Cost, utilization, and patterns of medication use associated with chronic idiopathic urticaria.

Ann Allergy Asthma Immunol

Genentech, Inc., South San Francisco, California 94080-4990, USA.

Published: February 2012

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to analyze the characteristics of patients with chronic idiopathic urticaria (CIU) using insurance claims data, as there is a lack of large population-based research on this condition.
  • A total of 6,019 patients with CIU were identified, with a mean age of 36 years; most were treated by primary care physicians, and many also had comorbidities such as allergic rhinitis and asthma.
  • Antihistamines were the most widely used treatment for CIU, but concerns were raised about the frequent prescription of oral corticosteroids (OCSs), highlighting the need for exploring safer alternative treatment options.

Article Abstract

Background: The literature on chronic idiopathic urticaria (CIU) lacks large-scale population-based studies.

Objective: To characterize an insured population with CIU, including their demographic characteristics and comorbidities.

Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional analysis using insurance claims. We included patients with 1 outpatient claim with an International Classification of Diseases, 9(th)Edition, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) code for idiopathic, other specified, or unspecified urticaria (ICD-9-CM 708.1, 708.8, or 708.9) and either (1) another of these claims 6 or more weeks later; (2) a claim for angioedema (ICD-9-CM 995.1) 6 or more weeks from the urticaria diagnosis; or (3) overlapping claims for 2 prescription medications commonly used for CIU.

Results: We identified 6,019 patients who had claims consistent with CIU. The mean age was 36 years. Fifty-six percent of patients had primary care physicians as their usual source of care, 14% had allergists, and 5% had dermatologists. Allergic rhinitis was diagnosed in 48%, asthma in 21%, other allergy in 19%, and atopic dermatitis in 8%. Sixty-seven percent of patients used prescription antihistamines, 54% used oral corticosteroids (OCSs), 24% used montelukast, and 9% used oral doxepin. Antihistamine users received a mean of 152 days of prescription antihistamines, OCS users 30 days of OCSs, montelukast users 190 days of montelukast, and oral doxepin users 94 days of doxepin.

Conclusions: Primary care physicians managed most patients with CIU. Antihistamines were the most common treatment for CIU, although OCSs were frequently prescribed. Thirty days of OCS supply among users may represent multiple steroid bursts each year. Given the known risks of OCSs, identifying other CIU treatments with more favorable safety profiles may be beneficial.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.anai.2011.10.018DOI Listing

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