International clinical practice guidelines (including guidelines in France) recommend that antidepressant treatment of major depression be continued for several months after recovery to reduce the risk of relapse and recurrence (
1–
4). However, there is growing evidence that patients discontinue new antidepressant prescriptions at high rates during the first several weeks of treatment (usually 50%−60% within ten weeks) (
5–
8). Diverse factors may account for this discontinuation: the drug’s characteristics and side effects, personal characteristics related to adherence (such as gender and age and self-reported severity of illness, fear of drug dependence, and perception of treatment efficacy) (
5,
7), and factors related to the prescribers (including specialty, skill in diagnosing depression and prescribing appropriate antidepressant treatments, and amount of time spent in patient education) (
6,
8–
10).
Although compelling evidence indicates that low socioeconomic status (SES) increases the duration of new episodes of major depression (
11), several studies have shown the duration of antidepressant treatment to be shorter among people of low SES (
6–
8,
12,
13). This fact suggests that the inverse-care law—that is, “the availability of good medical care tends to vary inversely with the need for it in the population served” (
14,
15)—applies to continuation of antidepressant treatment, especially among highly disadvantaged populations. Nonetheless, some studies have reached different conclusions (
10,
16–
19).
Few studies have sought to study the reasons for social inequalities specifically in the duration of antidepressant treatment (
18). In a previous study (
13), we suggested that these inequalities exist both in access to care (availability and use of mental health services) and in processes of care (the technical and interpersonal care provided to the patient, such as diagnostic and therapeutic procedures and coordination and continuity of care) (
20). For one aspect of the processes of care, previous studies have suggested that people of low SES, compared with those who are better off, are more likely to receive tricyclic antidepressants (
21), which are not tolerated as well as newer classes of antidepressants (
22). Differences in type of treatment might modify patient adherence to treatment (
23,
24) but are rarely taken into account in examining social inequalities in antidepressant treatment discontinuation (
6,
25). Similarly, the characteristics of prescribers (specialty excepted) and their clientele have been taken into account only rarely in studies analyzing social inequalities in antidepressant treatment (
8,
10,
25), although these characteristics have been shown to be associated with prescriptions for and duration of antidepressant treatment (
6,
8–
10,
12,
25) and to vary according to patients’ SES (
26–
28).
We conducted a cohort study to obtain further insights into the reasons for social inequalities in early discontinuation of antidepressant treatment with a focus on the processes of care. This study aimed to verify whether early antidepressant discontinuation occurs more frequently with low-income patients than with others, independently of other factors, and whether early discontinuation depends on prescribers’ choices of specific antidepressant drug treatment or on the composition of their clientele. We used multilevel models to take the hierarchical structure of the data (patient-level data embedded in physician-level data) into account and adjusted for proxies for patient morbidity.
Methods
Study design, population, and period
The target population consisted of the inhabitants of Marseille, the second largest city in France. Residents were ages 18–64 years and were covered by the French National Health Insurance Fund (NHIF). The fund’s beneficiaries are mainly salaried workers, including workers who have become unemployed. The cohort included all beneficiaries with a new episode of antidepressant treatment, defined as no antidepressant prescription claims in the six months before the index claim (
8,
29–
31), between July 1, 2008, and June 30, 2009. We included all new treatments prescribed by private general practitioners. In France, general practitioners manage more than 80% of patients with depression and prescribe 75% of new antidepressant treatments (
3,
13).
Data sources and variables
Individual data.
We obtained cohort members’ deidentified data from the databases of the NHIF in southeastern France after approval from the National Data Protection Authority (Commission Nationale de l’Informatique et des Libertés). The NHIF provides health insurance for all residents of France and about 87% of the French general population—the same proportion it insures in southeastern France. It covers most health care expenses (including doctors’ visits, medication, hospitalizations, laboratory tests, and imaging) and reimburses about 75% of overall individual health care costs (65% of costs for both older and newer antidepressant medications) (
32,
33). Only medications prescribed by a physician (private or public), purchased in commercial pharmacies in France, and considered effective by the Ministry of Health are reimbursed by the NHIF. The fund does not record prescriptions dispensed by public or private hospital pharmacies during hospital stays.
We collected information on the following drugs dispensed between January 1, 2008, and December 31, 2009: antidepressants (ATC classification code N06A), anxiolytics (ATC code N05B), hypnotics (ATC code N05C), antipsychotics, and lithium (ATC code N05AN01). [A list of the antipsychotics and their ATC codes is provided in appendix 1 of the online
data supplement to this article.] For each prescription claim, we retrieved the dates it was prescribed and dispensed and the anonymous identifier of the prescriber.
