AI Article Synopsis

  • The survey evaluated patient preferences between two autoinjectors for biologic medications in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) or Crohn's disease (CD), focusing on the SDZ-ADL pen (biosimilar) and the Humira Pen (reference).
  • Adult patients with experience using both devices participated in interviews, revealing the SDZ-ADL pen was preferred for its ease of use and independent operation.
  • A significant 82% of patients favored the SDZ-ADL pen due to features like buttonless activation and reduced injection pain, highlighting the importance of user-friendly designs for medication adherence.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Medication delivery device design impacts treatment satisfaction, adherence, and compliance in patients receiving biologics. This survey assessed autoinjector attributes that are important to patients, and assessed patient perceptions and preferences between an adalimumab biosimilar autoinjector (Hyrimoz SensoReady Pen [SDZ-ADL pen]) and the reference adalimumab autoinjector (Humira Pen [ref-ADL pen]) in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) or Crohn's disease (CD) in Canada.

Patients And Methods: In this survey, adult patients were recruited for web-assisted telephone interviews. Patients had ≥ 3 months' experience with the ref-ADL pen and 1-12 months' experience with the SDZ-ADL pen.

Results: The survey included 120 patients with RA (n = 32) or CD (n = 88). Mean experience with the ref-ADL pen was 7 years for RA or 5 years for CD vs 9 months with the SDZ-ADL pen. The most important autoinjector attributes were the ability to use the pen independently and the ease and simplicity of self-injection. When comparing the two autoinjectors, patients significantly preferred the SDZ-ADL pen over the ref-ADL pen for nearly every attribute evaluated, with the greatest differences reported for visual and audible feedback mechanisms, ease of self-injection, and ability to use the device independently. Overall, 82% of patients preferred the SDZ-ADL pen over the ref-ADL pen, with buttonless activation and less injection pain being the main drivers for this preference.

Conclusion: Patients with RA or CD indicated a preference for the SDZ-ADL pen over the ref-ADL pen, independent of the duration of use of the pen. The preference for a biosimilar device within 1 year of switching provides reassurance of rapid patient acceptance of biosimilars and may simplify the switching process. These results confirm the importance of ensuring autoinjector design supports independent self-administration of medication and align with previous data showing high patient satisfaction with the SDZ-ADL pen.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11162628PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/PPA.S455791DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • The survey evaluated patient preferences between two autoinjectors for biologic medications in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) or Crohn's disease (CD), focusing on the SDZ-ADL pen (biosimilar) and the Humira Pen (reference).
  • Adult patients with experience using both devices participated in interviews, revealing the SDZ-ADL pen was preferred for its ease of use and independent operation.
  • A significant 82% of patients favored the SDZ-ADL pen due to features like buttonless activation and reduced injection pain, highlighting the importance of user-friendly designs for medication adherence.
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