Comparison of Inconvenience Costs Between Influenza Antivirals for Japanese Pediatric Patients: A Conjoint Analysis of Parental Responses

Introduction Certain drug characteristics, including dosage and form, are associated with either convenience or inconvenience for the patients taking them, and any inconvenience can be considered as a “cost” in disease treatment. Multiple antivirals are available for influenza in Japan, with various...

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Published in:Advances in therapy Vol. 39; no. 4; pp. 1724 - 1742
Main Authors: Kurazono, Kenji, Ikeoka, Hidetoshi, Hiroi, Shinzo, Iwasaki, Kosuke, Takeshima, Tomomi, Tamura, Daisuke
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Cheshire Springer Healthcare 01-04-2022
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Summary:Introduction Certain drug characteristics, including dosage and form, are associated with either convenience or inconvenience for the patients taking them, and any inconvenience can be considered as a “cost” in disease treatment. Multiple antivirals are available for influenza in Japan, with various dosages and forms. This study evaluated the inconvenience costs associated with influenza antivirals for pediatric patients by using conjoint analysis on responses from their parents. Methods An online survey (May 2021) was conducted for parents whose child took antivirals for influenza at 6–11 years during the 3 years until March 2021. Attributes of the conjoint analysis were administration routes and formulation (tablet, capsule, dry syrup, or inhalant), duration of administration, frequency of administration per day, and out-of-pocket expenses. We assumed the efficacy and safety to be equivalent among the antivirals. A logistic regression model was applied to the analysis. We also asked parents about their recent experiences with antiviral treatment for their child. Results We collected responses from 3161 eligible individuals. The mean age (standard deviation) of the children when taking the antivirals and percentage of female children were 8.27 (1.63) years old and 53.2%, respectively. The tablet was the most preferred formulation; the inconvenience costs for each administration route and formulation, relative to the tablet as zero, were Japanese yen (JPY) 515 (US dollar 4.61, as of October 2021) for the inhalant, JPY 775 for the capsule, and JPY 804 for the dry syrup. The inconvenience costs for 5 days relative to 1 day and for twice a day relative to once a day were JPY 2150 and JPY 399, respectively. Conclusion Based on the conjoint analysis, a single-dose tablet antiviral was suggested to have the lowest inconvenience cost for pediatric patients. Trial Registration UMIN000044243.
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ISSN:0741-238X
1865-8652
DOI:10.1007/s12325-022-02062-z