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Erschienen in: BMC Urology 1/2012

Open Access 01.12.2012 | Research article

Dose and aging effect on patients reported treatment benefit switching from the first overactive bladder therapy with tolterodine ER to fesoterodine: post-hoc analysis from an observational and retrospective study

verfasst von: David Castro-Diaz, Pilar Miranda, Francisco Sanchez-Ballester, Isabel Lizarraga, Daniel Arumí, Javier Rejas

Erschienen in: BMC Urology | Ausgabe 1/2012

Abstract

Background

Previous randomized studies have demonstrated that fesoterodine significantly improves the Overactive Bladder (OAB) symptoms and their assessment by patients compared with tolterodine extended-release (ER). This study aimed to assess the effect of aging and dose escalation on patient-reported treatment benefit, after changing their first Overactive Bladder (OAB) therapy with tolterodine-ER to fesoterodine in daily clinical practice.

Methods

A post-hoc analysis of data from a retrospective, cross-sectional and observational study was performed in a cohort of 748 OAB adults patients (OAB-V8 score ≥8), who switched to fesoterodine from their first tolterodine-ER-based therapy within the 3–4 months before study visit. Effect of fesoterodine doses (4 mg vs. 8 mg) and patient age (<65 yr vs. ≥65 yr) were assessed. Patient reported treatment benefit [Treatment Benefit Scale (TBS)] and physician assessment of improvement with change [Clinical Global Impression of Improvement subscale (CGI-I)] were recorded. Treatment satisfaction, degree of worry, bother and interference with daily living activities due to urinary symptoms were also assessed.

Results

Improvements were not affected by age. Fesoterodine 8 mg vs. 4 mg provides significant improvements in terms of treatment benefit [TBS 97.1% vs. 88.4%, p < 0.001; CGI-I 95.8% vs. 90.8% p < 0.05)], degree of worry, bother and interference with daily-living activities related to OAB symptoms (p <0.05).

Conclusions

A change from tolterodine ER therapy to fesoterodine with dose escalation to 8 mg in symptomatic OAB patients, seems to be associated with greater improvement in terms of both patient-reported-treatment benefit and clinical global impression of change. Improvement was not affected by age.
Hinweise

Electronic supplementary material

The online version of this article (doi:10.​1186/​1471-2490-12-19) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Competing interests

This study was funded by Pfizer, S.L.U. IL and JR are employees of Pfizer, S.L.U. and DA is an employee of Pfizer Inc, Europe. DCD, PM and FSB have not received any financial support from Pfizer for writing or interpreting the present research, and declare that they do not have any conflict of interests as a consequence of this paper. A funding paid by Pfizer was received by Esther Tapia for drafting the manuscript.

Authors’ contributions

DCD, PM, FSB, IL and DA participated in the original idea and design of the study, interpreted results of analysis and actively reviewed and critiqued the manuscript for important intellectual content. JR participated in the analysis and interpretation of data. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

