The use of random-effects models to identify health care center-related characteristics modifying the effect of antipsychotic drugs

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Abstract

Purpose: A case study was conducted, exploring methods to identify drugs effects modifiers, at a health care center level. Patients and methods: Data were drawn from the Schizophrenia Outpatient Health Outcome cohort, including hierarchical information on 6641 patients, recruited from 899 health care centers from across ten European countries. Center-level characteristics included the following: psychiatrist’s gender, age, length of practice experience, practice setting and type, countries’ Healthcare System Efficiency score, and psychiatrist density in the country. Mixed multivariable linear regression models were used: 1) to estimate antipsychotic drugs’ effectiveness (defined as the association between patients’ outcome at 3 months – dependent variable, continuous – and antipsychotic drug initiation at baseline – drug A vs other antipsychotic drug); 2) to estimate the similarity between clustered data (using the intra-cluster correlation coefficient); and 3) to explore antipsychotic drug effects modification by center-related characteristics (using the addition of an interaction term). Results: About 23% of the variance found for patients’ outcome was explained by unmeasured confounding at a center level. Psychiatrists’ practice experience was found to be associated with patient outcomes (p=0.04) and modified the relative effect of “drug A” (p<0.001), independent of center- or patient-related characteristics. Conclusion: Mixed models may be useful to explore how center-related characteristics modify drugs’ effect estimates, but require numerous assumptions.

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Nordon, C., Battin, C., Verdoux, H., Haro, J. M., Belger, M., Abenhaim, L., & Van Staa, T. P. (2017). The use of random-effects models to identify health care center-related characteristics modifying the effect of antipsychotic drugs. Clinical Epidemiology, 9, 689–698. https://doi.org/10.2147/CLEP.S145353

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