Litcius/Paper detail

Suboptimal adherence to daily growth hormone in a US real-world study: an unmet need in the treatment of pediatric growth hormone deficiency

Jane Loftus, Yong Chen, Jose Ma. J. Alvir, Lei Chi, Shibasish Dasgupta, Anu Gupta, Michael P. Wajnrajch

2021Current Medical Research and Opinion19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate adherence to, and discontinuation of, somatropin treatment over 4 years in a US population-based study of children with pediatric growth hormone deficiency (pGHD). METHODS: A retrospective cohort analysis of commercially insured patients ≥3 and <16 years, diagnosed with pGHD, newly treated with somatropin was conducted using Optum De-identified Clinformatics Data Mart. Index date was defined as the first prescription for somatropin between 01 July 2002 and 30 September 2019. Five non-exclusive patient cohorts were identified (>3, 12, 24, 36, and 48 months of post-index continuous enrollment). Suboptimal adherence was defined as medication possession ratio <80%. Discontinuation was defined as the date at which a gap of >60 days between somatropin fills first occurred. Cox proportional hazards regression was used to evaluate time to discontinuation. RESULTS: = 3091), mean age was 11.3 ± 2.9 years, 75.9% were male, 70.9% white, 9.4% Hispanic, 3.6% Asian, and 3.1% black. The proportion with suboptimal adherence at months 12 and 48 was 19.6% and 35.9%, respectively. Discontinuation occurred in 42.2% of patients. The rate of discontinuation (HR [95% CI]) was higher for age ≥10 (1.74 [1.53-1.98]), females (1.35 [1.21-1.50]), black and Hispanic race/ethnicity (1.50 [1.18-1.90] and 1.27 [1.09-1.49] compared to White) and obesity (1.69 [1.19-2.40]). CONCLUSION: Suboptimal adherence increases with treatment duration, and risk of discontinuation is associated with age, female gender, black or Hispanic race/ethnicity, and obesity. Strategies that facilitate adherence among children at risk of discontinuation may improve clinical outcomes.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineDiscontinuationPediatricsCohortGrowth hormone deficiencyMedical prescriptionSomatropinInternal medicineRetrospective cohort studyCohort studyPharmacoepidemiologyPopulationProportional hazards modelGrowth hormoneHormoneEnvironmental healthPharmacologyGrowth Hormone and Insulin-like Growth FactorsPituitary Gland Disorders and TreatmentsMedication Adherence and Compliance
Suboptimal adherence to daily growth hormone in a US real-world study: an unmet need in the treatment of pediatric growth hormone deficiency | Litcius