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Subcutaneous sumatriptan delivery devices: comparative ease of use and preference among migraineurs

BACKGROUND: Several sumatriptan subcutaneous autoinjector devices for acute treatment of migraine patients are available, each device differs with respect to design and features. Determining device preference and ease of use is important because patients experiencing a migraine attack are often func...

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Autores principales: Andre, Anthony D, Brand-Schieber, Elimor, Ramirez, Margarita, Munjal, Sagar, Kumar, Rajesh
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dove Medical Press 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5261843/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28176899
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/PPA.S125137
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author Andre, Anthony D
Brand-Schieber, Elimor
Ramirez, Margarita
Munjal, Sagar
Kumar, Rajesh
author_facet Andre, Anthony D
Brand-Schieber, Elimor
Ramirez, Margarita
Munjal, Sagar
Kumar, Rajesh
author_sort Andre, Anthony D
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Several sumatriptan subcutaneous autoinjector devices for acute treatment of migraine patients are available, each device differs with respect to design and features. Determining device preference and ease of use is important because patients experiencing a migraine attack are often functionally impaired. OBJECTIVE: The objective of this human factors study was to compare migraine patients’ device use performance and preferences for three sumatriptan subcutaneous autoinjectors: a disposable two-step device (Zembrace(®) SymTouch(®)), a disposable three-step device (Sumavel(®) DosePro(®)), and a multistep reloadable device (Imitrex(®) STATdose(®)), using simulated injections. METHODS: Each study subject performed two unaided simulated injections with each of three different drug delivery devices, which were presented in counterbalanced order. The participants were then asked to rate the three devices on various subjective measures. The primary end point was overall device preference using a visual analog scale. RESULTS: A total of 54 subjects participated and each subject performed two simulated injections with each of the three devices. Most subjects preferred the two-step device (88.9%) to the three-step (13.0%) and the reloadable (1.9%). The two-step device had higher mean overall preference ratings (F (2, 159)=56.6, P<0.01) and higher ratings for ease of use, intuitiveness, convenience, portability, and control. The two-step device had a first injection full-dose delivery success rate of 44.4%, higher than both the reloadable (24.1%) and the three-step (3.7%) devices. The number of errors with the two-step device (n=3) was ~90% lower than the three-step (n=49) and reloadable (n=44) devices. CONCLUSION: In this human factors study, 54 migraineurs used simulated injections to compare three sumatriptan subcutaneous delivery devices. Zembrace SymTouch, a two-step device, was most preferred compared with Sumavel DosePro and Imitrex STATdose. It also ranked highest for ease of use and various other measures. In this study, migraine patients preferred the autoinjector that they rated as simpler and more intuitive.
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spelling pubmed-52618432017-02-07 Subcutaneous sumatriptan delivery devices: comparative ease of use and preference among migraineurs Andre, Anthony D Brand-Schieber, Elimor Ramirez, Margarita Munjal, Sagar Kumar, Rajesh Patient Prefer Adherence Original Research BACKGROUND: Several sumatriptan subcutaneous autoinjector devices for acute treatment of migraine patients are available, each device differs with respect to design and features. Determining device preference and ease of use is important because patients experiencing a migraine attack are often functionally impaired. OBJECTIVE: The objective of this human factors study was to compare migraine patients’ device use performance and preferences for three sumatriptan subcutaneous autoinjectors: a disposable two-step device (Zembrace(®) SymTouch(®)), a disposable three-step device (Sumavel(®) DosePro(®)), and a multistep reloadable device (Imitrex(®) STATdose(®)), using simulated injections. METHODS: Each study subject performed two unaided simulated injections with each of three different drug delivery devices, which were presented in counterbalanced order. The participants were then asked to rate the three devices on various subjective measures. The primary end point was overall device preference using a visual analog scale. RESULTS: A total of 54 subjects participated and each subject performed two simulated injections with each of the three devices. Most subjects preferred the two-step device (88.9%) to the three-step (13.0%) and the reloadable (1.9%). The two-step device had higher mean overall preference ratings (F (2, 159)=56.6, P<0.01) and higher ratings for ease of use, intuitiveness, convenience, portability, and control. The two-step device had a first injection full-dose delivery success rate of 44.4%, higher than both the reloadable (24.1%) and the three-step (3.7%) devices. The number of errors with the two-step device (n=3) was ~90% lower than the three-step (n=49) and reloadable (n=44) devices. CONCLUSION: In this human factors study, 54 migraineurs used simulated injections to compare three sumatriptan subcutaneous delivery devices. Zembrace SymTouch, a two-step device, was most preferred compared with Sumavel DosePro and Imitrex STATdose. It also ranked highest for ease of use and various other measures. In this study, migraine patients preferred the autoinjector that they rated as simpler and more intuitive. Dove Medical Press 2017-01-19 /pmc/articles/PMC5261843/ /pubmed/28176899 http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/PPA.S125137 Text en © 2017 Andre et al. This work is published and licensed by Dove Medical Press Limited The full terms of this license are available at https://www.dovepress.com/terms.php and incorporate the Creative Commons Attribution – Non Commercial (unported, v3.0) License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/). By accessing the work you hereby accept the Terms. Non-commercial uses of the work are permitted without any further permission from Dove Medical Press Limited, provided the work is properly attributed.
spellingShingle Original Research
Andre, Anthony D
Brand-Schieber, Elimor
Ramirez, Margarita
Munjal, Sagar
Kumar, Rajesh
Subcutaneous sumatriptan delivery devices: comparative ease of use and preference among migraineurs
title Subcutaneous sumatriptan delivery devices: comparative ease of use and preference among migraineurs
title_full Subcutaneous sumatriptan delivery devices: comparative ease of use and preference among migraineurs
title_fullStr Subcutaneous sumatriptan delivery devices: comparative ease of use and preference among migraineurs
title_full_unstemmed Subcutaneous sumatriptan delivery devices: comparative ease of use and preference among migraineurs
title_short Subcutaneous sumatriptan delivery devices: comparative ease of use and preference among migraineurs
title_sort subcutaneous sumatriptan delivery devices: comparative ease of use and preference among migraineurs
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5261843/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28176899
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/PPA.S125137
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