Al-Aqeel Sinaa, Al-Sabhan Jawza
Department of Clinical Pharmacy, King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2011 Jan 19(1):CD008312. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD008312.pub2.
Poor adherence to antiepileptic medications is associated with increased mortality and morbidity. In this review we focus on interventions designed to assist patients with adherence to antiepileptic medications.
To determine the effectiveness of interventions aimed at improving adherence to antiepileptic medications in adults and children with epilepsy.
We searched the Epilepsy Group's Specialised Register (24 June 2010), the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) (The Cochrane Library 2010, Issue 2) and electronic databases: MEDLINE (OVID) (1950 to June 2010); EMBASE (OVID) (1980 to 2010 Week 24); CINAHL (1982 to June 2010) and PsycINFO (22 June 2010), and the reference lists of relevant articles.
Randomised or quasi-randomised controlled trials of adherence-enhancing interventions aimed at patients with clinical diagnosis of epilepsy (as defined in individual studies), of any age and of either gender, treated with antiepileptic drugs in a primary care, outpatient or other community setting.
We screened titles and abstracts for eligibility. Two review authors independently extracted data and assessed each study according to the Cochrane criteria. The studies differed widely according to intervention and measures of adherence, therefore combining data was not appropriate.
Six trials met our inclusion criteria: five targeted adult epileptic patients with a combined patient number of 222 and one targeted parents of children with epilepsy (n = 51). Follow-up time was generally short: from one to six months. Two main types of intervention were examined: educational and behavioural modification. Each study compared treatment with no intervention 'usual care'. None compared one intervention with another. Due to heterogeneity between studies in terms of interventions and the methods used to measure adherence, we did not pool the results. Education and counselling of patients with epilepsy have shown mixed success. Behavioural interventions such as the use of intensive reminders and 'implementation intention' interventions provided more positive effects on adherence.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Intensive reminders and 'implementation intention' interventions appear promising in enhancing adherence to antiepileptic mediations, however we need more reliable evidence on their efficacy from carefully designed randomised controlled trials before a firm conclusion can be reached.
抗癫痫药物依从性差与死亡率和发病率增加相关。在本综述中,我们重点关注旨在帮助患者坚持服用抗癫痫药物的干预措施。
确定旨在提高癫痫成人和儿童抗癫痫药物依从性的干预措施的有效性。
我们检索了癫痫组专业注册库(2010年6月24日)、Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL)(Cochrane图书馆2010年第2期)以及电子数据库:MEDLINE(OVID)(1950年至2010年6月);EMBASE(OVID)(1980年至2010年第24周);CINAHL(1982年至2010年6月)和PsycINFO(2010年6月22日),以及相关文章的参考文献列表。
针对临床诊断为癫痫(如各研究中所定义)的患者、任何年龄和性别、在初级保健、门诊或其他社区环境中接受抗癫痫药物治疗的增强依从性干预措施的随机或半随机对照试验。
我们筛选标题和摘要以确定其是否符合纳入标准。两位综述作者独立提取数据,并根据Cochrane标准评估每项研究。由于各研究在干预措施和依从性测量方法上差异很大,因此合并数据并不合适。
六项试验符合我们的纳入标准:五项针对成年癫痫患者,患者总数为222例,一项针对癫痫儿童的父母(n = 51)。随访时间一般较短:从1个月到6个月。研究了两种主要类型的干预措施:教育和行为改变。每项研究都将治疗与无干预的“常规护理”进行了比较。没有一项研究将一种干预措施与另一种干预措施进行比较。由于各研究在干预措施和用于测量依从性的方法方面存在异质性,我们没有汇总结果。对癫痫患者的教育和咨询取得了喜忧参半的结果。行为干预措施,如使用强化提醒和“执行意图”干预措施,对依从性产生了更积极的影响。
强化提醒和“执行意图”干预措施在提高抗癫痫药物依从性方面似乎很有前景,然而,在得出确切结论之前,我们需要从精心设计的随机对照试验中获得更多关于其疗效的可靠证据。