Lavitra online - Medical Abstract March 11, 2005
Clinical monograph for drug formulary review:
erectile dysfunction agents.
Campbell HE.
WellPoint Pharmacy Management, PO Box 9, Cherry Valley, NY,
13320, USA.
BACKGROUND: Significant advances in the pharmacologic treatment
of erectile dysfunction (ERD) have occurred in recent years,
most notably the introduction of sildenafil, the first oral
selective phosphodiesterase type 5 (PDE5) inhibitor, in 1998.
Sildenafil quickly gained acceptance by the medical community
and the public because of its broad efficacy for different types
of ERD and its ease of use. Two PDE5 inhibitors, vardenafil
and tadalafil, have since joined sildenafil to compete in the
ERD market. A review was conducted by the Drug Information Service
of a pharmacy benefits manager (PBM) to determine the relative
merits and place in therapy of commonly used ERD drugs as part
of drug formulary management process and decision making by
the Pharmacy & Therapeutics (P&T) committee. OBJECTIVE: To provide
readers with a comprehensive clinical monograph on ERD drugs
written from a managed care perspective. METHODS: The PBM clinical
monograph is designed to provide health plans with an evidence-based
review of drugs, therapeutic classes, and disease states with
a managed care focus. For each therapeutic class or disease
review, an extensive and thorough literature search of MEDLINE
is conducted for efficacy, safety, effectiveness, and humanistic
and economic data. Drug/disease-state databases (UptoDate online,
MICROMEDEX), U.S. Food and Drug Administration clinical reviews,
key Internet sites, medical/pharmacy-related news sites, clinical
guidelines, and AMCP dossiers are also reviewed. Formulary drug
monographs prepared by the Drug Information Service of the PBM
include a critical analysis and summary of disease-oriented
and patient-oriented clinical outcomes, effectiveness, and humanistic
data. Additional data considered and included in the formulary
review process are clinical attributes, patent expirations/generic
competition, off-label or pending indications, and pharmacoeconomic
data. RESULTS: Despite the lack of head-to-head comparative
studies, all 3 PDE5 inhibitors appear to have equivalent efficacy
in the treatment of general ERD and ERD associated with diabetes
and postprostatectomy. Sildenafil has additional efficacy data
in the management of ERD associated with spinal cord injury
and antidepressant medications. Tadalafil has the longest duration
of action (up to 36 hours); this feature can be both beneficial
(greater sexual spontaneity) or possibly detrimental (greater
exposure to drug, delayed adverse events). All 3 PDE5 inhibitors
appear to be generally well tolerated and have similar contraindications
and warnings. However, vardenafil is the only PDE5 inhibitor
with a cardiac conduction precaution. Alprostadil products are
recommended in current ERD guidelines as second-line therapy
for those who have not responded or cannot take the oral PDE5
inhibitors. Overall, higher clinical efficacy rates are achieved
with intracavernous than with transurethral administration.
CONCLUSION: A large amount of clinical efficacy and safety data
has been published since the market launch of sildenafil in
1998. Sildenafil has the greatest body of efficacy and safety
evidence. No comparative studies have been conducted with any
of the PDE5 inhibitors. Differences in study populations, primary
end points, and measurement tools make comparisons difficult.
However, all PDE5 inhibitors appear to be roughly equivalent
in efficacy, with minor differences in adverse event profiles.
Until more comparative data are available, economic considerations
will be a significant factor in choosing ERD products for formulary
inclusion.
Sourced at http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=15766322&query_hl=6
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