Pedan Alexander, Varasteh Laleh, Schneeweiss Sebastian
Analytical Services, Adheris, Inc., One Van de Graaff Dr., Burlington, MA 01803, USA.
J Manag Care Pharm. 2007 Jul-Aug;13(6):487-96. doi: 10.18553/jmcp.2007.13.6.487.
Adherence with maintenance drug therapy such as HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors (statins) is typically analyzed from the perspective of patient characteristics.
To determine the effects of physician and pharmacy characteristics in addition to patient characteristics on variation in adherence rates for 4 statin drugs (atorvastatin, pravastatin, rosuvastatin, and simvastatin) for patients who patronized only 1 pharmacy and 1 prescriber of a statin.
A retrospective cohort study of 6,436 patients who initiated statin therapy was performed from computerized pharmacy records of 2 large national pharmacy chains. Adherence was defined as the number of 30-day refills within 12 months after initiation of statin therapy. Physician, pharmacy, prescription, and patient covariates were considered in a cross-classified hierarchical regression model.
The average number of refills dispensed was 4.75 per patient. Patients younger than 50 years had, on average, 13.6% fewer refills per year than did patients older than 70 years (P<0.001). Women were 4.4% less adherent than men (P = 0.041). Patients residing in southern states were significantly less adherent than were other patients; they had 19.4% fewer refills per year than did patients from western states (P<0.001). Each prescription dispensed for comorbid conditions increased adherence by 2.0% (P =0.002), and patients with a history of cardiovascular drug use were 14.1% more adherent than were other patients (P <0.001). Patients on a higher statin dose appeared to be 8.4% less adherent than were patients on a lower dose (P <0.001). Adherence was greater as the number of prescribed refills increased, with a rate of 2.1% per refill (P <0.001). Adherence was lower for patients with higher copayments, with a rate of 2.2% per each additional $10 of copayment (P <0.001). For patients treated by physicians in the top 2.5 percentile and bottom 2.5 percentile of statin adherence, mean refill counts per year were 6.1 and 2.9, respectively. For patients who patronized pharmacies in the top 2.5 percentile and bottom 2.5 percentile of statin adherence, mean refill counts per year were 6.6 and 2.5, respectively. Adherence increased at a rate of 28.4% per each additional 100 statin patients per patronized pharmacy (P <0.001) and decreased at a rate of about 6.5% per each additional 10 statin patients per treating physician (P <0.001).
Because of the variability in adherence rates across pharmacies and physicians, further assessment of pharmacy and physician characteristics in addition to patient characteristics may be of value in improving adherence.
维持性药物治疗的依从性,如HMG-CoA还原酶抑制剂(他汀类药物),通常是从患者特征的角度进行分析。
除患者特征外,确定医生和药房特征对仅光顾一家他汀类药物药房和一位他汀类药物开方医生的患者使用4种他汀类药物(阿托伐他汀、普伐他汀、瑞舒伐他汀和辛伐他汀)的依从率变化的影响。
从2家大型全国性连锁药房的计算机化药房记录中,对6436例开始他汀类药物治疗的患者进行回顾性队列研究。依从性定义为他汀类药物治疗开始后12个月内30天再填充的次数。在交叉分类分层回归模型中考虑医生、药房、处方和患者协变量。
每位患者的平均再填充次数为4.75次。50岁以下的患者每年平均再填充次数比70岁以上的患者少13.6%(P<0.001)。女性的依从性比男性低4.4%(P = 0.041)。居住在南部各州的患者依从性明显低于其他患者;他们每年的再填充次数比西部各州的患者少19.4%(P<0.001)。因合并症开具的每张处方使依从性提高2.0%(P = 0.002),有心血管药物使用史的患者依从性比其他患者高14.1%(P <0.001)。服用较高剂量他汀类药物的患者依从性似乎比服用较低剂量的患者低8.4%(P <0.001)。随着处方再填充次数的增加,依从性提高,每次再填充的比率为2.1%(P <0.001)。自付费用较高的患者依从性较低,每增加10美元自付费用,依从性降低2.2%(P <0.001)。对于他汀类药物依从性处于前2.5百分位数和后2.5百分位数的医生治疗的患者,每年的平均再填充次数分别为6.1次和2.9次。对于光顾他汀类药物依从性处于前2.5百分位数和后2.5百分位数的药房的患者,每年的平均再填充次数分别为6.6次和2.5次。每位光顾药房每增加100例他汀类药物患者,依从性以28.4%的速率增加(P <0.001),每位治疗医生每增加10例他汀类药物患者,依从性以约6.5%的速率降低(P <0.001)。
由于各药房和医生之间依从率存在差异,除患者特征外,进一步评估药房和医生特征可能对提高依从性有价值。