Palo Alto Medical Foundation Research Institute, CA 94301, USA.
Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2010 Mar 15;181(6):566-77. doi: 10.1164/rccm.200906-0907OC. Epub 2009 Dec 17.
Poor adherence to asthma controller medications results in poor treatment outcomes.
To compare controller medication adherence and clinical outcomes in 612 adults with poorly controlled asthma randomized to one of two different treatment decision-making models or to usual care.
In shared decision making (SDM), nonphysician clinicians and patients negotiated a treatment regimen that accommodated patient goals and preferences. In clinician decision making, treatment was prescribed without specifically eliciting patient goals/preferences. The otherwise identical intervention protocols both provided asthma education and involved two in-person and three brief phone encounters.
Refill adherence was measured using continuous medication acquisition (CMA) indices-the total days' supply acquired per year divided by 365 days. Cumulative controller medication dose was measured in beclomethasone canister equivalents. In follow-up Year 1, compared with usual care, SDM resulted in: significantly better controller adherence (CMA, 0.67 vs. 0.46; P < 0.0001) and long-acting beta-agonist adherence (CMA, 0.51 vs. 0.40; P = 0.0225); higher cumulative controller medication dose (canister equivalent, 10.9 vs. 5.2; P < 0.0001); significantly better clinical outcomes (asthma-related quality of life, health care use, rescue medication use, asthma control, and lung function). In Year 2, compared with usual care, SDM resulted in significantly lower rescue medication use, the sole clinical outcome available for that year. Compared with clinician decision making, SDM resulted in: significantly better controller adherence (CMA, 0.67 vs. 0.59; P = 0.03) and long-acting beta-agonist adherence (CMA, 0.51 vs. 0.41; P = 0.0143); higher cumulative controller dose (CMA, 10.9 vs. 9.1; P = 0.005); and quantitatively, but not significantly, better outcomes on all clinical measures.
Negotiating patients' treatment decisions significantly improves adherence to asthma pharmacotherapy and clinical outcomes. Clinical trials registered with www.clinicaltrials.gov (NCT00217945 and NCT00149526).
哮喘控制药物的依从性差会导致治疗效果不佳。
比较 612 名哮喘控制不佳的成年人在两种不同的治疗决策模型或常规护理下接受治疗的药物依从性和临床结果。
在共同决策(SDM)中,非医师临床医生和患者协商制定了一种治疗方案,以满足患者的目标和偏好。在临床医生决策中,不具体询问患者的目标/偏好就开出治疗方案。这两种干预方案完全相同,都提供了哮喘教育,并涉及两次面对面和三次简短的电话交流。
通过连续药物获取(CMA)指数来衡量药物的补充(每年获得的总供应天数除以 365 天)。以倍氯米松罐等效剂量来衡量累积控制药物剂量。在随访的第 1 年中,与常规护理相比,SDM 导致:控制药物的依从性(CMA,0.67 比 0.46;P < 0.0001)和长效β-激动剂的依从性(CMA,0.51 比 0.40;P = 0.0225)明显改善;累积控制药物剂量(罐等效物,10.9 比 5.2;P < 0.0001)更高;临床结果明显改善(与哮喘相关的生活质量、医疗保健使用、急救药物使用、哮喘控制和肺功能)。在第 2 年,与常规护理相比,SDM 导致急救药物的使用显著降低,这是该年唯一可用的临床结果。与临床医生决策相比,SDM 导致:控制药物的依从性(CMA,0.67 比 0.59;P = 0.03)和长效β-激动剂的依从性(CMA,0.51 比 0.41;P = 0.0143)明显改善;累积控制药物剂量(CMA,10.9 比 9.1;P = 0.005)更高;并且所有临床指标的结果都有改善,但无统计学意义。
与患者协商治疗决策可显著提高哮喘药物治疗的依从性和临床结果。临床试验在 www.clinicaltrials.gov 注册(NCT00217945 和 NCT00149526)。