Packard Kathleen A, Hilleman Daniel E
Department of Pharmacy Practice, Creighton University School of Pharmacy and Health Professions, Omaha, NE, USA.
The Cardiac Center of Creighton University School of Medicine, Omaha, NE, USA.
Cardiovasc Ther. 2016 Dec;34(6):415-422. doi: 10.1111/1755-5922.12211.
Suboptimal adherence to medications taken chronically for secondary prevention of cardiovascular disease (CVD, e.g., aspirin) continues to burden the healthcare system despite the well-established benefits of prevention. We conducted a literature search to examine patient adherence to medications for secondary prevention of CVD-as evaluated by prescription refill data, electronic medication monitors, pill counts, and physiologic markers-to better identify an unmet need for measures to improve patient adherence to these therapies.
English-language articles were obtained from the PubMed database using the following key words or combinations thereof "adherence," "compliance," "secondary prevention," and "cardiovascular disease." Publications that provided adherence data only for primary prevention, lacked data on medication adherence (e.g., focus on guideline adherence), emphasized quality-of-care outcomes, or focused on outcomes of acute interventions were excluded.
Multiple patient-, disease-, and treatment-related factors may contribute to poor adherence to treatment regimens, and therefore, a multifactorial approach will likely be needed to improve compliance with prescribed treatments for CVD. Although no magic bullet exists to assure full adherence, adherence programs coupled with patient counseling and education (inclusive of over-the-counter therapies), along with treatments that are less complex or avoid bothersome adverse effects, are more likely to be associated with successful outcomes.
Given the burden of CVD to the community and the healthcare system, nonadherence to CVD-preventative medications such as aspirin remains a substantial area of unmet need and represents a key opportunity for the development of quality-of-care enhancement programs to improve health outcomes in this patient population.
尽管心血管疾病(CVD,如阿司匹林)二级预防的长期用药依从性欠佳会持续给医疗系统带来负担,但预防的益处已得到充分证实。我们进行了文献检索,以研究患者对心血管疾病二级预防药物的依从性——通过处方 refill 数据、电子药物监测器、药丸计数和生理标志物进行评估——以便更好地确定在改善患者对这些疗法的依从性措施方面未得到满足的需求。
使用以下关键词或其组合从 PubMed 数据库中获取英文文章:“依从性”“顺应性”“二级预防”和“心血管疾病”。仅提供一级预防依从性数据、缺乏药物依从性数据(如关注指南依从性)、强调护理质量结果或关注急性干预结果的出版物被排除。
多种与患者、疾病和治疗相关的因素可能导致对治疗方案的依从性差,因此,可能需要采用多因素方法来提高对心血管疾病规定治疗的依从性。虽然不存在确保完全依从性的万灵药,但依从性计划与患者咨询和教育(包括非处方疗法)以及不太复杂或避免烦人的不良反应的治疗方法相结合,更有可能带来成功的结果。
鉴于心血管疾病给社区和医疗系统带来的负担,对阿司匹林等心血管疾病预防药物的不依从仍然是一个未得到充分满足的重要领域,也是开发提高护理质量计划以改善该患者群体健康结果的关键机会。