Real-World Experience of Patient-Relevant Benefits and Treatment Satisfaction with Apremilast in Patients with Psoriasis: An Analysis of the APPRECIATE Study.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_77EA92840B70
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Real-World Experience of Patient-Relevant Benefits and Treatment Satisfaction with Apremilast in Patients with Psoriasis: An Analysis of the APPRECIATE Study.
Journal
Dermatology and therapy
Author(s)
Klein T.M., Blome C., Kleyn C.E., Conrad C., Sator P.G., Ståhle M., Eyerich K., Radtke M.A., Bundy C., Cordey M., Griffiths CEM, Augustin M.
ISSN
2193-8210 (Print)
Publication state
Published
Issued date
01/2022
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
12
Number
1
Pages
81-95
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
In the real-world APPRECIATE study (NCT02740218), most patients with psoriasis demonstrated notable improvements on disease severity measures and reported clinically meaningful treatment benefits with apremilast.
We aim to further describe patient-relevant needs and benefits and patient satisfaction with apremilast, including subgroup analyses based on patient characteristics.
APPRECIATE, a multinational, retrospective, cross-sectional study, enrolled patients with chronic plaque psoriasis who started apremilast according to the European label. Patient Benefit Index (PBI; range 0 (no patient-relevant benefit) to 4 (maximum patient-relevant benefit), global PBI score ≥ 1 indicating minimum patient-relevant benefit and ≥ 3 indicating high benefit) and nine-item Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire for Medication (TSQM-9; range 0-100) were assessed 6 (± 1) months after apremilast initiation and summarized descriptively. Relationships between global PBI and TSQM-9 assessments were analyzed by Pearson correlations.
Of 480 enrolled patients, 347 (72.3%) had remained on apremilast at 6 (± 1) months; 90.9% (300/330) achieved global PBI score ≥ 1. Mean (standard deviation) global PBI score was 2.8 (1.2). Higher achievement of global PBI score ≥ 3 was observed in patients with no prior treatments (61.1% (22/36)) or prior phototherapy (64.6% (42/65)) versus prior conventional systemic (54.4% (100/184)) or biologic (38.6% (17/44)) treatment. Strong correlations were observed between the global PBI score and the TSQM-9 global satisfaction and effectiveness subscale scores.
Patients continuing apremilast for 6 (± 1) months in APPRECIATE reported patient-relevant treatment benefits. Findings suggest that receiving apremilast earlier versus later in treatment management is consistent with greater improvements in patient-relevant treatment outcomes.
Keywords
Apremilast, Patient Benefit Index, Patient-reported outcomes, Psoriasis, Real-world study, Treatment satisfaction
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
03/12/2021 18:50
Last modification date
18/11/2023 8:08
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