Patients' preferences and economic considerations play an important role in treatment decisions: a discrete choice experiment among rheumatologists

14Citations
Citations of this article
46Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate to what extent rheumatologists consider economic aspects and patients' preferences when choosing drug treatments in patients with active RA. METHODS: In a discrete choice experiment, rheumatologists were asked to choose between two unlabelled drug treatment options for a hypothetical RA patient with moderate disease activity who failed two synthetic DMARDs. Attributes and levels of drug treatments were selected based on existing literature, rheumatologists' opinion and expert consensus. This resulted in five attributes each described by three levels: efficacy (level of improvement and achieved state on DAS28), safety (probability of a serious adverse event), patients' preference (level of agreement), annual medication costs and cost-effectiveness (incremental cost-effectiveness ratio). An efficient experimental design generated 14 treatment choices and a random parameter logit model estimated the relative importance of attributes. RESULTS: Sixty-three rheumatologists from the Netherlands contributed to the analysis; 44% were female and mean (sd) age was 49 (8) years. Drug efficacy had the strongest relative contribution to the drug choice (44%) followed by medication costs (24%), patients' preference (17%) and cost-effectiveness (14%). Patients' preferences were most relevant when patients disliked a proposed treatment. The risk of serious but uncommon or rare side effects only played a minor role in the treatment choice (1%). CONCLUSION: In addition to drug efficacy, rheumatologists account for economic aspects and for patients' preferences when deciding on drugs. Decisions are more influenced by absolute costs than relative cost-effectiveness and by patients' disliking as opposed to favouring the treatment.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Hifinger, M., Hiligsmann, M., Ramiro, S., Severens, J. L., Fautrel, B., Watson, V., & Boonen, A. (2017). Patients’ preferences and economic considerations play an important role in treatment decisions: a discrete choice experiment among rheumatologists. Rheumatology (Oxford, England), 56(1), 68–76. https://doi.org/10.1093/rheumatology/kew328

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free