Ten-year follow-up of antidiabetic drug use, nonadherence, and mortality in a defined population with type 2 diabetes mellitus

Citation
Jb. Brown et al., Ten-year follow-up of antidiabetic drug use, nonadherence, and mortality in a defined population with type 2 diabetes mellitus, CLIN THER, 21(6), 1999, pp. 1045-1057
Citations number
20
Categorie Soggetti
Pharmacology
Journal title
CLINICAL THERAPEUTICS
ISSN journal
01492918 → ACNP
Volume
21
Issue
6
Year of publication
1999
Pages
1045 - 1057
Database
ISI
SICI code
0149-2918(199906)21:6<1045:TFOADU>2.0.ZU;2-T
Abstract
Studies performed for drug registration provide little insight into the lon g-term use and effectiveness of drugs in "real world" populations and setti ngs. Tn obtain such insight, we used 10 years of electronic medical-record data from Kaiser Permanente Northwest Division, a large, group-model health maintenance organization in the United States, to study drug transitions, lapses in drug therapy, and mortality among 693 persons with newly diagnose d type 2 diabetes mellitus in 1988. We also studied an equivalently defined cohort of 1071 persons with new diagnoses in 1994, for whom the availabili ty of laboratory results via electronic data permitted additional analyses. Cumulative mortality in the 1988 cohort increased steadily to 207 of 571 p atients (36%) by 1997 (year 10). In 1988, 548 of 693 patients (79%) receive d initial monotherapy with a sulfonylurea. Insulin use rose as the use of s ulfonylureas declined. Over this period, 504 of 693 patients (73%) disconti nued or added drug therapy. Eight percent to 10% of both sulfonylurea users and insulin users discontinued drug use during the study period. In the 19 94 cohort, two thirds of the subjects who discontinued therapy and were tes ted for glycosylated hemoglobin (Hb A(1c)) (n = 86) maintained good-to-exce llent glycemic control. However, 78 discontinuers (38%) were not tested for Hb A(1c), and, among this subset, 32% failed to visit a primary care clini cian. The results of this study suggest that 5% to 10% of persons with type 2 diabetes mellitus avoid contact with the medical care system. Avoidance persists for at least the first 10 years after diagnosis but is more common in the first year after diagnosis. In addition, secondary failure of sulfo nylureas begins within 1 year of diagnosis and continues at a steady pace. Almost 80% of patients initially treated with sulfonylureas added or switch ed to metformin or insulin within 10 years of diagnosis.