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Fewer daily doses and drugs with fewer side effects improve compliance
Patient compliance At most, 50% of people with chronic disease comply with their doctor's
recommendations, irrespective of disease, treatment, or
age.1 Adherence and persistence are poor even among
patients with diseases with a high and moderate risk of
death.2-4 Many factors related to patients, doctors, and
the medical system affect compliance with treatment.2-7
Similar problems exist in all countries.
5 6
Doctors and
patients are equally responsible for this abysmal state of
affairs.5
The disease in which adherence and persistence have been best studied
is hypertension, and it can serve as a model. About half the people
with hypertension receive drug treatment; in about half of them is
blood pressure controlled, and half stop taking their drugs during the
initial year of treatment. The median time to discontinuing drugs is 90 days.8-10 Persistence varies with individual drugs, and
adverse side effects are the prime culprit.10 This is a
reasonable conclusion, given that hypertension usually causes no
symptoms and most antihypertensive drugs have uncomfortable side
effects. Compliance with antihypertensive drugs is also better in older
patients, women, and in those prescribed fewer drugs.
Not frequently examined, however, is the effect of the number of doses
a day on compliance. Two studies with similar results summarised the
effects of daily regimens of medication on adherence to and persistence
with treatment. In 1988, 527 patients with arthritis who were
prescribed non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs were followed up for
up to four periods of three months.11 The study found an
inverse linear relation between the number of doses a day and
compliance. Adherence and persistence declined in similar fashion.
Compliance was 78% for once a day dosing, 72% for twice, 64% for
thrice, and 60% for four times a day.
The other study, which followed 21 723 people with hypertension for
one year, studied the relation between persistence and the class of
antihypertensives prescribed.10 All patients had insurance
benefits for drugs, so payment was not an issue. Persistence at one
year after start of treatment was significantly lower with twice a day
dosing (29%) than with once a day dosing (up to 56%; P New drugs for arthritis and hypertension have fewer side effects, and
their use should help improve compliance. Of course, newer drugs are
more expensive. This is true in all aspects of life Given that almost every treatment for arthritis and hypertension has
similar outcomes, except for adverse side effects, the doctor's dilemma
is whether to step up treatment or to prescribe the best treatment
first. Stepping up treatment Department of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania,
Philadelphia, PA 19104-2676, USA (bsbloom{at}mail.med.upenn.edu)
that is, adherence to the
regimen of care recommended by the doctor and persistence with it over
time
has been a common concern in medical practice for a long time. A
search on Medline found nearly 60 000 citations since 1980 related to compliance. Though much is known about the problem and how to overcome
it, little seems to have been done in everyday medical practice by
healthcare systems and practitioners.
0.0001). By
class of drug, persistence with angiotensin II receptor antagonists was
highest at 64%, followed by angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors
(58%), calcium antagonists (50%),
blockers (43%), and thiazide
diuretics (38%) (P
0.0001 for all). The percentage of patients who
switched to another antihypertensive drug was similar for all classes
of initial medication (6-9%). The remaining patients stopped all
antihypertensive treatment. Persistence with a drug was related to the
year in which it was first marketed. Newer drugs had fewer and less
bothersome side effects, and patients taking these drugs showed greater
persistence. The effects of daily dosing regimens are not unique to
pharmaceuticals. For example, during a given week non-compliance with
continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis for chronic renal failure was
18% in the United States and 7% in Canada.12 In all
three studies benefits forgone by patients because of poor compliance
were substantial.
newer and higher
quality products are usually more expensive, but their value, or the
trade off of quality to cost, is also higher. Only in medical care do
we expect higher quality at a lower cost.
the payer's choice
means starting with
the least expensive, usually least effective drug or the drug with the
highest rate of side effects, and when this fails moving to higher
quality drugs. Doctors and patients want the best treatment first, the
one with the greatest efficacy and least number of side effects
but
this is usually at the highest cost.
Footnotes
BB has received financial support from pharmaceutical firms through university research grants.
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| 2. | Turner BJ, Newschaffer CJ, Zhang D, Hauck WW. Antiretroviral use and pharmacy-based measurement of adherence in postpartum HIV-infected women. Med Care 2000; 38: 911-925[CrossRef][Medline]. |
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| 6. | Kyngas H, Lahdenpera T. Compliance of patients with hypertension and associated factors. J Adv Nursing 1999; 29: 832-839. |
| 7. | National High Blood Pressure Education Program. The sixth report of the joint national committee on prevention, detection, evaluation and treatment of high blood pressure. Arch Intern Med 1997; 157: 2413-2446[Abstract]. |
| 8. | Klein LE. Compliance and blood pressure control. Hypertension 1988 Mar (11):II61-4. |
| 9. |
Benson S, Vance-Bryan K, Raddatz J.
Time to patient discontinuation of antihypertensive drugs in different classes.
Am J Health Syst Pharm
2000;
57:
51-54 |
| 10. | Bloom BS. Continuation of initial antihypertensive medication after 1 year of therapy. Clin Ther 1998; 20: 1-11. |
| 11. | Bloom BS. Direct medical costs of disease and gastrointestinal side effects during treatment for arthritis. Am J Med 1988; 84(suppl 2a): 20-24[Medline]. |
| 12. | Blake PG, Korbet SM, Blake R, Bargman JM, Burkart JM, Delano BG, et al. A multicenter study of noncompliance with continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis exchanges in US and Canadian patients. Am J Kidney Dis 2000; 35: 506-514[Medline]. |
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