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Research Articles

Predictors of non-adherence to systemic oral therapy for advanced hepatocellular carcinoma

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Pages 1701-1708 | Accepted 22 Aug 2013, Published online: 27 Sep 2013
 

Abstract

Objectives:

With increasing use and cost of oral oncology medications, patient non-adherence with oral therapy is of concern. This study evaluated non-adherence among patients receiving first-line oral therapy for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC).

Methods:

This retrospective study used the employer-based MarketScan medical and pharmacy claims database (2005–2011) to identify adult patients with two or more diagnoses of HCC (ICD-9 155), and two or more filled prescriptions for sorafenib. Additional eligibility requirements were not having other previous cancers and a 4 month wash-out period prior to the index sorafenib date. Adherence was assessed using a modified proportion of days covered (PDC) measure with patient-specific sorafenib exposure from index date to treatment discontinuation. Non-adherence was categorized as PDC <85% (base case), with sensitivity analyses using an 80% cut-off and allowance for physician-directed therapy gaps. Logistic regression models were estimated to identify predictors of non-adherence.

Results:

A total of 1127 patients (median age = 61.0 years; 78.4% male) met eligibility criteria. Median duration of enrollment was 223 days and median sorafenib exposure was 121 days. Between 21.1% (PDC < 0.80) and 28.0% (PDC < 0.85) of patients were non-adherent. Higher age (p = 0.022), number of baseline medications (p = 0.003) and number of baseline comorbidities (p = 0.002) were associated with lower non-adherence, while prior procedures were associated with greater non-adherence (p = 0.002).

Limitations:

In this study using billing claims data, we were unable to evaluate patient severity in terms of clinical characteristics such as the Child–Pugh score. Similarly, we could not assess clinical outcomes such as tumor response, radiological progression or overall survival, although median duration of sorafenib exposure and duration of health plan enrollment respectively were found to be good proxies.

Conclusions:

Using a modified PDC approach, 22–29% of patients were non-adherent. Identified predictors of non-adherence in HCC should be assessed for newly emerging oral therapies, and may be used to guide patient education and other adherence-enhancing initiatives.

Transparency

Declaration of funding

This study was funded by Daiichi Sankyo Inc.

Declaration of financial/other relationships

J.C. is an employee of and has stock ownership rights with Daiichi Sankyo Inc., the study sponsor. At the time the study was conducted, RM was an employee of and had stock ownership rights with Daiichi Sankyo, Inc., the study sponsor. J.W. received compensation from Daiichi Sankyo Inc. for her role in manuscript preparation.

CMRO peer reviewers may have received honoraria for their review work. The peer reviewers on this manuscript have disclosed that they have no relevant financial relationships.

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