El Alili Mohamed, Vrijens Bernard, Demonceau Jenny, Evers Silvia M, Hiligsmann Mickael
Department of Health Services Research, CAPHRI School for Public Health and Primary Care, Maastricht University, Maastricht, The Netherlands.
WestRock Healthcare, Visé, Belgium.
Br J Clin Pharmacol. 2016 Jul;82(1):268-79. doi: 10.1111/bcp.12942. Epub 2016 May 2.
Different methods are available for measuring medication adherence. In this paper, we conducted a scoping review to identify and summarize evidence of all studies comparing the Medication Event Monitoring System (MEMS) with alternative methods for measuring medication adherence. A literature search was performed using the open database www.iAdherence.org that includes all original studies reporting findings from the MEMS. Papers comparing methods for measuring adherence to solid oral formulations were included. Data was extracted using a standardized extraction table. A total of 117 articles fulfilled the inclusion criteria, including 251 comparisons. Most frequent comparisons were against self-report (n = 119) and pill count (n = 59). Similar outcome measures were used in 210 comparisons (84%), among which 78 used dichotomous variables (adherent or not) and 132 used continuous measures (adherence expressed as percentage). Furthermore, 32% of all comparisons did not estimate adherence over the same coverage period and 44% of all comparisons did not use a statistical method or used a suboptimal one. Only eighty-seven (35%) comparisons had similar coverage periods, similar outcome measures and optimal statistical methods. Compared to MEMS, median adherence was grossly overestimated by 17% using self-report, by 8% using pill count and by 6% using rating. In conclusion, among all comparisons of MEMS versus alternative methods for measuring adherence, only a few used adequate comparisons in terms of outcome measures, coverage periods and statistical method. Researchers should therefore use stronger methodological frameworks when comparing measurement methods and be aware that non-electronic measures could lead to overestimation of medication adherence.
有多种方法可用于测量药物依从性。在本文中,我们进行了一项范围综述,以识别和总结所有比较药物事件监测系统(MEMS)与其他测量药物依从性方法的研究证据。使用开放数据库www.iAdherence.org进行文献检索,该数据库包含所有报告MEMS研究结果的原始研究。纳入了比较固体口服制剂依从性测量方法的论文。使用标准化提取表提取数据。共有117篇文章符合纳入标准,包括251项比较。最常见的比较是与自我报告(n = 119)和药丸计数(n = 59)。210项比较(84%)使用了相似的结局指标,其中78项使用二分变量(依从或不依从),132项使用连续指标(依从性以百分比表示)。此外,所有比较中有32%未在相同的覆盖期内估计依从性,44%的比较未使用统计方法或使用的是次优方法。只有87项(35%)比较具有相似的覆盖期、相似的结局指标和最佳统计方法。与MEMS相比,使用自我报告时,中位依从性被严重高估了17%,使用药丸计数时高估了8%,使用评分时高估了6%。总之,在所有MEMS与其他测量依从性方法的比较中,只有少数在结局指标、覆盖期和统计方法方面进行了充分的比较。因此,研究人员在比较测量方法时应使用更强有力的方法框架,并意识到非电子测量可能导致对药物依从性的高估。