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Comparative persistence and adherence with newer anti-hyperglycemic agents to treat patients with type 2 diabetes in the United States.

J Med Econ · 2016

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study of 11,961 adults with type 2 diabetes, 61% of patients taking canagliflozin 100mg stayed on the medication for a full year without a 90-day gap, compared to 23% to 52% for other drugs. Patients on canagliflozin 100mg and 300mg also had higher adherence rates, with 83% and 92% of days covered, respectively, versus 33% to 75% for the other medications.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalJ Med Econ, 2016
Citations34
Relative citation ratio1.41
NIH percentile62
Molecules
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Non-adherence and non-persistence to anti-hyperglycemic agents are associated with worse clinical and economic outcomes in patients with type 2 diabetes. This study evaluated treatment persistence and adherence across newer anti-hyperglycemic agents (canagliflozin, dapagliflozin, sitagliptin, saxagliptin, linagliptin, liraglutide, or exenatide). METHODS: This retrospective cohort study of Truven Health Analytics Marketscan databases included adult patients with type 2 diabetes whose first pharmacy claim for a newer anti-hyperglycemic agent was between February 1, 2014 and July 31, 2014. Treatment persistence and adherence were assessed for 12 months after the first claim (post-index). Persistence was defined as no gap ≥90 days between the end of one pharmacy claim and the start of the next pharmacy claim post-index. Adherence used two definitions: proportion of days covered (PDC) and medication possession ratio (MPR). Multivariable analyses of non-persistence (hazard ratios) and adherence (odds ratios) were adjusted for baseline demographics, drug cost, clinical characteristics, and other anti-hyperglycemic agents. RESULTS: A total of 11,961 patients met all study selection criteria. Persistence rates at 12 months were significantly greater (p < 0.05 for each comparison) for canagliflozin 100 mg (61%) compared with dapagliflozin 5 mg (40%), dapagliflozin 10 mg (41%), sitagliptin (48%), saxagliptin (42%), linagliptin (52%), liraglutide (47%), exenatide (23%), and long-acting exenatide (39%). The persistence rate was greater (p < 0.05) for canagliflozin 300 mg (64%) vs canagliflozin 100 mg. Median adherence rates for canagliflozin 100 mg (MPR = 0.83; PDC = 0.79) and canagliflozin 300 mg (MPR = 0.92; PDC = 0.81) were greater than for the other index anti-hyperglycemic agents (MPR = 0.33-0.75; PDC = 0.33-0.72). Consistent results for treatment persistence and adherence were observed in multivariable analyses that were adjusted baseline characteristics. CONCLUSIONS: Canagliflozin was associated with better treatment persistence and treatment adherence compared with other anti-hyperglycemic agents in real-world settings.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 27356271 ↗