Patient-Tailored Interventions to Improve Specialty Medication Adherence: Results from a Prospective Randomized Controlled Trial - 20/06/23
, Ryan Moore, MS, Leena Choi, Ph.D., Autumn D. Zuckerman, PharmD, BCPS, CSPAbstract |
Background |
Specialty medication nonadherence results in poor clinical outcomes and increased costs. This study evaluated the impact of patient-tailored interventions on specialty medication adherence.
Methods |
A pragmatic, randomized controlled trial was conducted at a single-center health-system specialty pharmacy from May 2019 to August 2021. Participants included recently nonadherent patients prescribed self-administered specialty medications from multiple specialty clinics. Eligible patients were stratified by historical clinic rates of nonadherence and randomized 1:1 to usual care or intervention arms. Intervention patients received patient-tailored interventions and 8 months of follow-up. A Wilcoxon test was used to analyze the difference in 6-, 8-, and 12-month post-enrollment adherence, calculated using proportion of days covered, between the intervention and usual care arms.
Results |
Four hundred and thirty eight patients were randomized. Baseline characteristics were similar between groups: mostly women (68%), white (82%), with a median age of 54 years (interquartile range, 40, 64). The most common reasons for nonadherence in the intervention arm were memory (37%) and unreachability (28%). There was a significant difference in median proportion of days covered between patients in the usual care and intervention arms at 8-months (0.88 vs 0.94, P < .001), 6-months (0.90 vs 0.95, P = .003), and 12-months post-enrollment (0.87 vs 0.93, P < .001).
Conclusions |
Patient-tailored interventions resulted in significant specialty medication adherence improvement compared with standard of care. Specialty pharmacies should consider targeting nonadherent patients for adherence interventions.
El texto completo de este artículo está disponible en PDF.Keywords : Delivery of health care, Medication adherence, Pharmacists, Pharmacy, Pragmatic clinical trials as topic, Specialty pharmacy
Esquema
| Funding: The author acknowledges the support for contribution in designing a pragmatic, randomized controlled trial embedded within usual care from the VICTR Learning Healthcare System Platform under CTSA award No. UL1 TR002243 from the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences. |
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| Conflict of Interest: None. |
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| Authorship: The authors are solely responsible for the content of this manuscript. |
Vol 136 - N° 7
P. 694 - juillet 2023 Regresar al númeroBienvenido a EM-consulte, la referencia de los profesionales de la salud.
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