Asthma and allergy medication use and costs among pediatric primary care patients on asthma controller therapy
Authors: Sazonov-Kocevar, Vasilisa1; Laforest, Laurent2; Travier, Noemie2; Yin, Donald D.1; Ganse, Eric Van2
Source: Pediatric Allergy and Immunology, Volume 17, Number 8, December 2006 , pp. 620-628(9)
Publisher: Blackwell Publishing
Abstract:
Sazonov-Kocevar V, Laforest L, Travier N, Yin DD, Van Ganse E. Asthma and allergy medication use and costs among pediatric primary care patients on asthma controller therapy.Pediatr Allergy Immunol 2006: 17: 620-628. © 2006 The Authors Journal compilation © 2006 Blackwell Munksgaard As observational studies in children initiating GINA-Step 3 therapies are scarce, we evaluated outcomes and costs in a primary care cohort. Two-yr retrospective cohort study included French children (age: 6-14) continuously followed in BKL-Thalès database who received ≥2 consecutive prescriptions for GINA-Step 3 therapy (=addition of montelukast or other controllers (`other'), such as increasing inhaled-corticosteroid dose (hICS), adding long-acting β agonist (LABA), or ICS + LABA). After matching on gender and propensity score, medication use [rescue (short-acting β agonists), acute (antibiotics (AB), oral corticosteroids (OCS)), allergy (antihistamines, nasal steroids) and other respiratory] was estimated via mean number of prescriptions and mean cost (per child/per month), and cost trends. During 12-month follow-up, children adding montelukast (n = 71) vs. `other' (n = 213) had similar asthma rescue/acute and allergy medication use. Subgroup with asthma and allergic rhinitis (A + AR) adding montelukast used less OCS and AB (p = 0.014). Two-yr cost trends suggest stable asthma/allergy medication use in montelukast group (€0.83) compared with increase in `other' (€5.39), which was driven by nasal steroid use [€0.32 (`other') vs. €−0.04 (montelukast), p = 0.0013]. In subgroup with A + AR decline in asthma/allergy medication use in montelukast group (€−0.47) vs. increase in `other' (€11.05), p = 0.015, was driven by differences in AB and OCS (p = 0.04) and nasal steroid use (p = 0.001). Concomitant asthma/allergy medication use was similar in children adding montelukast or `other' controllers (hICS, LABA, ICS + LABA), while children with allergic rhinitis on montelukast used less AB. Concomitant medication costs after addition of montelukast remained stable, while `other' group experienced increase, especially in children with concomitant allergic rhinitis.Keywords: asthma; children; control; costs; medication use
Document Type: Research article
DOI: 10.1111/j.1399-3038.2006.00459.x
Affiliations: 1: Merck & Co. Inc., Whitehouse Station, NJ, USA 2: Unité de Pharmacoépidémiologie, Hôpital Lyon Sud, Pierre Benite, France

Click here for Page Help