Long‐Term Treatment Patterns of Testosterone Replacement Medications

Testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) is prescribed to men diagnosed with hypogonadism to alleviate symptoms, improve quality of life, and improve overall health. However, most men use TRT for only a short duration. To evaluate the long‐term treatment patterns in hypogonadal men using topical TRT o...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of sexual medicine 2014-08, Vol.11 (8), p.2092-2099
Hauptverfasser: Donatucci, Craig, Cui, Zhanglin, Fang, Yun, Muram, David
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container_title Journal of sexual medicine
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creator Donatucci, Craig
Cui, Zhanglin
Fang, Yun
Muram, David
description Testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) is prescribed to men diagnosed with hypogonadism to alleviate symptoms, improve quality of life, and improve overall health. However, most men use TRT for only a short duration. To evaluate the long‐term treatment patterns in hypogonadal men using topical TRT or short‐lasting TRT injections. Using the Truven MarketScan® Database, 15,435 men who received their first (index) topical TRT prescription and 517 men who received their short‐lasting TRT injection index prescription in 2009 were followed from 12 to 30 months after treatment initiation. Treatment interruption was defined as a medication gap of >30 days. Patients who remained off treatment were classified as having discontinued treatment. Patients who restarted therapy after 30 days were classified as cyclic users. Patients were required to have continuous insurance coverage during 1 year prior to treatment initiation and at least 1 year afterward. Main outcome measures were length of therapy, discontinuation, and restarts of topical TRT or short‐lasting TRT injections. The patient characteristics were similar for patients who received topical TRT or short‐lasting TRT injections. Of the patients who discontinued therapy during the follow‐up period, the percentages of patients who were still on therapy after 3 months were 52% and 31% for topical TRT and short‐lasting TRT users, respectively. For cyclic users, there was an attrition rate of approximately 40% to 50% of patients in each cycle. For both topical TRT and short‐lasting TRT injections, the gap between stopping and restarting therapy tended to decrease over time. In this analysis, high discontinuation rates were observed. The treatment pattern of TRT may be related to the disease state rather than dosing, daily use, or mode of administration. Donatucci C, Cui Z, Fang Y, and Muram D. Long‐term treatment patterns of testosterone replacement medications. J Sex Med 2014;11:2092–2099.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/jsm.12608
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However, most men use TRT for only a short duration. To evaluate the long‐term treatment patterns in hypogonadal men using topical TRT or short‐lasting TRT injections. Using the Truven MarketScan® Database, 15,435 men who received their first (index) topical TRT prescription and 517 men who received their short‐lasting TRT injection index prescription in 2009 were followed from 12 to 30 months after treatment initiation. Treatment interruption was defined as a medication gap of &gt;30 days. Patients who remained off treatment were classified as having discontinued treatment. Patients who restarted therapy after 30 days were classified as cyclic users. Patients were required to have continuous insurance coverage during 1 year prior to treatment initiation and at least 1 year afterward. Main outcome measures were length of therapy, discontinuation, and restarts of topical TRT or short‐lasting TRT injections. The patient characteristics were similar for patients who received topical TRT or short‐lasting TRT injections. Of the patients who discontinued therapy during the follow‐up period, the percentages of patients who were still on therapy after 3 months were 52% and 31% for topical TRT and short‐lasting TRT users, respectively. For cyclic users, there was an attrition rate of approximately 40% to 50% of patients in each cycle. For both topical TRT and short‐lasting TRT injections, the gap between stopping and restarting therapy tended to decrease over time. In this analysis, high discontinuation rates were observed. The treatment pattern of TRT may be related to the disease state rather than dosing, daily use, or mode of administration. Donatucci C, Cui Z, Fang Y, and Muram D. Long‐term treatment patterns of testosterone replacement medications. 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source Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current); MEDLINE; Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects Administration, Topical
Adult
Aged
Androgens - administration & dosage
Drug Administration Schedule
Hormone Replacement Therapy - methods
Humans
Hypogonadism
Hypogonadism - drug therapy
Injections
Intermittent Medication
Long-Term Care
Male
Medication Adherence - statistics & numerical data
Middle Aged
Quality of Life
Testosterone
Testosterone - administration & dosage
Utilization Patterns
Young Adult
title Long‐Term Treatment Patterns of Testosterone Replacement Medications
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