Association Between Patient-Reported Medication Adherence and Anticoagulation Control - 23/08/17

Abstract |
Background |
The prevention of thromboembolism events remains challenging in cases of poor medication adherence. Unfortunately, clinical prediction of future adherence has been suboptimal. The objective of this study was to examine the correlation between 2 measures of real-time, self-reported adherence and anticoagulation control.
Methods |
The IN-RANGE2 cohort recruited patients initiating warfarin therapy in 3 urban anticoagulation clinics. At each study visit, participants reported adherence using a 100-point visual analogue scale (VAS, marking percentage of pills taken since prior visit on a linear scale) and 7-day recall of pill-taking behavior. Anticoagulation control was measured by between-visit percent time in international normalized ratio range (BVTR), dichotomized at the cohort median. The longitudinal association between adherence and anticoagulation control was estimated using generalized estimating equations, controlling for clinical and demographic characteristics, prior BVTR, and warfarin dose changes.
Results |
Among 598 participants with 3204 (median 4) visits, the median BVTR was 36.8% (interquartile range 0%-73.9%). Participants reported ≤80% adherence in 182 visits (5.7%) and missed pills in the past 7 days in 377 visits (11.8%). Multivariable regression analysis found poorer anticoagulation control (BVTR <36.8%) in those with a VAS ≤80% (odds ratio 1.89; 95% confidence interval, 1.12-3.18; P = .02) and self-reported change in adherence since last visit (odds ratio 1.55; 95% confidence interval, 1.20-2.01; P = .001).
Conclusion |
Self-reported VAS medication adherence at a clinic visit and changes in reported adherence since the last visit are independently associated with BVTR. Clinicians may gain additional insight into patients' medication adherence by incorporating this information into patient management.
El texto completo de este artículo está disponible en PDF.Keywords : Anticoagulation, Medication adherence, Self-report, Visual analogue scale, Warfarin
Esquema
| Funding: This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (grant R01HL066176; Principal Investigator: SEK) and by the American Heart Association (2016 Student Scholarship in Cardiovascular Disease; Principal Investigator: SEK). |
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| Conflict of Interest: MBS reports being a consultant for Bio2Medical, Janssen Healthcare, and CSL Behring; and has received research support from Boehringer Ingelheim, Janssen Healthcare, Portola, and Roche. SEK reports being an Expert Witness for Bayer and Pfizer. |
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| Authorship: All authors had access to the data and a role in writing the manuscript. |
Vol 130 - N° 9
P. 1092 - septembre 2017 Regresar al númeroBienvenido a EM-consulte, la referencia de los profesionales de la salud.
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