Drug survival for ciclosporin A in a long-term daily practice cohort of adult patients with atopic dermatitis

Publication date

2015-06

Authors

Van Der Schaft, J.
Politiek, K
van den Reek, J M P A
Christoffers, W A
Kievit, W
de Jong, E M G J
Bruijnzeel-Koomen, Carla A.ISNI 0000000043719227
Schuttelaar, M L A
de Bruin-Weller, MarjoleinORCID 0000-0002-1249-6993ISNI 0000000396350234

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Long-term data of ciclosporin A (CsA) treatment in daily practice in patients with severe atopic dermatitis (AD) are lacking. OBJECTIVES: To perform a detailed analysis of drug survival, which is the length of time a patient continues to take a drug, for CsA in a long-term daily practice cohort of patients with AD. The secondary objective was to identify determinants of drug survival. METHODS: Data were extracted from a retrospective cohort of patients treated with CsA for AD. Drug survival was analysed using Kaplan-Meier survival curves. Determinants of drug survival were analysed using uni- and multivariate Cox regression analyses with backward selection. RESULTS: In total, 356 adult patients were analysed (386 patient-years). The overall drug survival rates were 34%, 18%, 12% and 4% after 1, 2, 3 and 6 years, respectively. Reasons for discontinuation were controlled AD (26·4%), side-effects (22·2%), ineffectiveness (16·3%), side-effects plus ineffectiveness (6·2%) or other reasons (11·0%). Older age was associated with a decreased drug survival related to controlled AD [hazard ratio (HR) 0·91]. Older age was also associated with a decreased drug survival related to side-effects (HR 1·14). An intermediate-to-high starting dose (> 3·5-5·0 mg kg(-1) daily) was associated with an increased drug survival related to ineffectiveness (HR 0·63). CONCLUSIONS: This is the first study on drug survival for CsA treatment in AD. Older age was associated with decreased drug survival related to controlled AD and side-effects. An intermediate-to-high starting dose was associated with an increased drug survival related to ineffectiveness.

Keywords

Taverne, Clinical Study, Journal Article, Multicenter Study

Citation

van der Schaft, J, Politiek, K, van den Reek, J M P A, Christoffers, W A, Kievit, W, de Jong, E M G J, Bruijnzeel-Koomen, C A F M, Schuttelaar, M L A & de Bruin-Weller, M S 2015, 'Drug survival for ciclosporin A in a long-term daily practice cohort of adult patients with atopic dermatitis', British Journal of Dermatology, vol. 172, no. 6, pp. 1621-7. https://doi.org/10.1111/bjd.13730