Affiliation:
1. RAND Corporation Arlington Virginia USA
2. Department of Neurology University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center Dallas Texas USA
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundEssential tremor (ET) is a chronic, progressive neurological disease that affects an estimated 7 million individuals in the United States (ie, 2.2% of the entire U.S. population). Despite its high prevalence, there are a few published studies on patterns of prescription medication use among patients.ObjectiveThe aim was to examine prescription drug medication use among ET patients.MethodsThis is a cross‐sectional study of ET patients, age ≥40, with at least 1 prescription medication fill using the Optum's de‐identified Clinformatics Data Mart Database from 2018 through 2019. We examined patterns of fills of key agents used to treat ET.ResultsThe final sample comprised 36,839 ET patients in the United States; 89% had at least 1 prescription drug claim over a 2‐year period, indicating that 9 of 10 ET patients take a medication to treat their disease. For each of the 3 most frequently prescribed medications, only a modest fraction (1/5 to 1/4) of patients were taking that medication. Adherence to these agents was 52% to 61%. A high percentage of patients had fills for more than 1 of the main agents we studied.ConclusionThese data illustrate a need for medication in the ET population. There is only 1 FDA‐approved medication to treat ET, propranolol, and less than 25% of ET patients used this drug during our study period. At the same time, no single agent was utilized by more than one quarter of ET patients, adherence was low, and use of multiple agents was common. For such a common disease, the pharmacotherapeutic landscape is impoverished.