Pediatric growth hormone deficiency (pGHD) is treated with daily somatropin (recombinant human growth hormone) injections. High rates of discontinuation and poor adherence to treatment, which are associated with worse growth outcomes, have been documented previously, for example in the US and Europe. Discontinuation of somatropin has not yet been evaluated using real-world data in Japan. To describe discontinuation of, and persistence to, daily somatropin treatment among children with pGHD in Japan. This was a retrospective cohort study of children (≥3 and 60, > 90, and 120-day gap thresholds) between successive somatropin prescription fill dates. Persistence was defined as continuous refills of somatropin with no gaps in therapy. Time to discontinuation/non-persistence was evaluated using Kaplan-Meier methods, and Cox proportional hazards models identified predictors of time to discontinuation. This analysis utilized de-identified patient data from 2 large, Japanese-based retrospective databases; as such this study does not meet the requirements for institutional review board (IRB) review. Among the children included in this study (JMDC N = 452, MDV N = 573), most were male (JMDC 64.8%, MDV 60.0%). Mean age (standard deviation) was 8.8 (3.6) years in JMDC and 7.5 (3.6) years in MDV. Early persistence was high across both cohorts (JMDC 91.2%, MDV 83.4%). Using the 90-day gap definition for discontinuation, a sizable proportion of children discontinued over the follow-up period: JMDC 19% at 12 months, 35% at 48 months; and MDV 33% at 12 months, 54% at 48 months. Fewer discontinuations were observed with the 120-day gap definition (~16% at 48 months in JMDC, ~ 28% at 48 months in MDV) and more were observed with the 60-day gap definition (~67% at 48 months in JMDC, ~ 83% at 48 months in MDV). No meaningful predictors of discontinuation were identified. Despite high early persistence with somatropin, many children with pGHD in Japan were increasingly non-persistent over time: at 48 months post-index, at least 16% of children discontinued therapy, using the JDMC database and the most conservative measure of gap allowance. These results suggest a need for new strategies to support somatropin medication use over time among children with pGHD in Japan.
Loftus et al. (Wed,) studied this question.