Using the clinical guidelines as a reference framework and the same methodology used by Melfi and collegues (
30), we defined early discontinuation as fewer than four claims (including refills) for the antidepressant within six months after the index claim or any number of claims when the last purchase was made fewer than 75 days after the index claim. Because prescriptions are dispensed in France for a maximum of 28 days (
31), this definition refers to episodes of treatment lasting three months or less. We classified new treatments into four categories according to the type of antidepressant first dispensed during the study period: selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), tricyclics, other antidepressants (including venlafaxine, a serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor), and combined antidepressants (such as two or more types of antidepressant). We built a coprescription variable for the dispensing of anxiolytics or hypnotics at least once within the six months after the index claim, and we used the coprescription of antipsychotics or lithium (at least one claim during the same period) as a marker of severe mental illness (
31).
We used beneficiaries’ participation, as indicated in NHIF records, in the public CMUC (Couverture Maladie Universelle Complémentaire, or the Complementary Universal Health Insurance) as an indicator of very low income. This program exempts from any out-of-pocket costs individuals throughout France who are younger than 65 and have annual incomes below €9,000 (
32). Physicians can prescribe the medication of their choice to their CMUC patients.
The following data were also available for all NHIF beneficiaries: gender, age, and number of consultations with general practitioners (including house calls) and with private psychiatrists in 2008–2009. We used visits to psychiatrists as a proxy for depression severity (
34). We had no access to beneficiaries’ hospital consultations or admissions. Chronic disease status, recorded by physicians according to the tenth revision of the
International Classification of Diseases (
35), was obtained for each beneficiary. Chronic status is attributed to persons with specific and chronic diseases that are costly to treat (defined by NHIF) and that make patients eligible for 100% reimbursement for treatment. We used this information as a proxy for the presence of severe somatic (yes-no) or chronic psychiatric illnesses (none, major depression, severe anxiety disorder, or other severe psychiatric illness, such as psychosis) (
31).
Characteristics of prescribers and their clientele.
For private physicians, the NHIF databases contain characteristics of the prescribers and their clientele. We matched the cohort members to the anonymous private general practitioner who prescribed their new treatment. We obtained the following data for deidentified private physicians for 2008: gender, age, and total volume of medication prescribed and dispensed (in euros). For the physician’s 2008 patient list (all patients were seen at least once during 2008), we obtained data concerning the proportion of patients age ≥60 years or covered by CMUC (as an indicator of a very low SES or disadvantaged clientele) or having a chronic disease. We calculated the annual mean of total medications prescribed and dispensed per patient as a proxy for the physicians’ general prescription practices.
Statistical analysis
We used chi square tests to compare CMUC beneficiaries with others. Then we analyzed factors associated with the dependent variable of early discontinuation. We used unadjusted logistic regressions and then a multivariate multilevel logistic regression (
36) to consider the hierarchical structure of the data where individuals’ data (level 1) were nested among the physician’s clientele (level 2: the prescriber responsible for the new treatment). We first tested a null model (with no variables) to evaluate the significance of interprescriber variability and to assess whether the multilevel approach was justified (
37); we used the median odds ratio (MOR) to quantify this variability (
38). To focus the analysis on the processes of care, we adjusted the multivariate model for the number of visits each beneficiary had with private general practitioners (
13). To assess whether socioeconomic differences in early discontinuation varied according to patients’ gender and age, we tested interactions between CMUC coverage and these variables. Because of the high frequency of early discontinuation, we corrected estimated odds ratios with the method of Zhang and Yu (
39) to estimate relative risks (RRs) with their 95% confidence intervals (CIs).
We reassessed the full model with an interval defining a new treatment as one year without antidepressant treatment (versus six months), with a less stringent definition of early discontinuation (no antidepressant refill at all within the six months after the index claim) and with a more stringent one (fewer than six claims, including refills, for antidepressants within the six months after the index dispensing).
Analyses were performed with SAS version 9.2 and the GLIMMIX procedure.
Results
Individual characteristics and type of drug treatment
The study population included 14,518 individuals with a new treatment prescribed by a private general practitioner between July 1, 2008, and June 30, 2009. Mean age at inclusion was 44.0±11.4 years; 31.9% of the sample were men, 22.0% were covered by CMUC, 14.9% had a severe chronic somatic illness, and 5.7% a chronic psychiatric disorder (
Table 1).
SSRIs were prescribed for 65.6% of the cohort members, tricyclics for 8.0%, other antidepressants for 25.9%, and a combination of two or more types of antidepressant for .5%; anxiolytics or hypnotics or both were prescribed in the six months after the index claim for 70.9% of the sample. The type of antidepressant prescribed differed significantly (p<.001) according to CMUC coverage (
Table 1). These differences remained significant after adjustment for gender, age, and number of consultations with private general practitioners and with private psychiatrists: CMUC coverage was associated with a higher probability of treatment with tricyclics versus SSRIs (results not shown).
