Thorpe Carolyn T, Bryson Chris L, Maciejewski Matthew L, Bosworth Hayden B
Health Innovation Program, Department of Population Health Sciences, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin 53792-7685, USA.
Med Care. 2009 Apr;47(4):474-81. doi: 10.1097/mlr.0b013e31818e7d4d.
To examine factors associated with oversupply and undersupply of antihypertensive medication, and examine evidence for medication acquisition as distinct from self-reported adherence.
Analysis of pharmacy refill records, medical charts, and in-person interviews.
Five hundred sixty-two male veterans with hypertension enrolled in a randomized controlled trial to improve BP control.
Patients were classified as having undersupply (<0.80), appropriate supply (> or = 0.80 and < or = 1.20), or oversupply (>1.20) of antihypertensive medication in the 90 days before trial enrollment based on the ReComp algorithm. Determination of BP control was based on clinic measurements at enrollment. Demographic, clinical, psychosocial, and behavioral factors relevant to medication-taking behavior and BP were assessed at enrollment.
Twenty-three percent of the patients had undersupply, 47% had appropriate supply, and 30% had oversupply of antihypertensive medication. Multinomial logistic regression revealed that using fewer classes of antihypertensive medications and greater perceived adherence barriers were independently associated with greater likelihood of undersupply. Current employment was associated with decreased likelihood of oversupply, and greater comorbidity and being married were associated with increased likelihood of oversupply. Agreement between ReComp and self-reported adherence was poor (kappa = 0.19, P < 0.001). Undersupply, oversupply, and self-reported nonadherence were all independently associated with decreased likelihood of BP control after adjusting for each other and patient factors.
Antihypertensive oversupply was common and may arise from different circumstances than undersupply. Measures of medication acquisition and self-reported adherence appear to provide distinct, complementary information about patients' medication-taking behavior.
研究与抗高血压药物供应过多和供应不足相关的因素,并检验药物获取情况与自我报告的依从性不同的证据。
对药房配药记录、病历和面对面访谈进行分析。
562名患有高血压的男性退伍军人,他们参与了一项旨在改善血压控制的随机对照试验。
根据ReComp算法,在试验入组前90天内,将患者分为抗高血压药物供应不足(<0.80)、供应适当(>或 = 0.80且<或 = 1.20)或供应过多(>1.20)。血压控制情况根据入组时的诊所测量结果确定。在入组时评估与用药行为和血压相关的人口统计学、临床、心理社会和行为因素。
23%的患者药物供应不足,47%的患者供应适当,30%的患者药物供应过多。多项逻辑回归显示,使用的抗高血压药物种类较少以及感知到的依从性障碍较大与供应不足的可能性增加独立相关。目前就业与供应过多的可能性降低相关,合并症较多和已婚与供应过多的可能性增加相关。ReComp与自我报告的依从性之间的一致性较差(kappa = 0.19,P < 0.001)。在相互调整和患者因素后,供应不足、供应过多和自我报告的不依从均与血压控制的可能性降低独立相关。
抗高血压药物供应过多很常见,其产生的情况可能与供应不足不同。药物获取情况的测量和自我报告的依从性似乎提供了关于患者用药行为的不同但互补的信息。