Abstract

Pharmacologic treatment for psoriatic arthritis (PsA) includes traditional oral small molecules (OSMs), tumor necrosis factor inhibitors (TNFis), and newer oral therapies such as a phosphodiesterase-4 (PDE4) inhibitor and a Janus kinase inhibitor. We aimed to describe treatment patterns and health care costs for treatment-naïve patients with active PsA initiating pharmacologictreatment. This was an observational, retrospectivestudy. We assessed treatment patterns and health care costs from the IBM MarketScan Research databases. We calculated costs during the 12-month follow-up period for inpatient and outpatient medical health care, including outpatient prescription costs. A total of 3491 patients were identified for the study. Incident therapies included OSMs methotrexate (58.3%), sulfasalazine (9.8%), hydroxychloroquine (2.3%), and other OSMs (1.9%); TNFis adalimumab (12.3%), etanercept (8.6%), infliximab (1.9%), and other TNFis (1.4%); and the PDE4 inhibitor apremilast (2.6%). Persistence ranged from 15.2% to 34.6% with OSM monotherapy and from 42.9% to 58.2% with TNFi monotherapy. Percentage of patients with a gap of at least 60 days in therapy ranged from 42.9% to 48.5% with OSMs and from 17.9% to 29.9% with TNFis. Mean first-line unadjusted per-patient per-month total health care costs for OSMs ranged from $1029 to $1456 and mean total health care costs ranged from $19,173 to $25,013. Mean unadjusted per-patient per-month total health care costs for TNFis ranged from $4203 to $7063 and mean total health care costs ranged from $45,635 to $60,933. Although patients using OSMs had generally lower total health care costs, they also had the highest rates of treatment modifications such as low persistence and medication gaps of at least 60 days.

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