswithschizophreniaatriskoftreatmentnonadherence AT brnabicalanjm treatmentdiscontinuationandclinicaloutcomesinthe1yearnaturalistictreatmentofpatientswithschizophreniaatriskoftreatmentnonadherence AT newtonrichard treatmentdiscontinuationandclinicaloutcomesinthe1yearnaturalistictreatmentofpatientswithschizophreniaatriskoftreatmentnonadherence AT yewendy treatmentdiscontinuationandclinicaloutcomesinthe1yearnaturalistictreatmentofpatientswithschizophreniaatriskoftreatmentnonadherence AT escamillarauli treatmentdiscontinuationandclinicaloutcomesinthe1yearnaturalistictreatmentofpatientswithschizophreniaatriskoftreatmentnonadherence AT chenkuangpeng treatmentdiscontinuationandclinicaloutcomesinthe1yearnaturalistictreatmentofpatientswithschizophreniaatriskoftreatmentnonadherence AT donliana treatmentdiscontinuationandclinicaloutcomesinthe1yearnaturalistictreatmentofpatientswithschizophreniaatriskoftreatmentnonadherence AT montgomerywilliam treatmentdiscontinuationandclinicaloutcomesinthe1yearnaturalistictreatmentofpatientswithschizophreniaatriskoftreatmentnonadherence AT karagianisjamie treatmentdiscontinuationandclinicaloutcomesinthe1yearnaturalistictreatmentofpatientswithschizophreniaatriskoftreatmentnonadherence AT aschersvanumhaya treatmentdiscontinuationandclinicaloutcomesinthe1yearnaturalistictreatmentofpatientswithschizophreniaatriskoftreatmentnonadherence |