Kinter E, van Beek J, Christensen K, Poulos C, Posner J, Sabatella G. Preferences of patients with multiple sclerosis for attributes of injectable MS treatments in the United Kingdom and France. Poster presented at the 1st Congress of the European Academy of Neurology; June 20, 2015. Berlin, Germany.


Introduction: Perceptions and experiences of medication efficacy, side-effects, dosing frequency and complexity, influence patient adherence to injectable disease-modifying treatments in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS), which ultimately impacts outcomes.

 

Methods: Respondents with a self-reported diagnosis of MS completed an online discrete-choice-experiment survey (adapted United States survey), which included a series of treatment-choice questions. Each hypothetical treatment had six attributes: number of years until disability progression, number of relapses in the next four years, injection time, frequency of injections, flu-like symptoms, and injection-site reactions. Each attribute had a number of associated levels. Mixed-logit regression parameters were used to calculate preference weights of attribute levels and relative importance of treatment attributes.

 

Results: In both France and the UK, 100 respondents completed the survey and provided sufficient data for analysis. In France, improving the time until disability progression from 2 to 4 years and reducing injection frequency from 'daily' to 'every two weeks' had a relative importance (vertical distance between preference weights for attribute levels) of 3.0 and 3.5, respectively. In the UK, these changes had a relative importance of 2.9 and 2.6 (Figure 2). In both countries, these changes were more important than changes in the other attributes assessed.

 

Conclusion: Reducing the frequency of injectable MS treatments can be as important to patients as improvements in treatment efficacy.

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