抑郁症的抗抑郁治疗:总费用和治疗持续时间†

IF 1 4区 医学 Q4 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES Journal of Mental Health Policy and Economics Pub Date : 2000-01-01 DOI:10.1002/mhp.95
Deborah G. Dobrez, Catherine A. Melfi, Thomas W. Croghan, Professor Thomas J. Kniesner, Robert L. Obenchain
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引用次数: 9

摘要

背景:抑郁症的经济成本是巨大的,包括护理的直接医疗成本和生产力损失的间接成本。抗抑郁药成本效益的实证研究表明,选择性血清素再摄取抑制剂(SSRIs)的使用成本可能不比三环类抗抑郁药(TCAs)高,将提高耐受性,并与更长的治疗时间有关。然而,抑郁症护理的成功通常涉及多种因素,包括护理来源、护理类型和患者特征,以及药物选择。抗抑郁治疗成分的成本效益组合尚不清楚。研究目的:我们的研究评估了接受抗抑郁治疗的抑郁症患者的成本和抗抑郁持续性结果。具体而言,我们确定了初始护理的提供者选择、同时进行的心理治疗以及SSRI与TCA药物治疗的选择对低治疗成本和持续抗抑郁治疗的联合结果的影响。方法:一个私人健康保险索赔数据库确定了2678名患者,他们在1990-1994年间接受了抑郁症诊断和抗抑郁药处方。根据他们的医疗费用是高还是低(以中值为分界点),以及他们的抗抑郁药使用模式是持续的还是提前停止药物治疗(开具少于六张处方),每个患者分为四组。控制患者特征、合并症、抑郁类型和同时治疗的双变量probit模型是成本效益治疗情况的主要多变量统计工具。结果:SSRIs显著降低了患者停止药物治疗的发生率,同时基本上保持费用不变。SSRIs在抑郁症治疗中的相对有效性独立于患者的个人特征,并主导其他治疗维度的后果,如看心理健康专家和同时接受心理治疗。最初的提供者专业与药物治疗的连续性无关,同时进行的心理治疗通过减少药物治疗中断和提高成本来创造一种权衡。讨论:较长的治疗时间与基于SSRI的药物治疗(相对于基于TCA的药物治疗)和同时进行的心理治疗有关。高昂的费用与同时进行心理治疗和选择专业提供者进行初始护理有关。在我们的研究中,成本效益高的护理包括由非专业提供者发起的基于SSRI的药物治疗。我们的模型中没有包括既往治疗史和其他可能影响抗抑郁药选择的未观察到的因素。对医疗保健的影响:决定使用基于SSRI的药物治疗不需要仔细考虑患者的个人特征。将抑郁症患者的药物治疗从TCAs转移到SSRIs,可以通过降低药物治疗中断的发生率来改善结果,同时在很大程度上保持高整体医疗费用的可能性不变。有针对性地同时使用心理治疗可能具有额外的成本效益。对健康政策的影响:抑郁症护理的各个组成部分的相互作用可以改变抗抑郁治疗的成本效益。我们的研究结果表明,非专业提供者在启动护理和支持增加SSRIs作为抑郁症一线治疗的使用方面发挥了作用,这是一种提供符合APA持续抗抑郁治疗指南的成本效益护理的方式。进一步研究的意义:进一步的研究提高了我们对提供者选择、同时进行心理治疗和药物选择的决策的理解,将提高我们对治疗选择对抑郁症护理成本效益的影响的理解。我们已经提出,有针对性的同时进行心理治疗可能被证明是具有成本效益的;确定最有可能从额外治疗中受益的群体的研究将进一步使临床医生和医疗保健政策制定者能够就抑郁症的治疗模式达成共识。版权所有©2000 John Wiley&;有限公司。
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Antidepressant treatment for depression: total charges and therapy duration†
BACKGROUND: The economic costs of depression are significant, both the direct medical costs of care and the indirect costs of lost productivity. Empirical studies of antidepressant cost-effectiveness suggest that the use of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) may be no more costly than tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs), will improve tolerability, and is associated with longer therapy duration. However the success of depression care usually involves multiple factors, including source of care, type of care, and patient characteristics, in addition to drug choice. The cost-effective mix of antidepressant therapy components is unclear. AIMS OF THE STUDY: Our study evaluates cost and antidepressant-continuity outcomes for depressed patients receiving antidepressant therapy. Specifically, we determined the impact of provider choice for initial care, concurrent psychotherapy, and choice of SSRI versus TCA-based pharmacotherapies on the joint outcome of low treatment cost and continuous antidepressant therapy. METHODS: A database of private health insurance claims identifies 2678 patients who received both a diagnosis of depression and a prescription for an antidepressant during 1990-1994. Patients each fall into one of four groups according to whether their health care charges are high versus low (using the median value as the break point) and by whether their antidepressant usage pattern is continuous versus having discontinued pharmacotherapy early (filling fewer than six prescriptions). A bivariate probit model controlling for patient characteristics, co-morbidities, type of depression and concurrent treatment is the primary multivariate statistical vehicle for the cost-effective treatment situation. RESULTS: SSRIs substantially reduce the incidence of patients discontinuing pharmacotherapy while leaving charges largely unchanged. The relative effectiveness of SSRIs in depression treatment is independent of the patient's personal characteristics and dominates the consequences of other treatment dimensions such as seeing a mental health specialist and receiving concurrent psychotherapy. Initial provider specialty is irrelevant to the continuity of pharmacotherapy, and concurrent psychotherapy creates a tradeoff through reduced pharmacotherapy interruption with higher costs. DISCUSSION: Longer therapy duration is associated with SSRI-based pharmacotherapy (relative to TCA-based pharmacotherapy) and with concurrent psychotherapy. High cost is associated with concurrent psychotherapy and choice of a specialty provider for initial care. In our study cost-effective care includes SSRI-based pharmacotherapy initiated with a non-specialty provider. Previous treatment history and other unobserved factors that might affect antidepressant choice are not included in our model. IMPLICATIONS FOR HEALTH CARE PROVISION: The decision to use an SSRI-based pharmacotherapy need not consider carefully the patient's personal characteristics. Shifting depressed patients' pharmacotherapy away from TCAs to SSRIs has the effect of improving outcomes by lowering the incidence of discontinuation of pharmacotherapy while leaving largely unchanged the likelihood of having high overall health care charges. Targeted use of concurrent psychotherapy may be additionally cost-effective. IMPLICATIONS FOR HEALTH POLICIES: The interaction of various components of depression care can alter the cost-effectiveness of antidepressant therapy. Our results demonstrate a role for the non-specialty provider in initiating care and support increased use of SSRIs as first-line therapy for depression as a way of providing cost-effective care that is consistent with APA guidelines for continuous antidepressant treatment. IMPLICATIONS FOR FURTHER RESEARCH: Further research that improves our understanding of how decisions regarding provider choice, concurrent psychotherapy, and drug choice are made will improve our understanding of the effects treatment choices on the cost-effectiveness of depression care. We have suggested that targeted concurrent psychotherapy may prove to be cost-effective; research to determine groups most likely to benefit from the additional treatment would further enable clinicians and healthcare policy makers to form a consensus regarding a model for treating depression.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
6.20%
发文量
8
期刊介绍: The Journal of Mental Health Policy and Economics publishes high quality empirical, analytical and methodologic papers focusing on the application of health and economic research and policy analysis in mental health. It offers an international forum to enable the different participants in mental health policy and economics - psychiatrists involved in research and care and other mental health workers, health services researchers, health economists, policy makers, public and private health providers, advocacy groups, and the pharmaceutical industry - to share common information in a common language.
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