Real-World Effectiveness of Omadacycline and Impact of Unapproved Omadacycline Prescription Claims among Adult Outpatients with Community-Acquired Bacterial Pneumonia or Acute Bacterial Skin and Skin Structure Infections

Journal of Managed Care & Specialty Pharmacy, 2023

Background

Omadacycline is an amino-methylcycline antibiotic that is indicated for the treatment of adults with community-acquired bacterial pneumonia (CABP) and acute bacterial skin and skin structure infections (ABSSSI). Like many new antibiotics, there are scant real-world effectiveness data for omadacycline. There is also a high potential that an omadacycline prescription is rejected or reversed, and it is not known whether patients who have an unapproved omadacycline claim are at higher risk for 30-day emergency department (ED)/inpatient (IP) visits.

Objective

To describe the real-world effectiveness of omadacycline and assess the impact of unapproved omadacycline claims among adult outpatients with CABP or ABSSSIs.

Methods

The study population included patients who received 1 or more omadacycline outpatient prescriptions from a large US claims database (October 2018 to September 2020) and had a diagnosis for CABP or ABSSSI. The approval status of omadacycline claims was determined. The proportion of all-cause 30-day ED/IP visits among patients with an approved vs unapproved claim was compared.

Results

404 patients met the inclusion criteria (CABP: 97; ABSSSI: 307). Of the 404 patients, 146 (36%) had an unapproved claim (CABP: 28; ABSSSI: 118). Overall, the proportion of 30-day ED/IP visits (yes/no) for those with an unapproved and approved claim was 28% vs 17%, respectively (P < 0.05). The overall adjusted 30-day ED/IP visits incidence difference was 11% (95% CI = 2 - 19), corresponding to an adjusted number needed to treat of 9 (95% CI = 5 - 43).

Conclusions

A high incidence (36%) of unapproved omadacydine claims was observed in this study. Patients with unapproved daims had an 11% higher incidence of 30-day all-cause ED/IP visits than patients with approved claims.

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Authors

Lodise TP, Gunter K, Mu F, Gao E, Yang D, Yim E, Sandor S, Berman G