Background

Overactive bladder (OAB) is a lower urinary tract disorder characterized by urgency with or without urge incontinence, often with increased daytime frequency and nocturia[14]. The prevalence of OAB increased with age[58]. In Spain, the EPICC study showed that the prevalence of OAB, previously estimated in adults ≥40 years of age at 21.5%[9], was 5.9% for women aged 25–64, 4.6% for men aged 50–65 and 38.5% for institutionalized people over 65[10]. The symptoms associated with OAB can significantly affect the psychological, social, occupational, domestic, and sexual aspects of those who suffer from it[11]. As a result, OAB has a negative impact on the patient’s quality of life[12, 13]. Despite the significant impact of OAB on patients’ lives and the availability of treatment options, only a small percentage of elderly patients seek and receive treatment[9, 14].
Antimuscarinic agents are the pharmacological mainstay of OAB treatment[15]. Patients, however, often do not respond to them appropriately, largely because of non-compliance, but also due to lack of efficacy or intolerance[16]. In these cases, the symptoms of these patients may be improved by changing the drug[1720] and behavioural therapy techniques. In this way, previous randomized studies have demonstrated the superior efficacy of fesoterodine over tolterodine[18, 19, 21].
Therapeutic benefit might be achieved with higher doses. The literature supports that the efficacy of anticholinergics is enhanced by dose escalation[2224]. Moreover, flexible dosing reflects clinical practice better than fixed dosing[23]. Fesoterodine is a nonselective antimuscarinic agent that has showed a dose-dependent response[22]. This dose response has not been demonstrated with all of the other antimuscarinic agents that offer multiple doses[4].
Several studies have suggested that antimuscarinic agents are generally effective and well-tolerated in older subjects[2529]. However, the use of drugs in clinical trials markedly differs from that of the routine clinical practice in several aspects, thus limiting the generalization of results[30]. In this sense, non-interventional studies, may provide complementary information on the effectiveness of specific treatments in real clinical practice settings[31]. Then, data from open-label or observational studies exploring the subjective patient perception of the effectiveness of fesoterodine, in symptomatic OAB subjects not satisfied with tolterodine, would also be relevant to clinical management in the daily practice[8, 32].
Here, we carried out a post-hoc analysis from the IMPACTA study[32] to evaluate whether aging and dose escalation to fesoterodine 8 mg compared to fesoterodine 4 mg, were associated with higher patient-reported treatment benefit and clinician perception of change, after switching from their first OAB tolterodine ER-based therapy, in daily clinical practice.

Methods

Study design and patients

This was a post-hoc analysis of data from a retrospective, cross-sectional observational and multicenter study (IMPACTA), aimed at determining the factors causing treatment change in OAB patients and the resulting degree of satisfaction under normal conditions[32].
Urologists and gynecologists from all over the country were selected at random according to the geographic population density. The original study included outpatients of both genders over 18 years of age, diagnosed with OAB, currently symptomatic in accordance with clinical judgement (OAB-V8 score ≥8)[33]. At the physician’s discretion, treatment was changed due to any cause within the 3–4 months prior to the visit. This post-hoc analysis only included those patients who fulfilled the above-mentioned selection criteria, and who were switched to daily fesoterodine from their first tolterodine ER-based therapy. Fesoterodine dosage could either be maintained at 4 mg or increased to, 8 mg. All patients provided their informed written consent. In accordance with the Spanish recommendations, the study was approved by the Clinical Research Ethics Committee of Hospital General Universitario of Valencia. The study was conducted in accordance with the principles contained in the Declaration of Helsinki for studies in humans.

