Patient Acceptability and Preferences for Solid Oral Dosage Form Drug Product Attributes: A Scoping Review.

IF 2 3区 医学 Q2 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL Patient preference and adherence Pub Date : 2024-06-21 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.2147/PPA.S443213
Brett Hauber, Mark V Hand, Bruno C Hancock, Joseph Zarrella, Ljiljana Harding, Michaela Ogden-Barker, Amy S Antipas, Stephen J Watt
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Abstract

Background: There is no consistent framework for patient-centric drug product design, despite the common understanding that drug product acceptability and preferences influence adherence and, therefore, drug product effectiveness. The aim of this review was to assess current understanding of patient acceptability and preferences for solid oral dosage form (SODF) drug product attributes, and the potential impact of these attributes on patient behaviors and outcomes.

Patients and methods: A scoping review was conducted. Embase, Ovid MEDLINE®, and PubMed® were searched for full-text articles published between January 2013 and May 2023. Following screening and assessment against predefined inclusion criteria, data were analyzed thematically.

Results: Nineteen studies were included. Four overarching domains of drug product attributes were identified and summarized in a framework: appearance, swallowability, palatability, and handling. Each domain was informed by specific drug product attributes: texture, form, size, shape, color, marking, taste, mouthfeel, and smell. The most frequently studied domains were swallowability and appearance, while the most studied attributes were size, shape, and texture. Smell, marking, and mouthfeel were the least studied attributes. Texture intersected all domains, while form, shape, and size intersected appearance, swallowability, and handling. Swallowability and size appeared to be the key domain and attribute, respectively, to consider when designing drug products. Few studies explored the impact of drug product attributes on behaviors and outcomes.

Conclusion: While existing studies of drug product attributes have focused on appearance and swallowability, this review highlighted the importance of two less well-understood domains-palatability and handling-in understanding patients' acceptability and preferences for SODF drug products. The framework provides a tool to facilitate patient-centric design of drug products, organizing and categorizing physical drug product attributes into four overarching domains (appearance, swallowability, palatability, and handling), encouraging researchers to comprehensively assess the impact of drug product attributes on patient acceptability, preferences, and outcomes.

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患者对口服固体制剂药物产品属性的接受度和偏好:范围审查。
背景:尽管人们普遍认为药物产品的可接受性和偏好会影响用药依从性,进而影响药物产品的有效性,但以患者为中心的药物产品设计并没有统一的框架。本综述旨在评估目前对患者对口服固体制剂(SODF)药物产品属性的可接受性和偏好的理解,以及这些属性对患者行为和结果的潜在影响:进行了范围界定审查。在 Embase、Ovid MEDLINE® 和 PubMed® 中检索了 2013 年 1 月至 2023 年 5 月间发表的全文文章。根据预定义的纳入标准进行筛选和评估后,对数据进行了专题分析:结果:共纳入 19 项研究。确定了药物产品属性的四个主要领域,并将其归纳为一个框架:外观、吞咽性、适口性和操作。每个领域都有具体的药品属性:质地、形状、大小、形状、颜色、标记、味道、口感和气味。研究最多的领域是可吞咽性和外观,研究最多的属性是大小、形状和质地。气味、标记和口感是研究最少的属性。质地与所有领域都有交集,而形状、形状和大小则与外观、可吞咽性和操作性有交集。吞咽性和大小似乎分别是设计药物产品时需要考虑的关键领域和属性。很少有研究探讨药物产品属性对行为和结果的影响:尽管现有的药物产品属性研究主要集中在外观和可吞咽性方面,但本综述强调了两个鲜为人知的领域--可口性和操作性--在了解患者对SODF药物产品的接受度和偏好方面的重要性。该框架为促进以患者为中心的药物产品设计提供了一个工具,它将药物产品的物理属性组织和归类为四个总体领域(外观、可吞咽性、适口性和操作),鼓励研究人员全面评估药物产品属性对患者可接受性、偏好和疗效的影响。
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来源期刊
Patient preference and adherence
Patient preference and adherence MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL-
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
4.50%
发文量
354
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Patient Preference and Adherence is an international, peer reviewed, open access journal that focuses on the growing importance of patient preference and adherence throughout the therapeutic continuum. The journal is characterized by the rapid reporting of reviews, original research, modeling and clinical studies across all therapeutic areas. Patient satisfaction, acceptability, quality of life, compliance, persistence and their role in developing new therapeutic modalities and compounds to optimize clinical outcomes for existing disease states are major areas of interest for the journal. As of 1st April 2019, Patient Preference and Adherence will no longer consider meta-analyses for publication.
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