Is There a Threshold for Medication Adherence? Lessons Learnt From Electronic Monitoring of Drug Adherence

Medication adherence is a well-recognized problem in the management of patients with chronic diseases needing a long-term pharmacotherapy. While fighting against non-adherence, an important question frequently arises, i.e., how much adherence is enough to obtain the full treatment benefits? Most stu...

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Main Author: Michel Burnier
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-01-01
Series:Frontiers in Pharmacology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphar.2018.01540/full
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spelling doaj-b089da93825145119c2fc1ead6d873bb2020-11-24T22:05:03ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Pharmacology1663-98122019-01-01910.3389/fphar.2018.01540416695Is There a Threshold for Medication Adherence? Lessons Learnt From Electronic Monitoring of Drug AdherenceMichel BurnierMedication adherence is a well-recognized problem in the management of patients with chronic diseases needing a long-term pharmacotherapy. While fighting against non-adherence, an important question frequently arises, i.e., how much adherence is enough to obtain the full treatment benefits? Most studies having attempted to answer this question have used large pharmacy records and health care databases to quantify the percentage of days covered by the prescribed treatment and hence deduce a threshold below which there appears to be fewer benefits from therapy. In the present paper, the use of data obtained using electronic monitoring of adherence is discussed as another means to assess adherence thresholds with a particular emphasis on hypertension. The data show that even with the use of electronic monitoring of adherence, which provides a comprehensive dosing history, it is extremely difficult to define an adherence threshold in hypertension. This is due to many factors that need to be taken into account, including not only the pattern of patients’ adherence and their clinical and environmental characteristics, but also the pharmacological characteristics of the prescribed drugs, the severity of the disease and many others. To determine adherence cut-offs more precisely, specific protocols should be designed to answer the question in various clinical conditions. These protocols should be conducted in well-defined patients’ groups, they should use the most reliable methods to measure adherence providing if possible a detailed dosing history perhaps combined with drugs levels in blood or urine. These studies should also choose the best methods to measure clinical endpoints, such as ambulatory blood pressure monitoring or home blood pressure in the case of hypertension. One important aspect is that datasets should be solid and large enough to be able to analyze adherence data as a continuous variable using newly developed mathematical models including new metrics catching the complexity of adherence. The rapid development of new technologies like devices, connectivity, and analytics, will probably provide new solutions to improve our ability to define valid and clinically useful adherence thresholds in various therapeutic areas.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphar.2018.01540/fullhypertensionpercentage days coveredcardiovascularblood pressurepharmacologygenotype
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michel Burnier
spellingShingle Michel Burnier
Is There a Threshold for Medication Adherence? Lessons Learnt From Electronic Monitoring of Drug Adherence
Frontiers in Pharmacology
hypertension
percentage days covered
cardiovascular
blood pressure
pharmacology
genotype
author_facet Michel Burnier
author_sort Michel Burnier
title Is There a Threshold for Medication Adherence? Lessons Learnt From Electronic Monitoring of Drug Adherence
title_short Is There a Threshold for Medication Adherence? Lessons Learnt From Electronic Monitoring of Drug Adherence
title_full Is There a Threshold for Medication Adherence? Lessons Learnt From Electronic Monitoring of Drug Adherence
title_fullStr Is There a Threshold for Medication Adherence? Lessons Learnt From Electronic Monitoring of Drug Adherence
title_full_unstemmed Is There a Threshold for Medication Adherence? Lessons Learnt From Electronic Monitoring of Drug Adherence
title_sort is there a threshold for medication adherence? lessons learnt from electronic monitoring of drug adherence
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Pharmacology
issn 1663-9812
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Medication adherence is a well-recognized problem in the management of patients with chronic diseases needing a long-term pharmacotherapy. While fighting against non-adherence, an important question frequently arises, i.e., how much adherence is enough to obtain the full treatment benefits? Most studies having attempted to answer this question have used large pharmacy records and health care databases to quantify the percentage of days covered by the prescribed treatment and hence deduce a threshold below which there appears to be fewer benefits from therapy. In the present paper, the use of data obtained using electronic monitoring of adherence is discussed as another means to assess adherence thresholds with a particular emphasis on hypertension. The data show that even with the use of electronic monitoring of adherence, which provides a comprehensive dosing history, it is extremely difficult to define an adherence threshold in hypertension. This is due to many factors that need to be taken into account, including not only the pattern of patients’ adherence and their clinical and environmental characteristics, but also the pharmacological characteristics of the prescribed drugs, the severity of the disease and many others. To determine adherence cut-offs more precisely, specific protocols should be designed to answer the question in various clinical conditions. These protocols should be conducted in well-defined patients’ groups, they should use the most reliable methods to measure adherence providing if possible a detailed dosing history perhaps combined with drugs levels in blood or urine. These studies should also choose the best methods to measure clinical endpoints, such as ambulatory blood pressure monitoring or home blood pressure in the case of hypertension. One important aspect is that datasets should be solid and large enough to be able to analyze adherence data as a continuous variable using newly developed mathematical models including new metrics catching the complexity of adherence. The rapid development of new technologies like devices, connectivity, and analytics, will probably provide new solutions to improve our ability to define valid and clinically useful adherence thresholds in various therapeutic areas.
topic hypertension
percentage days covered
cardiovascular
blood pressure
pharmacology
genotype
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphar.2018.01540/full
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