Introduction: Chronic idiopathic/spontaneous urticaria (CIU/CSU) is a debilitating skin condition that is burdensome for patients and healthcare providers. We aimed to describe clinical characteristics, consultation patterns and healthcare resource utilization in real-world US patients with refractory and non-refractory CIU/CSU. Methods: Data was collected from the Adelphi Real World 2015 Urticaria Disease Specific Programme. Physicians completed patient record forms (PRFs) for the next four patients consulting with non-refractory CIU/CSU and the next six with refractory CIU/CSU; patients were considered refractory if symptomatic and on treatment step ≥2. The same patients were asked to complete patient self-completion (PSC) forms describing how CIU/CSU affected them. Results: Seventeen physicians (15 allergists; 2 dermatologists) completed 184 PRFs (108 refractory CIU/CSU; 76 non-refractory CIU/CSU); 140 patients completed PSC forms (93 refractory CIU/CSU; 47 non-refractory CIU/CSU). Mean time from first consultation to diagnosis was 13.5 (SD 28.3) weeks; mean time from diagnosis to first treatment was 16.0 (SD 37.9) weeks. Patients with refractory CIU/CSU were more likely to initially consult primary care physicians than those with non-refractory CIU/CSU (51% and 28%, respectively). The most common symptoms were itching, sleep problems and anxiety/distress, affecting 75%, 23% and 18%, respectively. Patient-perceived disease severity was greater than physician-perceived severity (refractory CIU/CSU kappa 0.1512; non-refractory CIU/CSU 0.1590). Conclusions: Patients with CIU/CSU in this real-world study - particularly those with refractory CIU/CSU - were slow to receive specialist care and had substantial symptom burdens; patient-physician perception of disease severity was discordant. Earlier diagnosis of CIU/CSU may lead to timely use of CIU/CSU therapies.
Keywords: Chronic idiopathic urticaria; chronic spontaneous urticaria; management; real-world; refractory.