Assessing Preferences of Patients with Chronic Spontaneous Urticaria for Injectable Treatment Profiles.

IF 3.4 3区 医学 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Ana Maria Giménez-Arnau, Maria-Magdalena Balp, Andrii Danyliv, Tonya Winders, James O'Donoghue, Jörn Kleebach, Samantha Morrison, Shaun Walsh, Maike Mueller, Daniela Lopez-Ortiz, Marcus Maurer, Jonathan A Bernstein
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: In the context of injectable biologic products approved or in development for chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU), it is important to capture which treatment attributes matter most to patient and what trade-offs patients are willing to make.

Objectives: The CHOICE-CSU study aimed to quantify patient preferences toward injectable treatment attributes among patients with CSU, inadequately controlled by H1-antihistamines.

Methods: This was a two-phase cross-sectional patient preference study in adult patients with a diagnosis of CSU, inadequately controlled by H1-antihistamines. A qualitative phase collected patients' insights and relevant treatment attributes that mattered to them, and the outputs were used for the quantitative phase to create the actual injectable treatment profiles with attributes and levels such as: efficacy, safety, and mode of administration. The quantitative phase used discrete choice experiment (DCE) methodology. Eligible patients were asked to make hypothetical choices between 12 treatment profile pairs, created by Sawtooth SoftwareTM. The DCE data were analyzed using hierarchical Bayesian logistic regression models, enabling the quantification of the relative importance of each attribute/level during the decision-making process.

Results: A total of 450 respondents participated in the DCE. The key attributes driving respondent preference amongst injectable treatment options were type of administration device (relative importance 18.5%), complete control of urticaria (relative importance 17.4%), and resolution of angioedema (relative importance 16.4%). Keeping all other attributes and levels equal, the predicted choice share was higher for a profile with an auto-injector versus one with a pre-filled syringe (72.9% versus 27.1%).

Conclusions: The CHOICE-CSU study is the first study to provide a quantitative assessment of preferences that patients with CSU, inadequately controlled by H1-antihistamines, have for injectable treatment attributes. Symptom-free periods are the most important overriding therapy goal for patients, and patients will accept some inconveniences, such as administration mode, to achieve this. Additionally, when efficacy is equivalent, administration ease of injectable therapies is valued by patients. As new CSU oral treatment options emerge, additional testing of patient preference toward oral treatments will be required.

评估慢性自发性荨麻疹患者对注射治疗方案的偏好。
背景:在已批准或正在开发用于慢性自发性荨麻疹(CSU)的注射生物制剂的背景下,重要的是要了解哪些治疗属性对患者最重要,以及患者愿意做出哪些权衡。目的:CHOICE-CSU研究旨在量化h_1 -抗组胺药控制不充分的CSU患者对注射治疗属性的偏好。方法:这是一项两期横断面患者偏好研究,研究对象是诊断为CSU的成年患者,这些患者使用h1 -抗组胺药控制不足。定性阶段收集患者的见解和对他们重要的相关治疗属性,并将输出用于定量阶段,以创建具有属性和级别的实际注射治疗概况,例如:有效性,安全性和给药方式。定量阶段采用离散选择实验(DCE)方法。符合条件的患者被要求在由Sawtooth SoftwareTM创建的12对治疗方案中做出假设选择。DCE数据采用分层贝叶斯逻辑回归模型进行分析,量化决策过程中各属性/水平的相对重要性。结果:共有450名受访者参与了DCE。驱动受访者对注射治疗方案偏好的关键属性是给药装置类型(相对重要性18.5%)、完全控制荨麻疹(相对重要性17.4%)和解决血管性水肿(相对重要性16.4%)。在保持所有其他属性和水平相同的情况下,自动注射器比预充注射器的预测选择份额更高(72.9%比27.1%)。结论:CHOICE-CSU研究是第一个定量评估h_1 -抗组胺药控制不足的CSU患者对注射治疗属性的偏好的研究。无症状期是患者最重要的压倒一切的治疗目标,为了达到这一目标,患者会接受一些不便,如给药方式。此外,当疗效相等时,注射疗法的给药便利性受到患者的重视。随着新的CSU口服治疗方案的出现,需要对患者对口服治疗的偏好进行额外的测试。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Patient-Patient Centered Outcomes Research
Patient-Patient Centered Outcomes Research HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES-
CiteScore
6.60
自引率
8.30%
发文量
44
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Patient provides a venue for scientifically rigorous, timely, and relevant research to promote the development, evaluation and implementation of therapies, technologies, and innovations that will enhance the patient experience. It is an international forum for research that advances and/or applies qualitative or quantitative methods to promote the generation, synthesis, or interpretation of evidence. The journal has specific interest in receiving original research, reviews and commentaries related to qualitative and mixed methods research, stated-preference methods, patient reported outcomes, and shared decision making. Advances in regulatory science, patient-focused drug development, patient-centered benefit-risk and health technology assessment will also be considered. Additional digital features (including animated abstracts, video abstracts, slide decks, audio slides, instructional videos, infographics, podcasts and animations) can be published with articles; these are designed to increase the visibility, readership and educational value of the journal’s content. In addition, articles published in The Patient may be accompanied by plain language summaries to assist readers who have some knowledge of, but not in-depth expertise in, the area to understand important medical advances. All manuscripts are subject to peer review by international experts.
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