Overactive bladder medication: Persistence, drug switching, and reinitiation.

2020 
AIM To assess real-world treatment profiles, including the time to and reasons for discontinuation or drug switching, treatment reinitiation, and postdiscontinuation follow-up in patients receiving antimuscarinics or s3-agonists for overactive bladder (OAB) through a retrospective chart review. METHODS We retrospectively reviewed medical charts of 777 patients, aged ≥18 years, who underwent antimuscarinic or s3-agonist therapy at our hospital. Data on patient's age, sex, chief complaint, and OAB symptom score at therapy initiation were collected. Treatment persistence was assessed with respect to the median time to discontinuation and the persistence rate at 12 months. RESULTS Older patients, male patients, and those with more severe urgency symptoms were more likely to show treatment persistence with OAB medications. Treatment persistence with mirabegron was significantly longer than that with antimuscarinics when administered as either the first- or second-line medication. Multivariate analyses showed that urgency severity and use of mirabegron were independently associated with better persistence (p = .026 and p = .018, respectively). Out of 583 patients who discontinued medication, 344 continued with the visit schedule, and the reinitiation rate of the OAB medication was 19% at a median follow-up of 24 months. CONCLUSION Although the persistence rates for OAB medications improved with the introduction of mirabegron, most patients still discontinued the medication therapy within 1 year. The treatment strategies for patients with mild symptoms and those who are resistant to medication can still be improved. Tailored individualized treatments that avoid excessive reliance on pharmacotherapy would be key to further improve treatment outcomes in OAB patients.
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