Patient and physician preferences in epilepsy monotherapy in a real-world study (VOTE): evidence from discrete choice experiments
Abstract number :
143
Submission category :
7. Antiepileptic Drugs / 7E. Other
Year :
2020
Submission ID :
2422491
Source :
www.aesnet.org
Presentation date :
12/5/2008 12:00:00 AM
Published date :
Nov 21, 2020, 02:24 AM
Authors :
Felix Rosenow - Goethe-University Frankfurt; Yaroslav Winter - Mainz Comprehensive Epilepsy Center, Johannes Gutenberg-University; Iryna Leunikava - UCB Pharma; Marcus Brunnert - UCB Pharma; Jessie Sutphin - RTI Health Solutions; Marco Boeri - RTI Health; Flavio Villani - Centro Regionale per l’Epilessia, Ospedale Policlinico IRCCS San Martino, Genoa, Italy; Christian Brandt - Bethel Epilepsy Center, Mara Hospital, Bielefeld, Germany
Rationale:
The importance of patient-centered decision-making is increasingly recognized. There is limited experience in capturing patient preference information as part of observational studies. This study was conducted to gain insights into patients’ and physicians’ preferences for risks and benefits in terms of efficacy and side effects in epilepsy monotherapy with antiepileptic drugs (AED).
Method:
Prospective, observational study (EP0076; VOTE) in patients with focal seizures who required a change in their AED monotherapy. Patients completed a discrete choice experiment (DCE) survey on a tablet in clinic before and after consultation. The survey was experimentally designed and pretested. Physicians completed a similar survey for up to 3 patients per physician after the consultation. The DCE consisted of a series of 12 choices between two hypothetical treatments defined by 7 attributes with 3-4 levels: chance of becoming seizure-free, chance of developing clinical depression, personality changes, trouble thinking clearly, dizziness, bodyweight change in 6 months, and sleepiness/tiredness. Data were analyzed using a conditional multinomial logit or random-parameters logit model. The conditional relative importance of each attribute was calculated. Results310 patients (mean [SD] age: 46.8 [18.3] years; 52.3% female) were enrolled from eight European countries, of whom 305 completed the survey before consultation and 273 completed the survey before and after consultation. Patients had a mean (SD) epilepsy duration of 11.2 (12.6) years and median (range) focal seizure frequency/28 days of 0.6 (0.0, 112.0). Most common reasons for change in AED regimen were insufficient efficacy (48.4%) and adverse drug reaction (31.9%). 49 physicians completed a survey for 94 patients. Prior to consultation, patients preferred a higher chance of seizure freedom, lower risk of clinical depression, and less severe side effects (Fig 1A). Avoiding moderate-to-severe trouble thinking clearly was more important than avoiding a 10% chance of clinical depression. After consultation, the patients’ relative importance weights were generally qualitatively similar (Fig 1B). Physicians placed more weight on efficacy and personality changes than on chance of depression or other side effects (Fig 2A). For patients, the most important attributes before consultation were seizure freedom and trouble thinking clearly; in physicians, the most important attributes after the consultation were seizure freedom, followed by personality changes (Fig 2B). For both patients and physicians, bodyweight change was least important.
Conclusion:
In this study, patients’ most important treatment attributes for AED monotherapy before and after consultation were higher chance of seizure freedom and avoiding negative impact on cognition in terms of trouble thinking clearly. Physicians placed more weight on personality changes than other side effects.
Funding:
:
Funding:
: UCB Pharma-sponsored.
Antiepileptic Drugs