连续 3-8 年参加医疗补助计划的青少年单独或与其他精神药物一起服用兴奋剂的模式。

IF 1.5 4区 医学 Q2 PEDIATRICS Journal of child and adolescent psychopharmacology Pub Date : 2024-04-01 Epub Date: 2024-02-16 DOI:10.1089/cap.2023.0028
Daniel Zhu, Julie M Zito, James F Gardner, Heather A Young, Scott Quinlan, Angelo Elmi
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目标:美国的药物流行病学研究很少以连续参保一年以上的治疗为基础。本研究旨在从医疗补助管理报销数据中了解连续参保 3 至 8 年的儿科兴奋剂使用模式(单独使用或与其他精神药物一起使用)。研究方法:一项回顾性队列研究来自大西洋中部一个州的医疗补助登记、药房和诊断索赔数据(2007-2014 年)。研究人员将使用刺激剂治疗的 2-17 岁连续注册 3-8 年的青少年与未使用刺激剂治疗的日期匹配对比组进行了比较。主要结果包括刺激剂使用的流行率和持续时间,以及在相对较长的注册时间(3-8 年)内使用刺激剂的多重用药模式。结果:在 264,518 名连续接受 3-8 年治疗的 2-17 岁儿童中,16.5% 的儿童有兴奋剂处方配药史,比全国每年 8.1% 的患病率高出一倍。分组分析表明,兴奋剂使用率最高的人群是 6-11 岁的青少年(20.4%)、符合寄养条件的青少年(42.3%)和连续就学 7-8 年的青少年(20.1%)。接受兴奋剂治疗的青少年中,外化性精神障碍的发生率远远高于未接受兴奋剂治疗的青少年。接受兴奋剂治疗的时间中位数为 487 天,是寄养机构兴奋剂使用者的一半。29.8%的兴奋剂使用者同时服用两种或两种以上精神药物。在同时使用三种或四种以上精神药物的人群中,分别有 85% 和 88% 的人同时使用兴奋剂和抗精神病药物。在 12-17 岁年龄组(AOR = 1.8)、有寄养资格(AOR = 4.5)和入学时间最长(AOR = 1.7)的人群中,三类或四类以上多种药物的调整赔率(AOR)显著增加。结论与相关性:在连续参保 3-8 年的医疗补助参保青少年中,兴奋剂流行率是年度数据集的两倍。未来的研究应在可靠诊断的社区人群中调查三至五类间兴奋剂的多重药效。
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Stimulant Patterns, Alone or with Other Psychotropic Classes, in Medicaid-Insured Youth Continuously Enrolled for 3-8 Years.

Objective: Little U.S. pharmacoepidemiologic study is based on treatment during continuous enrollment for periods more than a year. This study aims to show pediatric patterns of stimulant use (alone or with other psychotropic classes) from Medicaid administrative claims data for stimulant patterns of 3- to 8-year continuous enrollees. Methods: A retrospective cohort study was derived from Medicaid enrollment, pharmacy, and diagnosis claims data (2007-2014) in a mid-Atlantic state. Youth aged 2-17 years with 3-8 years of continuous enrollment treated with stimulants were compared with a date-matched comparison group treated without stimulants. Major outcomes include prevalence and duration of stimulant use and patterns of stimulant polypharmacy across relatively long enrollments (3-8 years). Results: Among 264,518 unique 2- to 17-year olds with 3-8 years of continuous enrollment, 16.5% had stimulant prescription dispensings, doubling the annual national prevalence of 8.1%. Subgroup analysis showed that the highest prevalence of stimulant use was for 6- to 11-year olds (20.4%), foster care eligible youth (42.3%), and those with 7-8 years of continuous enrollment (20.1%). Externalizing psychiatric disorders were far more common in those treated with stimulants than in those treated without stimulants. The duration of stimulant exposure overall was a median of 487 days, half that of foster care stimulant users. Stimulant polypharmacy with two or more psychotropic classes concomitantly characterized 29.8% of stimulant users. Among those with three or four or more class polypharmacy, 85% and 88%, respectively, had concomitant stimulant and antipsychotic use. The adjusted odds ratio (AOR) of three or more class polypharmacy significantly increased in 12- to 17-year-old age group (AOR = 1.8), foster care eligibility (AOR = 4.5), and among those with the longest enrollment (AOR = 1.7). Conclusions and Relevance: Stimulant prevalence in Medicaid-insured youth with continuous enrollment of 3-8 years was twice as common as in annual data sets. Future research should investigate three to five interclass stimulant polypharmacy effectiveness in reliably diagnosed community populations.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
5.30%
发文量
61
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Child and Adolescent Psychopharmacology (JCAP) is the premier peer-reviewed journal covering the clinical aspects of treating this patient population with psychotropic medications including side effects and interactions, standard doses, and research on new and existing medications. The Journal includes information on related areas of medical sciences such as advances in developmental pharmacokinetics, developmental neuroscience, metabolism, nutrition, molecular genetics, and more. Journal of Child and Adolescent Psychopharmacology coverage includes: New drugs and treatment strategies including the use of psycho-stimulants, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, mood stabilizers, and atypical antipsychotics New developments in the diagnosis and treatment of ADHD, anxiety disorders, schizophrenia, autism spectrum disorders, bipolar disorder, eating disorders, along with other disorders Reports of common and rare Treatment Emergent Adverse Events (TEAEs) including: hyperprolactinemia, galactorrhea, weight gain/loss, metabolic syndrome, dyslipidemia, switching phenomena, sudden death, and the potential increase of suicide. Outcomes research.
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