Although treatment switching and discontinuation is common in MS patients, there is some noticeable variability between drugs and across measures of persistency and adherence. Also, claims data do not allow distinguishing between clinical patterns of MS, direct estimation of disease severity and observation of care that occurs outside of insurance coverage, and results need to be cautiously interpreted. The compliance to the various MS drugs was 80% or higher at all times for all four drugs. The highest rate of treatment persistency existed in the intramuscular IFNbeta-1a initiator group, while subcutaneous IFNbeta-1b was associated with a significantly lower persistence (p < 0.0001).
Adherence and persistence were similar between atypical antipsychotic groups. The typical antipsychotic group, however, demonstrated lower adherence and a greater likelihood of patients modifying therapy compared with the risperidone cohort.
Changing or discontinuing DMDs is common among MS patients and is associated with higher non-pharmaceutical medical costs that vary based on the initiating drug and other demographics characteristics.
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