Measurements and instruments

The patient-reported treatment benefit of changing was assessed using the self-administered Treatment Benefit Scale (TBS)[34]. The physician-reported treatment improvement resulting from change was assessed by the Clinical Global Impression of Improvement (CGI-I) scale[35]. Patients also completed ad-hoc questions about the self-perceived treatment satisfaction/preference, and degree of worry, bother and interference with daily living activities due to urinary symptoms. Drug compliance was assessed by the Morisky-Green scale[36]. Demographic data, concomitant treatments in the last 3 months and reasons for OAB treatment switch, were also collected by the investigator at the single visit.
The OAB-V8[33] is a reliable 8-item questionnaire used to identify patients with OAB symptoms. Each item is scored on a 6-point Likert scale ranging from 0 (not at all) to 5 (a very great deal). Total score is obtained by adding up the score of each item. Patients were considered to have OAB if their OAB-V8 score was ≥ 8.
The CGI[35] consists of two subscales. The first subscale, severity of illness (CGI-S), assesses the clinician’s impression of the patient’s current state of illness. It is scored from 1 = normal/not at all ill to 7 = extremely ill. The Global Improvement Subscale (CGI-I), assesses the patient’s improvement or worsening rating 1–7 (1 = very much improved, 2 = much improved, 3 = minimally improved, 4 = no change, 5 = minimally worse, 6 = much worse, 7 = very much worse).
The TBS[34] is a self-administered single-item instrument, used to compare the current state of their urinary problems with their state before the start of the study. It is scored from 1 to 4 (1 = greatly improved, 2 = improved, 3 = no change, 4 = worsened during the treatment).
The Morinsky-Green questionnaire[36] is a four-question survey to assess the patient’s treatment adherence. Patients were classified according to the number of questions answered correctly: compliant (4 questions), partially compliant (3 questions) or non-compliant (≤2 questions).
Ad-hoc patient questions were scored using a 5-point Likert-type scale: 1 = not at all, 2 = a little, 3 = some, 4 = quite a bit and 5 = very much/quite a lot. Subjects were asked to rate the degree of worry, bother and impact on their daily-life activities with regard to different OAB symptoms, as well as their satisfaction with current treatment. The preference for current or previous medication was assessed by patients as: I prefer the new one, I have some preference for the new, I don’t have any preference, I prefer the previous one. Worry about urinary symptoms included the frequency (increased frequency of micturition during the daytime), incontinence during sexual intercourse, nocturia, frequency of urinary tract infections, urgency, bladder pain, urge incontinence, urinary difficulties (in starting to urinate, resulting in delayed bladder emptying when the subject is ready to urinate) and stress incontinence. The degree of bother was assessed by urinary frequency (the patient believes he/she urinates too often during the day), urgency (sudden, irresistible need to urinate without delay) and urge incontinence (urine loss associated with a strong desire to urinate). Finally, interviewed patients rated the interference of urinary symptoms with their everyday daily-live such as their normal, leisure, occupational and household activities.

Statistical methodology

Patients were distributed into groups according to doses administered (4 mg, 8 mg) and age (<65 yr, ≥65 yr). As used in several previous studies,[27, 28, 37] the age range cut-off value to define “older” was set at ≥ 65 years old.
The patient’s degree of improvement or worsening according to the CGI-I subscale was categorized as improved (very much improved, much improved, minimally improved), no change or impaired (minimally worse, much worse, very much worse). The current state of the patient’s urinary problems compared with the state before the start of the study, according to the TBS, was also grouped into three categories: improved (greatly improved, improved) no change or impaired (worsened during the treatment).
A descriptive statistical analysis of all the variables was performed, including central tendency and dispersion measures for continuous variables, and absolute and relative frequencies for categorical variables. Analysis of variance, parametric and robust with Levene test of homogeneity was used to analyze continuous variables and the Chi square test for qualitative variables. Pearson’s correlation coefficient was calculated between ad-hoc OAB questions score and age of patient. ANCOVA test and multivariate analysis controlling for confounding variables (univariate general linear models and logistic regression models) were applied. All results were adjusted for sex, driven treatment change, treatment adherence, treatment length and reason for switching.
The level of significance of the statistical tests was 5% and they were bilateral. All the analyses were performed with the SPSS statistical package, version 17 and 19.

Results

Subjects

A total of 3,365 patients were included in the IMPACTA study. 748 subjects were analyzed in this post-hoc analysis [55.9% <65 yr, 44.1% ≥65 yr; 30.2% 4 mg, 68.0% 8 mg] from those 842 that received previously tolterodine as a 1st therapy (Figure1). Table1 shows demographic and clinical characteristics of the patients. Overall, most subjects were women (83.5%) and the mean age was 61.5 years (Table1). Patients were of early diagnosis, with a mean time since diagnosis of one year. The principal concomitant conditions, besides high blood pressure, were diabetes mellitus, frequent urinary tract infections and obesity. The majority of the patients were receiving concomitant medications (67.3%). Gender was the only characteristic statistically different between the dose groups (p = 0.014, Table1). However, the age groups were not homogeneous for gender, body mass index, and mean time since OAB diagnosis. Concomitant conditions, in particular high blood pressure were also more frequent in the older group (Table1). Fesoterodine 8 mg was prescribed to 69% of the patients under 65 years old and to 70% of the older patients.
Table 1
Demographic and clinical characteristics of patients
 
