Burnier M, Schneider M P, Chioléro A, Stubi C L, Brunner H R
Division of Hypertension and Vascular Medicine and Policlinique Médicale Universitaire, Lausanne, Switzerland.
J Hypertens. 2001 Feb;19(2):335-41. doi: 10.1097/00004872-200102000-00022.
Incomplete compliance is one of several possible causes of uncontrolled hypertension. Yet, non-compliance remains largely unrecognized and is falsely interpreted as treatment resistance, because it is difficult to confirm or exclude objectively. The goal of this study was to evaluate the potential benefits of electronic monitoring of drug compliance in the management of patients with resistant hypertension.
Forty-one hypertensive patients resistant to a three-drug regimen (average blood pressure 156/ 106 +/- 23/11 mmHg, mean +/- SD) were studied prospectively. They were informed that for the next 2 months, their presently prescribed drugs would be provided in electronic monitors, without any change in treatment, so as to provide the treating physician with a measure of their compliance. Thereafter, patients were offered the possibility of prolonging the monitoring of compliance for another 2 month period, during which treatment was adapted if necessary.
Monitoring of compliance alone was associated with a significant improvement of blood pressure at 2 months (145/97 +/- 20/15 mmHg, P < 0.01). During monitoring, blood pressure was normalized (systolic < 140 mmHg or diastolic < 90 mmHg) in one-third of the patients and insufficient compliance was unmasked in another 20%. When analysed according to tertiles of compliance, patients with the lowest compliance exhibited significantly higher achieved diastolic blood pressures (P = 0.04). In 30 patients, compliance was monitored up to 4 months and drug therapy was adapted whenever necessary. In these patients, a further significant decrease in blood pressure was obtained (from 150/100 +/- 18/15 to 143/94 +/- 22/11 mmHg, P = 0.04/0.02).
These results suggest that objective monitoring of compliance using electronic devices may be a useful step in the management of patients with refractory hypertension, as it enables physicians to take rational decisions based on reliable and objective data of drug compliance and hence to improve blood pressure control.
服药依从性不佳是高血压控制不佳的几种可能原因之一。然而,由于难以客观地确认或排除,不依从性在很大程度上仍未被认识到,且被错误地解释为治疗抵抗。本研究的目的是评估电子监测药物依从性在难治性高血压患者管理中的潜在益处。
对41例对三联药物治疗方案耐药的高血压患者(平均血压156/106±23/11mmHg,均值±标准差)进行前瞻性研究。他们被告知,在接下来的2个月里,他们目前正在服用的药物将被放入电子监测器中,治疗方案不变,以便为治疗医生提供他们依从性的一种衡量方式。此后,患者有机会将依从性监测再延长2个月,在此期间如有必要可调整治疗方案。
仅监测依从性就与2个月时血压的显著改善相关(145/97±20/15mmHg,P<0.01)。在监测期间,三分之一的患者血压恢复正常(收缩压<140mmHg或舒张压<90mmHg),另有20%的患者被发现依从性不足。根据依从性三分位数进行分析时发现,依从性最低的患者达到的舒张压显著更高(P=0.04)。在30例患者中,对依从性进行了长达4个月的监测,并在必要时调整药物治疗。在这些患者中,血压进一步显著下降(从平均150/100±18/15mmHg降至143/94±22/11mmHg,P=0.04/0.02)。
这些结果表明,使用电子设备客观监测依从性可能是难治性高血压患者管理中的一个有用步骤,因为它使医生能够根据可靠且客观的药物依从性数据做出合理决策,从而改善血压控制。