Abstract

BackgroundMaintaining patient adherence to disease modifying drugs in multiple sclerosis is a challenge, which can be improved by autoinjectors. The BETACONNECT® is a fully electronic autoinjector for the injection of interferon beta-1b (IFN beta-1b) automatically recording injections.MethodsThe BETAEVAL study was a prospective, observational, cohort study over 24 weeks among patients with relapsing remitting multiple sclerosis or clinically isolated syndrome treated with IFN beta-1b in Germany using the BETACONNECT®. The primary aim was to investigate treatment adherence, secondary aims included assessing satisfaction and functional health status. Adherence was evaluated from injection data recorded by the device. Patient-related data were obtained from clinical examinations and patient questionnaires.ResultsOf the 151 patients enrolled, 143 were available for analysis. Thirty-four patients discontinued the study prematurely. 107/143 (74.8%) patients still used the BETACONNECT® at the end of the study. Injection data from the device at any visit was available for 107 patients. Among those, the percentage of adherent patients injecting ≥80% of doses and still participating in the study was 57.9% at week 24. 29% of patients prematurely stopped the study, 13.1% injected <80%. Among patients with BETACONNECT® data at the respective visit, the proportion of adherent patients was high over the entire study period (week 4: 81.1% [N = 95], week 12: 86.7% [N = 83], week 24: 80.5% [N = 77]). Participants (N = 143) indicated high satisfaction with the BETACONNECT®. At week 24, 98.0% of patients who completed the corresponding questionnaire (strongly) agreed that it was user-friendly, 81.2% felt confident in using it compared to their previous way and 85.5% preferred it to their previous way of injection. Injection-related pain was rated as mild to moderate at all follow-up visits. Whereas 17.2% of patients with corresponding questionnaire indicated using analgesics prior to injection at week 4, only 9.1% did at week 24. Outcomes from questionnaires assessing functional health status, depression, fatigue and cognitive function were very similar throughout the study course.ConclusionsThe majority of patients continued using the BETACONNECT® for IFN beta-1b treatment during the 24-week study period. Adherence was high among participants still using the BETACONNECT® and patients were highly satisfied with the device. Ongoing studies will evaluate long-term adherence and treatment outcomes in patients using the BETACONNECT®.Trial registrationclinicaltrails.gov NCT02121444 (registered April 22, 2014).

Highlights

  • Maintaining patient adherence to disease modifying drugs in multiple sclerosis is a challenge, which can be improved by autoinjectors

  • 8 patients were excluded because the inclusion criteria were violated or no documented follow-up visit was available, resulting in 143 patients for final analysis (full analysis set (FAS) and safety analysis set (SAF); Fig. 1)

  • Persistence, adherence and compliance Among the 143 patients in the FAS, 129 (90.2%) indicated they were still performing their injections with the BETACONNECT® at week 4, 123 (86%) at week 12 and 107 (74.8%) at week 24

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Summary

Introduction

Maintaining patient adherence to disease modifying drugs in multiple sclerosis is a challenge, which can be improved by autoinjectors. Long-term adherence to the prescribed treatment regimen is crucial in order to achieve optimal response from injectable DMDs. Patients missing doses or interrupting treatment fare worse and have an increased risk of relapse and disability progression than adherent patients [2,3,4,5]. Patients missing doses or interrupting treatment fare worse and have an increased risk of relapse and disability progression than adherent patients [2,3,4,5] This directly translates into increased healthcare resource utilization which may lead to increased healthcare costs [4, 5]. Adherence was found to be suboptimal in available studies of injectable DMDs [3, 5,6,7]

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