Total N(748)
4 mg N(226)
8 mg N(509)
<65 yr. N(418)
≥65 yr. N(330)
Gender (woman), %
83.5
83.5
73.7§
84.9
65.8*
Age, mean (SD), yr
61.5(11.0)
61.2(11.1)
61.7(10.8)
53.9(8.1)
71.1(4.9)*
BMI, mean (SD), Kg/m2
26.6(3.4)
26.5(3.7)
26.6(3.3)
26.0(3.5)
27.3(3.2)*
OAB evolution time, mean (SD), d.
389.7(618.6)
405.6(695.7)
383.6(588.1)
316.5(388.6)
482.3(813.7)*
OAB-V8 score (0–40)
17.6(7.1)
17.4(7.4)
17.6(7.0)
17.4(7.1)
17.8(7.1)
Concomitant conditions, %
 
69.8
66.4
59.0
77.9*
Obesity (BMI ≥ 30 Kg/m2)
12.7
14.6
12.0
10.0
16.1§
HBP
45.1
45.1
45.4
34.7
58.2*
Urinary tract infections
19.7
18.1
20.0
21.3
17.6§
DM
20.6
21.2
19.8
17.5
24.5§
Depression
13.4
15.0
12.8
13.4
13.3
CVA
1.2
1.3
1.2
0.2
2.4§
Parkinson’s
1.2
1.3
1.0
0.5
2.1
Concomitant medication, %
67.3
69.8
66.4
59.0
77.9*
SD Standard deviation; BMI Body Mass Index; OAB (overactive bladder); HBP High blood pressure; DM Diabetes mellitus; CVA Cerebrovascular Accident*p between groups < 0.001; §p between groups < 0.05.

Switching characteristics

In the majority of cases (75.2%) switching treatment from tolterodine ER to fesoterodine was due to the investigator’s decision (Table2). The most common reason for switching was lack of effectiveness (66.8%) (Table2). Between dose groups, this reason was significantly most frequent in the higher dose group (70.9% vs. 58.0%, p < 0.05). Whereas side effects, were the cause of the switch in 23.5% of those titrated to 4 mg and in 16.1% of those escalating to 8 mg (p < 0.05, Table2).
Table 2
Reason for and characteristics of switching
 
Total N(748)
4 mg N(226)
8 mg N(509)
<65 yr. N(418)
≥65 yr. N(330)
Driven treatment change, %
     
 Patient request
24.8
29.8
21.7
24.7
24.9
 Investigator decision
75.2
70.2
78.3§
75.3
75.1
Principal reason for switching, %
     
 Lack of effectiveness
66.8
58.0
70.9§
67.0
66.7
 Side-effects
18.4
23.5
16.1
17.0
20.3
 Bad compliance
6.1
8
5.3
7.2
4.8
 Others
8.5
10.5
7.7
8.9
8.2
Treatment length, mean (SD), d.
66.2(36.2)
60.1(34.8)
68.8(36.7)§
63.8(36.1)
69.2(36.2)§
Treatment compliance £, %
31.0
24.9
33.5§
31.6
30.3
‡at the time of study visit; £:% of compliers (4 Morinsky-Green questions answered correctly); *:p between groups < 0.001; §:p between groups < 0.05.
When patients were evaluated in this trial, subjects had been on treatment with fesoterodine for nearly two months (Table2). The treatment length was significantly higher in the greater dose group (68.8 vs. 60.1 days; p < 0.003) and in the older patients (69.2 vs. 63.8 days; p < 0.042). Thirty-one percent of the patients showed compliance with the current treatment (correct response to 4 out of the 4 questions in the Morinsky-Green questionnaire). Compliance rate was higher with 8 mg dosing (33.5% vs. 24.9%, p = 0.035) and similar between age groups (Table2).