Prescriber characteristics
Prescribers for CMUC-covered cohort members were more frequently male and younger than 45. Their prescriptions resulted in lower annual mean drug expenditures than those prescribed by providers for new treatments for people not covered by CMUC (
Table 2). Their clientele had higher rates of chronic illness and low income than patients of the other providers (
Table 2).
Early discontinuation of antidepressant treatment
Overall, 71.6% of the cohort discontinued their new antidepressant treatment early; this percentage was 44.7% when discontinuation was defined as no refills at all, and 84.2% when defined as fewer than six claims within the six months after the index claim. [Details are illustrated in appendix 2 of the online
data supplement.]
In the unadjusted analyses, the risk of early discontinuation was higher among patients covered by CMUC and among those receiving tricyclics or other antidepressants, compared with those receiving SSRIs (
Table 3). Risk of early discontinuation also was associated with characteristics of prescribers and their patients; in particular, it was most likely when the proportion of CMUC-covered patients was highest (
Table 3).
The MOR of the null model was 1.58 (p<.001) and thus justified the multilevel approach. It decreased to 1.52 after adding individual-level covariates and remained significant in the full hierarchical model (MOR=1.40, p<.001) (
Table 4). The full model, adjusted for individual and prescriber characteristics, confirmed the above-mentioned associations (
Table 3). We found a significant interaction between SES and gender: the relative risk of early discontinuation associated with CMUC was higher for women (RR
a=1.15, CI=1.12–1.18) than for men (RR
a=1.05, CI=1.00–1.10). There was no significant interaction between SES and age.
Extending the criterion defining new treatment to one year or using different definitions of early discontinuation produced results similar to those presented above for the factors associated with discontinuation. [Appendixes 3 and 4 of the online
data supplement provide details.]
Discussion
This cohort study of French NHIF beneficiaries residing in Marseille found early discontinuation of 71.6% of the new antidepressant treatments. Low income (CMUC coverage), type of antidepressant prescribed (tricyclics versus SSRIs), and the composition of the prescriber’s clientele (in particular a high proportion of patients with CMUC coverage) were independently and significantly associated with an increased risk of early discontinuation of antidepressant treatment.
Limitations and strengths
To the best of our knowledge, our study is the first to analyze the association between prescribers’ personal and professional characteristics and the risk of clients’ early discontinuation of antidepressant treatment while adjusting for personal and drug treatment characteristics and using multilevel regression models. This method allowed us to compare the risk of discontinuation according to prescribers’ characteristics while controlling for the systematic biases related to the composition of their clientele.
Our results cannot be extrapolated to population categories that are not covered by the NHIF (such as students, farmers, trades people, and the self-employed). Hence, the generalizability of these results to rural areas or to countries without universal health insurance may be limited.
As in most observational studies of administrative databases (
6,
21,
31,
40–
42), information about diagnoses and disease severity was not available, except for a subset of patients with chronic or severe cases of depression. To improve our consideration of case severity, we adjusted the multilevel model for claims for antipsychotics or lithium and for visits with private psychiatrists, both of which can be considered markers of psychiatric disease severity given that general practitioners refer patients to psychiatrists more frequently in severe versus mild cases of depression (
13,
34). No information on disease duration or age at onset was available, although these variables may be associated with prescribers’ choices of the type of antidepressant.
Because NHIF databases did not contain information on the actual treatment duration, we defined early discontinuation by the number of claims, that is, reimbursements for pharmacy expenses (and we note that reimbursement usually happens automatically at purchase, with no action required by the patient). We used the same cutoff as Melfi and colleagues (
30) (fewer than four claims within the six months after the index claim), which may seem to indicate poor adherence to guidelines and underestimate rates of discontinuation (
30). However, changing the cutoff did not alter our results (appendix 4 of online
data supplement).
We evaluated individual SES with the proxy variable of CMUC coverage because the NHIF database does not record either household income or education level. CMUC coverage is a strong and reliable indicator of low income and social deprivation in France (
32,
43) but does not allow analysis of socioeconomic gradients.
We used a six-month interval without any antidepressant purchases to distinguish between new and prevalent antidepressant treatments (
8,
29–
31); this criterion is commonly considered to distinguish between a relapse (same episode) of major depression and a new episode. Some authors have used longer intervals (
6,
40). The choice of this interval is important because it might imply misclassification of prevalent cases as new cases (
31). However, using an interval of one year instead of six months gave similar results (appendix 3 of online
data supplement).
