%0 Journal Article %T Patient adherence to and tolerability of self-administered interferon ¦Â-1a using an electronic autoinjection device: a multicentre, open-label, phase IV study %A Alessandra Lugaresi %A Ciro Florio %A Vincenzo Brescia-Morra %A Salvatore Cottone %A Paolo Bellantonio %A Marinella Clerico %A Diego Centonze %A Antonio Uccelli %A Maria di Ioia %A Giovanna De Luca %A Andrea Marcellusi %A Andrea Paolillo %A for the BRIDGE study group %J BMC Neurology %D 2012 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1471-2377-12-7 %X BRIDGE (RebiSmart to self-inject Rebif serum-free formulation in a multidose cartridge) was a 12-week, multicentre, open-label, single-arm, observational, Phase IV study in which patients self-administered IFN ¦Â-1a (titrated to 44 ¦Ìg), subcutaneously (sc), three times weekly, via electronic autoinjection device. Patients were assessed at baseline and 4-weekly intervals to Week 12 or early termination (ET) for: physical examinations; diary card completion (baseline, Weeks 4, 8 only); neurological examinations (baseline, Week 12/ET only); MS Treatment Concern Questionnaire (MSTCQ; Weeks 4, 8, 12 only); Convenience Questionnaire (Week 12 only); Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS); and Paced Auditory Serial Addition Task (PASAT; baseline only). Adherence was defined as administration of ¡Ý 80% of scheduled injections, recorded by the autoinjection device.Overall, 88.2% (105/119; intent-to-treat population) of patients were adherent; 67.2% (80/119) administered all scheduled injections. Medical reasons accounted for 35.6% (31/87) of missed injections, forgetfulness for 20.6% (18/87). Adherence did not correlate with baseline Expanded Disability Status Scale (P = 0.821) or PASAT (P = 0.952) scores, or pre-study therapy (P = 0.303). No significant changes (baseline-Week 12) in mean HADS depression (P = 0.482) or anxiety (P = 0.156) scores were observed. 'Overall convenience' was the most important reported benefit of the autoinjection device. Device features associated with handling and ease of use were highly rated. Mean MSTCQ scores for 'flu-like' symptoms (P = 0.022) and global side effects (P = 0.002) significantly improved from Week 4-12. Mean MSTCQ scores for pain at injection site and injection pain increased from Week 4-12 (P < 0.001). Adverse events were mild/moderate. No new safety signals were identified.Convenience and ease of use of the autoinjection device may improve adherence and, therefore, outcomes, in patients with RRMS receiving sc IFN ¦Â-1a.EU C %K Relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis %K IFN beta %K Medication adherence %K Drug delivery systems %K Self administration %U http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2377/12/7