Treatment benefit of change

The illness status of the patients after the change of treatment was mildly ill, CGI-S mean (SD) [total 3.2 (1.2); doses groups (3.2 (1.1) 4 mg vs. 3.1 (1.2) 8 mg, p = 0.252); age groups 3.1 (1.2) <65 yr vs. 3.2 (1.1) ≥65 yr, p = 0.142)].
Patient and physician-reported treatment benefit of changing is showed in Figure2. 94.4% of the overall patients improved in the physician’s judgement as per the CGI-I scoring after the change to fesoterodine. 94.2% of the patient rating improved on the TBS (Figure2). The differences between age groups were not statistically significant (p = 0.655, Figure2). Regarding dose groups, the physician-reported treatment benefit (CGI-I) was significantly higher with the 8 mg dose (95.8% vs. 90.8%; p = 0.04). The proportion of patients who reported being improved, according to TBS, was also significantly higher in the fesoterodine 8 mg group compared with 4 mg (97.1% vs. 88.4%; p < 0.001). Table3 and4 summarize patients urinary symptoms scoring in relation to bother, worry and impact on daily living items by age and dose, respectively. The symptoms that caused most concern (somewhat/quite a bit) to the patients as a whole were increased frequency during the day, urgency, nocturia and urge incontinence (Table3). The strong desire to urinate was the symptom that causes greatest bother. OAB symptoms interfered principally with leisure and usual activities.
Table 3
Urinary symptoms improvement after switching from tolterodine ER to fesoterodine according to age of patients
Urinary symptoms
(not at all = 0 to quite a lot = 5)
Total
<65 years
>65 years
P value between groups
r
Worry
     
 Frequency
3.2 (3.1-3.3)
3.2 (3.1-3.3)
3.3 (3.1-3.4)
0.325
0.056
 Incontinence during sexual attempt
2.2 (2.2-2.3)
2.3 (2.2-2.4)
2.0 (1.9-2.2)
0.008
−0.128
 Nocturia
3.0 (2.9-3.1)
3.0 (2.9-3.1)
3.1 (3.0-3.3)
0.051
0.104*
 Frequency of infections
2.4 (2.3-2.5)
2.4 (2.2-2.5)
2.4 (2.2-2.5)
0.923
0.022
 Urgency
3.2 (3.1-3.3)
3.2 (3.1-3.3)
3.3 (3.1-3.4)
0.585
0.044
 Bladder pain
2.3 (2.3-2.4)
2.3 (2.2-2.4)
2.4(2.2-2.5)
0.775
0.034
 Urge incontinence
3.1 (3.0-3.3)
3.1 (2.9-3.2)
3.2 (3.1-3.3)
0.211
0.055
 Urinary difficulties
2.2 (2.1-2.3)
2.1 (2.0-2.2)
2.3 (2.2-2.4)
0.070
0.141
 Stress incontinence
2.2 (2.1-2.3)
2.1 (2.0-2.2)
2.2 (2.1-2.4)
0.266
0.028
Bother
     
 Urinary frequency
3.2 (3.2-3.3)
3.2 (3.1-3.3)
3.3 (3.2-3.4)
0.453
0.029
 Strong desire to urinate
3.3 (3.2-3.4)
3.3 (3.1-3.4)
3.3 (3.2-3.4)
0.642
0.022
 Urine loss associated with a strong desire to urinate
3.1 (3.0-3.2)
3.1 (2.9-3.2)
3.2 (3.1-3.3)
0.117
0.055
Interference with daily-living activities
    
 Usual activities
3.0 (2.9-3.1)
3.0 (2.9-3.1)
3.1 (2.9-3.2)
0.519
0.034
 Leisure
3.1 (3.0-3.2)
3.1 (3.0-3.2)
3.1 (3.0-3.2)
0.761
−0.005
 Work/domestic activities
2.5 (2.4-2.6)
2.7 (2.6-2.8)
2.2 (2.0-2.3)
<0.001
−0.197
p significance level adjusted by sex, driven of treatment change, treatment adherence, treatment length, reason for switching; Values are mean (95% Confidence Interval) Pearson coefficient of correlation between symptom score and age. *p < 0.05; ‡p ≤ 0.001.
Table 4
Urinary symptoms improvement after switching from tolterodine ER to fesoterodine according to fesoterodine dose at the study visit
Urinary symptom
(not at all = 0 to quite a lot = 5)
Total
4 mg
8 mg
p value between groups
Worry
    
