Real-world treatment patterns and healthcare costs in patients with psoriasis taking systemic oral or biologic therapies

Psoriasis is a chronic, immune-mediated, systemic inflammatory disorder associated with high costs. This study evaluated real-world treatment patterns and associated costs in patients in the United States with psoriasis initiating systemic oral or biologic treatments. This retrospective cohort study...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of dermatological treatment 2023-12, Vol.34 (1), p.2176708-2176708
Hauptverfasser: Thai, Sydney, Zhuo, Joe, Zhong, Yichen, Xia, Qian, Chen, Xiu, Bao, Ying, Dhanda, Devender, Priya, Lawshia, Wu, Jashin J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Psoriasis is a chronic, immune-mediated, systemic inflammatory disorder associated with high costs. This study evaluated real-world treatment patterns and associated costs in patients in the United States with psoriasis initiating systemic oral or biologic treatments. This retrospective cohort study used IBM ® (now Merative™) MarketScan ® Commercial and Medicare claims (1 January 2006-31 December 2019) to evaluate patterns of switching, discontinuation, and nonswitching in two cohorts of patients initiating oral or biologic systemic therapy. Total pre-switch and post-switch costs were reported per-patient per-month (PPPM). Each cohort was analyzed (oral, n = 11,993; biologic; n = 9753). Among the oral and biologic cohorts, 32% and 15% discontinued index and any systemic treatment within 1 year of initiation; 40% and 62% remained on index therapy; and 28% and 23% switched treatment, respectively. In the oral and biologic cohorts, total PPPM costs within 1 year of initiation for nonswitchers, patients who discontinued, and patients who switched were $2594, $1402, and $3956, respectively, and $5035, $3112, and $5833, respectively. This study identified lower persistence in the oral treatment cohort, higher costs associated with switching, and a need for safe and effective oral treatment options for patients with psoriasis to delay the switch to biologic therapy.
ISSN:0954-6634
1471-1753
DOI:10.1080/09546634.2023.2176708