Bonar_2025_J.Neuromuscul.Dis_12_22143602241308194

Reference

Title : Disease burden, healthcare resource utilisation, and treatment patterns in patients with newly diagnosed myasthenia gravis in England: A retrospective cohort study - Bonar_2025_J.Neuromuscul.Dis_12_22143602241308194
Author(s) : Bonar K , Boudiaf N , Zaremba P , Tarancon T , Zhou J , Jacob S
Ref : J Neuromuscul Dis , 12 :22143602241308194 , 2025
Abstract :

BACKGROUND: Myasthenia gravis (MG), a chronic and unpredictable autoimmune disease, is associated with multiple comorbidities and high disease burden. OBJECTIVE: To assess the disease burden, healthcare resource utilisation (HCRU), and treatment patterns of patients with newly diagnosed MG in England. METHODS: Data from Clinical Practice Research Datalink GP practices linked to the Hospital Episode Statistics database were used. Eligible patients had <=1 diagnostic code for MG, with the first MG diagnostic code recorded between 01 January 2010 and 31 December 2019. Non-MG controls were selected if they had no recorded MG diagnosis and <=12 months of data. Controls were matched for age, sex and GP practice in a maximum ratio of 5:1. RESULTS: Mean follow-up duration was 2.8 and 3.1 years for the MG and non-MG cohorts, respectively. In the MG cohort, 56% of patients were male, with a mean age of 67 years at baseline. Incidence rates of all comorbidities assessed during follow-up were higher in the MG cohort than in controls. Almost two-thirds of MG patients experienced <=1 myasthenic exacerbation during follow-up; incidence rates (95% confidence interval) of MG exacerbations and crises were 50.0 (44.7-55.9) and 1.3 (0.8-2.0) per 100 person-years, respectively. Visits to non-neurology specialists and outpatient clinics were the most common instances of HCRU overall, each being more frequent in the MG cohort than for controls. In the first year of follow-up, acetylcholinesterase inhibitors (AChEIs) and corticosteroids were used by 56.0% and 50.2% of MG patients, respectively; the use of AChEIs declined thereafter. CONCLUSIONS: Despite treatment, there is a high disease burden for patients with newly diagnosed MG in England, with high rates of MG exacerbation and HCRU use. Thus, there is a need for targeted treatments with sustained efficacy and improved safety to adequately manage MG symptoms and reduce MG-related disease burden.

PubMedSearch : Bonar_2025_J.Neuromuscul.Dis_12_22143602241308194
PubMedID: 39973446

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Citations formats

Bonar K, Boudiaf N, Zaremba P, Tarancon T, Zhou J, Jacob S (2025)
Disease burden, healthcare resource utilisation, and treatment patterns in patients with newly diagnosed myasthenia gravis in England: A retrospective cohort study
J Neuromuscul Dis 12 :22143602241308194

Bonar K, Boudiaf N, Zaremba P, Tarancon T, Zhou J, Jacob S (2025)
J Neuromuscul Dis 12 :22143602241308194