 Frequency
3.2 (3.1-3.3)
3.4 (3.3-3.5)
3.1 (3.0-3.2)
0.001
 Incontinence during sexual attempt
2.2 (2.2-2.3)
2.1 (1.9-2.2)
2.2 (2.1-2.4)
0.075
 Nocturia
3.0 (2.9-3.1)
3.2 (3.1-3.4)
3.0 (2.9-3.1)
0.010
 Frequency of infections
2.4 (2.3-2.5)
2.4 (2.2-2.5)
2.4 (2.3-2.5)
0.812
 Urgency
3.2 (3.1-3.3)
3.4 (3.2-3.5)
3.2 (3.1-3.3)
0.026
 Bladder pain
2.3 (2.3-2.4)
2.4 (2.3-2.6)
2.3 (2.2-2.4)
0.207
 Urge incontinence
3.1 (3.0-3.3)
3.3 (3.2-3.5)
3.1 (3.0-3.2)
0.008
 Urinary difficulties
2.2 (2.1-2.3)
2.2 (2.0-2.3)
2.2 (2.1-2.3)
0.691
 Stress incontinence
2.2 (2.1-2.3)
2.1 (1.9-2.3)
2.2 (2.1-2.3)
0.304
Bother
    
 Urinary frequency
3.2 (3.2-3.3)
3.4 (3.3-3.6)
3.2 (3.1-3.2)
0.001
 Strong desire to urinate
3.3 (3.2-3.4)
3.5 (3.4-3.7)
3.2 (3.1-3.3)
<0.001
 Urine loss associated with a strong desire to urinate
3.1 (3.0-3.2)
3.3 (3.1-3.5)
3.0 (2.9-3.1)
0.007
Interference with daily-living activities
   
 Usual activities
3.0 (2.9-3.1)
3.1 (3.0-3.3)
3.0 (2.9-3.1)
0.119
 Leisure
3.1 (3.0-3.2)
3.2 (3.1-3.4)
3.0 (2.9-3.1)
0.032
 Work/domestic activities
2.5 (2.4-2.6)
2.5 (2.3-2.6)
2.4 (2.3-2.5)
0.717
p significance level adjusted by sex, driven of treatment change, treatment adherence, treatment length, reason for switching; Values are mean (95% Confidence Interval).
Compared with younger subjects, patients ≥ 65 showed similar results except for worry about incontinence during sexual attempt (p = 0.008) and interference with work/domestic activities (p < 0.001) which were significantly higher in the younger group (Table3).
Regarding dose groups, patients who received a dose escalation to 8 mg, rated significantly lower their worry and bother-related to all usual OAB symptoms as frequency, nocturia, urgency and urge incontinence, compared with 4 mg. (p < 0.05, Table4). The interference with daily-living activities due to OAB symptoms, improved with higher dosing, particularly in the case of leisure (p < 0.05, Table4).
Overall, patients reported being satisfied (somewhat/quite a bit) with fesoterodine treatment, with a mean score (SD) of 3.7 (0.9). Nearly all subjects (92.8%) declared preferring/having some preference for fesoterodine.
Younger and older patients both showed a similar treatment satisfaction [mean (SD): 3.7 (0.9) vs. 3.6 (0.8), p = 0.256] and preference for the new treatment (mean (SD): 93.0% vs. 92.4%, p = 0.888).
Between dose groups, patient satisfaction with the new treatment was greater with the higher dosing [mean (95% CI): 3.7 (3.7-3.8) vs. 3.5 (3.4-3.6), p = 0.003]. The proportion of patients who reported preferring/having some preference for fesoterodine was also significantly higher with the dose of 8 mg (94.8% vs. 88.0%; p = 0.001).

