A longitudinal, retrospective cohort study on the impact of roflumilast on exacerbations and economic burden among chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients in the real world

Yin Wan,1 Shawn X Sun,2 Shelby Corman,1 Xingyue Huang,2 Xin Gao,1 Andrew F Shorr3 1Health Economics and Modeling, Outcomes Research, Pharmerit International, Bethesda, MD, USA; 2Health Economics and Outcomes Research, Forest Laboratories, LLC, an affiliate of Actavis, Inc., Jersey City, NJ, USA; 3P...

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Main Authors: Wan Y, Sun SX, Corman S, Huang X, Gao X, Shorr AF
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2015-10-01
Series:International Journal of COPD
Online Access:https://www.dovepress.com/a-longitudinal-retrospective-cohort-study-on-the-impact-of-roflumilast-peer-reviewed-article-COPD
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spelling doaj-c26c80cb22b44523bc706eb71a7a40642020-11-24T23:45:47ZengDove Medical PressInternational Journal of COPD1178-20052015-10-012015Issue 12127213624037A longitudinal, retrospective cohort study on the impact of roflumilast on exacerbations and economic burden among chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients in the real worldWan YSun SXCorman SHuang XGao XShorr AFYin Wan,1 Shawn X Sun,2 Shelby Corman,1 Xingyue Huang,2 Xin Gao,1 Andrew F Shorr3 1Health Economics and Modeling, Outcomes Research, Pharmerit International, Bethesda, MD, USA; 2Health Economics and Outcomes Research, Forest Laboratories, LLC, an affiliate of Actavis, Inc., Jersey City, NJ, USA; 3Pulmonary Critical Care, Washington Hospital Center and Georgetown University, Washington, DC, USA Background: Roflumilast is approved in the United States to reduce the risk of COPD exacerbations in patients with severe COPD. Exacerbation rates, health care resource utilization (HCRU), and costs were compared between roflumilast patients and those receiving other COPD maintenance drugs. Methods: LifeLink™ Health Plan Claims Database was used to identify patients diagnosed with COPD who initiated roflumilast (roflumilast group) or ≥3 other COPD maintenance drugs (non-roflumilast group) from May 1, 2011 to December 31, 2012. Patients must have been enrolled for 12 months before (baseline) and 3 months after (postindex) the initiation date, ≥40 years old, not systemic corticosteroid dependent, and without asthma diagnosis at baseline. Difference-in-difference models compared change from baseline in exacerbations, HCRU (office, emergency visits, and hospitalizations), and total costs between groups, adjusting for baseline differences. Results: A total of 14,211 patients (roflumilast, n=710; non-roflumilast, n=13,501) were included. During follow-up, the rate of overall exacerbations per patient per month decreased by 11.1% in the roflumilast group and increased by 15.9% in the non-roflumilast group (P<0.001). After controlling for baseline differences, roflumilast-treated patients experienced a greater reduction in exacerbations (0.0160 fewer exacerbations per month, P=0.01), numerically greater reductions in hospital admissions (0.003 fewer per month, P=0.57), office visits (0.46 fewer per month, P=0.26), and total costs from baseline compared with non-roflumilast patients ($116 less per month, P=0.62). Conclusion: In a real-world setting, patients initiating roflumilast experienced reductions in exacerbations versus patients treated with other COPD medications. Keywords: PDE-4 inhibitor, COPD, outcomes, health care resource utilizationhttps://www.dovepress.com/a-longitudinal-retrospective-cohort-study-on-the-impact-of-roflumilast-peer-reviewed-article-COPD
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wan Y
Sun SX
Corman S
Huang X
Gao X
Shorr AF
spellingShingle Wan Y
Sun SX
Corman S
Huang X
Gao X
Shorr AF
A longitudinal, retrospective cohort study on the impact of roflumilast on exacerbations and economic burden among chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients in the real world
International Journal of COPD
author_facet Wan Y
Sun SX
Corman S
Huang X
Gao X
Shorr AF
author_sort Wan Y
title A longitudinal, retrospective cohort study on the impact of roflumilast on exacerbations and economic burden among chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients in the real world
title_short A longitudinal, retrospective cohort study on the impact of roflumilast on exacerbations and economic burden among chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients in the real world
title_full A longitudinal, retrospective cohort study on the impact of roflumilast on exacerbations and economic burden among chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients in the real world
title_fullStr A longitudinal, retrospective cohort study on the impact of roflumilast on exacerbations and economic burden among chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients in the real world
title_full_unstemmed A longitudinal, retrospective cohort study on the impact of roflumilast on exacerbations and economic burden among chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients in the real world
title_sort longitudinal, retrospective cohort study on the impact of roflumilast on exacerbations and economic burden among chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients in the real world
publisher Dove Medical Press
series International Journal of COPD
issn 1178-2005
publishDate 2015-10-01
description Yin Wan,1 Shawn X Sun,2 Shelby Corman,1 Xingyue Huang,2 Xin Gao,1 Andrew F Shorr3 1Health Economics and Modeling, Outcomes Research, Pharmerit International, Bethesda, MD, USA; 2Health Economics and Outcomes Research, Forest Laboratories, LLC, an affiliate of Actavis, Inc., Jersey City, NJ, USA; 3Pulmonary Critical Care, Washington Hospital Center and Georgetown University, Washington, DC, USA Background: Roflumilast is approved in the United States to reduce the risk of COPD exacerbations in patients with severe COPD. Exacerbation rates, health care resource utilization (HCRU), and costs were compared between roflumilast patients and those receiving other COPD maintenance drugs. Methods: LifeLink™ Health Plan Claims Database was used to identify patients diagnosed with COPD who initiated roflumilast (roflumilast group) or ≥3 other COPD maintenance drugs (non-roflumilast group) from May 1, 2011 to December 31, 2012. Patients must have been enrolled for 12 months before (baseline) and 3 months after (postindex) the initiation date, ≥40 years old, not systemic corticosteroid dependent, and without asthma diagnosis at baseline. Difference-in-difference models compared change from baseline in exacerbations, HCRU (office, emergency visits, and hospitalizations), and total costs between groups, adjusting for baseline differences. Results: A total of 14,211 patients (roflumilast, n=710; non-roflumilast, n=13,501) were included. During follow-up, the rate of overall exacerbations per patient per month decreased by 11.1% in the roflumilast group and increased by 15.9% in the non-roflumilast group (P<0.001). After controlling for baseline differences, roflumilast-treated patients experienced a greater reduction in exacerbations (0.0160 fewer exacerbations per month, P=0.01), numerically greater reductions in hospital admissions (0.003 fewer per month, P=0.57), office visits (0.46 fewer per month, P=0.26), and total costs from baseline compared with non-roflumilast patients ($116 less per month, P=0.62). Conclusion: In a real-world setting, patients initiating roflumilast experienced reductions in exacerbations versus patients treated with other COPD medications. Keywords: PDE-4 inhibitor, COPD, outcomes, health care resource utilization
url https://www.dovepress.com/a-longitudinal-retrospective-cohort-study-on-the-impact-of-roflumilast-peer-reviewed-article-COPD
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