BACKGROUND: Because of their lower cost, healthcare systems recommend physicians to prefer generic products, rather than brand-name medicaments. There is then considerable interest and debate concerning safety and effectiveness of generic products. Few studies have compared patients treated with brand-name and generic drugs for adherence to treatment, with somewhat inconsistent results. The primary objective of this study was to compare the risk of discontinuing antihypertensive drug therapy in patients treated with generic or brand-name agents. METHODS: The 101618 beneficiaries of the Healthcare system of Lombardy, Italy, aged 18 years or older who were newly treated on monotherapy with antihypertensive generic or brand-name drugs during 2008, were followed until the earliest date among those of the occurrence of treatment discontinuation to whatever antihypertensive drug therapy (outcome), or censoring (death, emigration, 12 months after treatment initiation). Hazard ratios of discontinuation associated with starting on generic or brand-name products (intention-to-treat analysis), and incidence rate ratio of discontinuation during periods on generic and brand-name products (as-treated analysis) were respectively estimated from a cohort and self-controlled case series analyses. RESULTS: Patients who started on generics did not experience a different risk of discontinuation compared with those starting on brand-name agents (hazard ratio: 1.00; 95% confidence interval 0.98-1.02). Discontinuation did not occur with different rates during periods covered by generics or brand-name agents (incidence rate ratio: 1.01; 95% confidence interval 0.96-1.11) within the same individuals. A number of sensitivity and subgroup analyses confirmed the robustness of these findings. CONCLUSION: Generic products are not responsible for the high rate of discontinuation from antihypertensive drug therapy. Assuming therapeutic equivalence, clinical implication is of prescribing generic drug therapies.

Medication persistence and the use of generic and brand-name blood pressure-lowering agents / G. Corrao, D. Soranna, C. La Vecchia, A. Catapano, E. Agabiti Rosei, G. Gensini, L. Merlino, G. Mancia. - In: JOURNAL OF HYPERTENSION. - ISSN 0263-6352. - 32:5(2014), pp. 1146-1153. [10.1097/HJH.0000000000000130]

Medication persistence and the use of generic and brand-name blood pressure-lowering agents

C. La Vecchia;A. Catapano;
2014

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Because of their lower cost, healthcare systems recommend physicians to prefer generic products, rather than brand-name medicaments. There is then considerable interest and debate concerning safety and effectiveness of generic products. Few studies have compared patients treated with brand-name and generic drugs for adherence to treatment, with somewhat inconsistent results. The primary objective of this study was to compare the risk of discontinuing antihypertensive drug therapy in patients treated with generic or brand-name agents. METHODS: The 101618 beneficiaries of the Healthcare system of Lombardy, Italy, aged 18 years or older who were newly treated on monotherapy with antihypertensive generic or brand-name drugs during 2008, were followed until the earliest date among those of the occurrence of treatment discontinuation to whatever antihypertensive drug therapy (outcome), or censoring (death, emigration, 12 months after treatment initiation). Hazard ratios of discontinuation associated with starting on generic or brand-name products (intention-to-treat analysis), and incidence rate ratio of discontinuation during periods on generic and brand-name products (as-treated analysis) were respectively estimated from a cohort and self-controlled case series analyses. RESULTS: Patients who started on generics did not experience a different risk of discontinuation compared with those starting on brand-name agents (hazard ratio: 1.00; 95% confidence interval 0.98-1.02). Discontinuation did not occur with different rates during periods covered by generics or brand-name agents (incidence rate ratio: 1.01; 95% confidence interval 0.96-1.11) within the same individuals. A number of sensitivity and subgroup analyses confirmed the robustness of these findings. CONCLUSION: Generic products are not responsible for the high rate of discontinuation from antihypertensive drug therapy. Assuming therapeutic equivalence, clinical implication is of prescribing generic drug therapies.
English
databases; generic; discontinuation; brand name; antihypertensive treatment
Settore MED/01 - Statistica Medica
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
2014
Lippincott Williams and Wilkins
32
5
1146
1153
8
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
scopus
pubmed
crossref
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Medication persistence and the use of generic and brand-name blood pressure-lowering agents / G. Corrao, D. Soranna, C. La Vecchia, A. Catapano, E. Agabiti Rosei, G. Gensini, L. Merlino, G. Mancia. - In: JOURNAL OF HYPERTENSION. - ISSN 0263-6352. - 32:5(2014), pp. 1146-1153. [10.1097/HJH.0000000000000130]
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Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
8
262
Article (author)
no
G. Corrao, D. Soranna, C. La Vecchia, A. Catapano, E. Agabiti Rosei, G. Gensini, L. Merlino, G. Mancia
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/239956
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