Discussion

This was a post-hoc analysis, from a non-interventional study, involving patients who expressed dissatisfaction with their prior and first OAB treatment with tolterodine ER, principally because of lack of effectiveness or tolerability problems.
The present data, show that switching to flexible doses of fesoterodine 4 or 8 mg, in the usual clinical practice, provided improvements in the state of the urinary problems in a very high portion of patients, both in the physician’s and patient’s point of view. Furthermore, patients declared being satisfied with the new treatment, and more than 90% of them, reported preferring fesoterodine treatment instead of tolterodine ER. Our findings are in consonance with those reported in an open-label study[8] in which flexible-dose fesoterodine significantly improved OAB symptoms and rates of treatment satisfaction in subjects who were dissatisfied with prior tolterodine therapy.
One possible reason for such findings may lie in the pharmacological profile of fesoterodine. In contrast to tolterodine, which is metabolized in the liver via cytochrome P450 (CYP) 2D6 to produce the active metabolite 5-hydroxymethyl tolterodine (5-HMT), hepatic enzymes are not involved in the conversion of fesoterodine to 5-HMT[19, 22]. Fesoterodine is extensively and rapidly converted to 5-HMT, so no fraction of fesoterodine is detectable in plasma after administration, unlike tolterodine[19, 22]. Moreover, there is substantial interindividual variability in CYP2D6 metabolic activity, while, the esterases that convert fesoterodine to 5-HMT do not exhibit genotypic variations[8, 38, 39]. Thus, the pharmacokinetic variability among individuals treated with fesoterodine is lower[8].
Additional explanations for these findings, particularly the high figures of effectiveness as perceived by both clinicians and patients, could go in two ways. In one way, previous randomized studies have demonstrated the superior efficacy of fesoterodine over tolterodine[18, 19, 21]. Therefore, it should be no surprise to see replication of such results in routine medical practice. On the other hand, these findings should also be interpreted in the light of the fact that the cohort of patients included in this analysis needed a change in its previous tolterodine-based therapy of their OAB symptoms. Moderate improvements, as shown in the urinary questions (see Tables3 and4), could then be perceived as important benefits from the patient’s or clinician’s perspective, because such moderate improvements were observed in the urinary symptoms that best define the OAB condition. Finally, no possible ceiling effect in the CGI-I scale has been described yet. However, as the TBS is a one-item scale with four possible categories of response (greatly improved, improved, no changed and worsened during the treatment), a ceiling effect could not be completely ruled-out.
To date, few studies have addressed the efficacy and tolerability of fesoterodine in elderly patients[29, 40]. Here, the benefits of switching to fesoterodine do not seem to be age-related. Thus, the percentage of younger patients who reached treatment benefit (according to TBS and CGI-I scales) was similar to that in older subjects. No statistically significant difference was observed regarding the degree of worry, bother or interference with the daily-living activities due to usual urinary symptoms, between younger patients and those over 65 years. Our results were compatible with those from randomized studies with antimuscarinic agents for OAB, which showed a similar efficacy irrespective of age[27, 40]. Conversely, these results differ from those obtained in a post-hoc analysis of data from two randomized fesoterodine 4 mg and 8 mg studies. There, patients stratified according to age into three categories (<65, ≥65- < 75, ≥75), showed greater treatment response and improvements in the two younger groups, while, in the ≥75 years group, improvement was only observed with the 8 mg dose[29].
The results presented here show that compared with 4 mg, fesoterodine dose escalation to 8 mg provides significant additional improvements. In the patient’s opinion, worry, bother and interference–related OAB symptoms, improved or showed a trend to greater improvement with higher dosing. 8 mg of fesoterodine provides also higher improvement in term of both patient-reported-treatment benefit and clinical global impression of change.
In addition, compared with subjects receiving 4 mg, a significantly greater proportion of subjects receiving fesoterodine 8 mg, reported drug compliance preference and satisfaction with the new treatment. Our findings, stemming from the usual clinical practice, were in consonance with those reported in previous randomized studies, where the higher 8-mg dose provides additional benefit compared with the lower dose at most end points[22, 41]. Up to now, we are unaware of the existence of non-interventional studies that addressed the issue of efficacy of fesoterodine dose-escalation. The only open-label, single-arm study that addressed it, did not compare the efficacy between subjects treated with 4-mg dose throughout study and subjects who escalated to the 8-mg dose[8].
The availability of two doses of fesoterodine allows for individualization of patient care[8]. Dose escalation may allow for improved outcomes in those patients who reported good tolerability and desire greater symptom relief[8]. In the above-mentioned open-label study, half of the subjects opted to escalate their fesoterodine 4 mg dose to 8 mg[8]. In the present study nearly 70% of subjects received the higher fesoterodine 8 mg dose. Here, the reasons for dose escalation were not recorded either. However, this could be indicative of the fact that, the percentage of patients treated with 8 mg that switched due to lack of tolterodine effectiveness, was significantly higher than those in the 4 mg group. While, side effects were the cause for switching in 23.5% of those titrated to 4 mg vs. 16.1% of those escalating to 8 mg.
The present post-hoc analysis had limitations. We did not capture reasons why physicians/patients did or did not opt for dose escalation. This may be important, because the reasons underlying the decision whether or not to increase the dose, probably varied between individuals, but reflect optimization of the balance between efficacy and tolerability[8]. Additionally, there were limitations inherent in the observational design of the study. In this study, the groups of patients were not well-balanced. Most of the patient characteristics assessed were different between groups. One of them is the treatment length. This could be a confounding factor, but it is not, because the mean time of treatment length was more than two months in all our groups, and significant fesoterodine improvements had been reported as early as two weeks after initiation of treatment[22].
In spite of the limitations of the study, it showed the benefit that patients dissatisfied with tolterodine ER perceive upon changing to fesoterodine, which is greater at higher doses. Patient perception of OAB treatment outcomes may be a useful indicator of benefit and might help drive persistence on treatment, which is known to be poor in OAB[20].

