4.1 Article

Health care resource utilization patterns among patients with Parkinson's disease psychosis: analysis of Medicare beneficiaries treated with pimavanserin or other-atypical antipsychotics

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL ECONOMICS
Volume 26, Issue 1, Pages 34-42

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/13696998.2022.2152600

Keywords

Parkinson's disease; psychosis; pimavanserin; atypical antipsychotics; HCRU; health care resource utilization; hospitalizations

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This study analyzed PDP patients treated with PIM monotherapy and found that it led to nearly 12% and 7% reductions in all-cause hospitalizations and ER visits compared to other-AAPs.
Background Pimavanserin (PIM) is the only FDA-approved atypical antipsychotic (AAP) for hallucinations and delusions associated with Parkinson's disease psychosis (PDP). Comparative real-world analyses demonstrating its benefits are needed. Objectives To evaluate health care resource utilization (HCRU) outcomes among PDP patients treated with PIM vs. other-AAPs. Methods Retrospective cohort analysis of Parts A, B, and D claims from 100% Medicare sample from 01 January 2013-31 December 2019 was conducted. PDP Patients initiating (i.e. index date) continuous monotherapy (PIM vs. other-AAPs) for >= 12-months during 01 January 2014-31 December 2018 without 12-months pre-index AAP use were selected after 1:1 propensity score matching (PSM) on 31 variables (sex, race, region, age, and 27 Elixhauser comorbidities). HCRU outcomes included: annual all-cause and psychiatric hospitalization (short-term stay, long-term stay, and SNF-stay [skilled nursing facility]) rates, annual all-cause and psychiatric-ER visit rates, mean per-patient-per-year (PPPY) hospitalizations, and average length of stay (ALOS). PIM and other-AAPs were compared using generalized linear models (GLM) controlled for demographic characteristics, comorbidities, coexisting-dementia, and coexisting insomnia. Results Of 12,164 PDP patients, 48.41% (n = 5,889) were female, and mean age was 77 (+/- 8.14) years. Among 1:1 matched patients (n = 842 in each), 37.8% (n = 319) on PIM vs. 49.8% (n = 420) on other-AAPs (p < .05) reported >= 1 all-cause hospitalizations, respectively. Specifically, short-term and SNF-stay among PIM patients vs. other-AAPs were: 34% (n = 286) vs. 46.2% (n = 389) and 20.2% (n = 170) vs. 31.8% (n = 267) (p < .05), respectively. Similarly, 9.6% (n = 81) of PIM vs. 14.6% (n = 123) of other-AAPs patients had >= 1 psychiatric hospitalization (p < .05). Furthermore, >= 1 all-cause and psychiatric ER visit among PIM vs. other-AAPs were 61.6% (n = 519) vs. 69.4% (n = 584) and 5.2% (n = 43) vs. 10.2% (n = 86) (p < .05), respectively. PIM also had significantly lower ALOS, and mean PPPY short-term hospitalization and SNF-stays. Conclusions In this analysis of PDP patients, PIM monotherapy resulted in nearly 12% and 7% lower all-cause hospitalizations and ER visits vs. other-AAPs.

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