Predictors of Long-Acting Injectable Antipsychotic Medication Use in Patients with Schizophrenia Spectrum, Bipolar, and Other Psychotic Disorders in a US Community-based, Integrated Health System

Author:

Alavi Mubarika1,Ridout Samuel J2,Lee Catherine1ORCID,Harris Brooke3,Ridout Kathryn K12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Research , Kaiser Permanente Northern California, Oakland, CA

2. The Permanente Medical Group , Kaiser Permanente Northern California, Oakland, CA

3. Kaiser Foundation Hospitals , Kaiser Permanente Northern California, Oakland, CA

Abstract

Abstract Background and Hypothesis Long-acting injectable (LAI) antipsychotics improve patient outcomes and are recommended by treatment guidelines for patients with limited medication adherence in schizophrenia spectrum, bipolar, and other psychotic disorders. Reports of LAI antipsychotic use in these disorders and if use aligns with treatment guidelines are lacking. This study aimed to report patient characteristics associated with LAI antipsychotic use in these disorders. Study Design Retrospective observational study of patients ≥18-years-old with bipolar or psychotic disorders at a large, integrated, community-based health system. Patient demographic and clinical characteristics served as exposures for the main outcome of adjusted odds ratio (aOR) for LAI versus oral antipsychotic medication use from January 1, 2017 to December 31, 2023. Study Results There were N = 2685 LAI and N = 31 531 oral antipsychotic users. Being non-white (aOR = 1.3-2.0; P < .0001), non-female (aOR = 1.5; P < .0001), from a high deprivation neighborhood (NDI, aOR = 1.3; P < .0007), having a higher body mass index (BMI, aOR = 1.3-1.7; P < .0009), having a schizophrenia/schizoaffective (aOR = 5.8-6.8; P < .0001), psychotic (aOR = 1.6, P < .0001), or substance use disorder (aOR = 1.4; P < .0001), and outpatient psychiatry (aOR = 2.3-7.5; P < .0001) or inpatient hospitalization (aOR = 2.4; P < .0001) utilization in the prior year with higher odds and age ≥40 (aOR = 0.4-0.7; P < .0001) or bipolar disorder (aOR = 0.9; P < .05) were associated with lower odds of LAI use. Non-white, non-female, age 18-39, and high NDI patients had higher LAI use regardless of treatment adherence markers. Smoking and cardiometabolic markers were also associated with LAI use. Conclusions Demographic and clinical factors are associated with increased LAI use irrespective of treatment adherence. Research on utilization variation informing equitable formulation use aligned with treatment guideline recommendations is warranted.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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