Adolescent and caregiver preferences for juvenile idiopathic arthritis treatment: a discrete-choice experiment

Flora McErlane, Marco Boeri, Cooper Bussberg, Joseph C Cappelleri, Rebecca Germino, Lori Stockert, Caroline Vass, Adam M Huber

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    Abstract

    Background
    This study aimed to elicit and quantify preferences for treatments for juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA).

    Methods
    We conducted a discrete-choice experiment among adolescents with JIA in the United States (US) (n = 197) and United Kingdom (UK) (n = 100) and caregivers of children with JIA in the US (n = 207) and UK (n = 200). In a series of questions, respondents chose between experimentally designed profiles for hypothetical JIA treatments that varied in efficacy (symptom control; time until next flare-up), side effects (stomachache, nausea, and vomiting; headaches), mode and frequency of administration, and the need for combination therapy. Using a random-parameters logit model, we estimated preference weights for these attributes, from which we derived their conditional relative importance.

    Results
    On average, respondents preferred greater symptom control; greater time until the next flare-up; less stomachache, nausea, and vomiting; and fewer headaches. However, adolescents and caregivers in the US were generally indifferent across varying modes and frequencies of administration. UK adolescents and caregivers preferred tablets, syrup, or injections to intravenous infusions. US and UK adolescents were indifferent between treatment with monotherapy or combination therapy; caregivers in the UK preferred treatment with combination therapy to monotherapy. Subgroup analysis showed preference heterogeneity across characteristics including gender, treatment experience, and symptom experience in both adolescents and caregivers.

    Conclusions
    Improved symptom control, prolonged time to next flare-up, and avoidance of adverse events such as headache, stomachache, nausea, and vomiting are desirable characteristics of treatment regimens for adolescents with JIA and their caregivers.
    Original languageEnglish
    Article number129
    Number of pages15
    JournalPediatric Rheumatology
    Volume21
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 21 Oct 2023

    Keywords

    • Nausea
    • Stated preferences
    • Arthritis, Juvenile - drug therapy
    • Juvenile idiopathic arthritis
    • Caregivers
    • Vomiting
    • Patient
    • Child
    • Humans
    • Adolescent
    • United States
    • Caregiver
    • Headache

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