Conclusions

Our analysis suggests that a change from tolterodine ER-based therapy to fesoterodine in symptomatic OAB patients was associated with increased patient treatment benefit. Improvement was not affected by age. Moreover, fesoterodine dose escalation to 8 mg provided significant additional improvement in terms of treatment response, treatment satisfaction, degree of worry-related urinary symptoms, and drug compliance.

Acknowledgements

The authors wish to thank Mercedes García-Vargas for her contribution during the preliminary phases of the study as well as Esther Tapia for drafting the manuscript.
This article is published under license to BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://​creativecommons.​org/​licenses/​by/​2.​0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Competing interests

This study was funded by Pfizer, S.L.U. IL and JR are employees of Pfizer, S.L.U. and DA is an employee of Pfizer Inc, Europe. DCD, PM and FSB have not received any financial support from Pfizer for writing or interpreting the present research, and declare that they do not have any conflict of interests as a consequence of this paper. A funding paid by Pfizer was received by Esther Tapia for drafting the manuscript.

Authors’ contributions

DCD, PM, FSB, IL and DA participated in the original idea and design of the study, interpreted results of analysis and actively reviewed and critiqued the manuscript for important intellectual content. JR participated in the analysis and interpretation of data. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.
Anhänge

Authors’ original submitted files for images

Below are the links to the authors’ original submitted files for images.
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Metadaten
Titel
Dose and aging effect on patients reported treatment benefit switching from the first overactive bladder therapy with tolterodine ER to fesoterodine: post-hoc analysis from an observational and retrospective study
verfasst von
David Castro-Diaz
Pilar Miranda
Francisco Sanchez-Ballester
Isabel Lizarraga
Daniel Arumí
Javier Rejas
Publikationsdatum
01.12.2012
Verlag
BioMed Central
Erschienen in
BMC Urology / Ausgabe 1/2012
Elektronische ISSN: 1471-2490
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2490-12-19

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