Finally, our study focused on ambulatory care and did not consider antidepressants prescribed during hospital stays. Given that there is evidence of large socioeconomic differences in hospitalization for psychiatric reasons (
44), social inequalities in antidepressant use may be wider than estimated in our study.
Social inequalities in early discontinuation of antidepressants
The rate of antidepressant discontinuation in our study was higher than that observed in most previous studies in other countries (
6,
12,
25,
29) but is in line with previous results in France for the period 2004–2007 (81.8% of antidepressant treatments were discontinued within six months in a nationally representative sample of NHIF beneficiaries: 87.2% for low-income people versus 81.2% for others) (
8). As previously reported in France and elsewhere (
6–
8,
12,
13), this discontinuation rate was higher for low-income patients; even after adjustment for characteristics of the drug treatment and the prescriber; low income can sometimes be a marker for severe mental illness (
11). Our results suggest that the inverse-care law persists in this field and is more pronounced among women.
Higher rates of off-label antidepressant prescription among low-SES patients may partly explain this result. General practitioners may find it more difficult to diagnose depression and assess its severity among these patients (
45–
49). Moreover, low-SES patients may manage their illness and adhere to treatment poorly; they may have a greater expectation, for example, that the drug will work immediately, although it takes several weeks for antidepressants to become effective (
50). Social inequalities in patient-physician communication, as shown in other health fields (
26,
51,
52), may worsen this situation. Physicians may exhibit a pessimistic view of the possible outcomes of depression management for low-SES patients and thus may be reluctant to respond with their full attention (
53).
Further evidence of the inverse-care law is our finding that low-income patients were more likely to receive tricyclics and less likely to receive SSRIs than other patients, as suggested elsewhere (
21,
41,
54). Moreover, treatment with tricyclics was associated with a higher risk of antidepressant discontinuation compared with treatment with SSRIs, independent of other factors. This finding is consistent with previous studies (
6,
7,
24,
25,
55) and may reflect that tricyclics are tolerated less well than SSRIs (
24). In the absence of specific indication, physicians should thus prescribe SSRIs or other antidepressants rather than tricyclics (
4). In France, as elsewhere, tricyclics are less expensive than newer antidepressants (
21,
33,
41), and the out-of-pocket cost is accordingly lower, but these facts should not explain our findings because the CMUC program is designed to eliminate out-of-pocket costs for filling prescriptions from dispensing pharmacies, and the program does not limit doctors’ prescription choices. Nonetheless, drug cost might influence prescribers’ choices for highly disadvantaged patients (
52).
Our results are also consistent with previous studies showing that CMUC beneficiaries tend to be concentrated among certain practitioners (
28,
56), perhaps because of the reluctance or refusal of some physicians to treat CMUC patients for financial or attitudinal reasons, as well as because of patient preferences and geographic location (
56). This concentration in the clientele of some prescribers was independently associated with a higher risk of early discontinuation. This finding suggests differences in depression management between general practitioners with a more disadvantaged clientele and those whose patients are better off. Videau and colleagues (
27) showed that the mean consultation duration of general practitioners with a low-SES clientele was shorter than among those whose patients had a higher SES, probably because the density of general practitioners is much lower in disadvantaged areas than in more affluent ones; as a consequence, physicians practicing in these areas have higher workloads and must shorten their consultations.
Conclusions
Initial training and continuing medical education of general practitioners in the area of major depression should include specific information and focus on the acquisition of specific skills to diagnose and treat low-SES populations and minimize the early discontinuation of antidepressant treatment. Specific actions should also target attitudes and knowledge of low-SES patients to improve their treatment adherence. For example, programs of therapeutic education especially tailored for this population should be developed, as they have been for treatment of other illnesses (
57,
58). Previous American studies have shown that depression care management programs (involving a care manager who conducts patient assessment, education, follow-ups, and care coordination) can be effective in reducing social inequalities in depression treatment and outcomes (
50,
59); such programs should be tested elsewhere to reduce social inequalities in depression management.
Acknowledgments and disclosures
This study received support from the Public Health Research Institute (Institut de Recherche en Santé Publique) and from the Funds for Quality and Coordination of Care in southeastern France. The authors thank the National Association for the Coordination of Continuing Medical Education and Specialist Assessment (Association Nationale de Coordination des Actions de Formation Continue et d’Évaluation en Médecine Spécialisée) for its contribution to the work, Gille Boite, M.S., for assistance in data management, and Jo Ann Cahn, B.A., J.D., for reading the manuscript and improving the English.
The authors report no competing interests.