a University of California at San Francisco , San Francisco , CA , USA.
b New York City Health and Hospitals , New York , NY , USA.
Postgrad Med. 2018 May;130(4):394-401. doi: 10.1080/00325481.2018.1457396. Epub 2018 Apr 6.
Continuing use of medication is key to effective treatment and positive health outcomes, particularly in chronic conditions such as diabetes. However, in primary care, non-persistence (i.e. discontinuing or interrupting treatment) with insulin therapy is a common problem among patients with type 2 diabetes. To help primary care physicians manage patients who are non-persistent or likely not to be persistent, this review aimed to provide an overview of modifiable and non-modifiable factors associated with insulin non-persistence as well as practical strategies to address them. Data were extracted from published studies evaluating factors associated with non-persistence among patients with type 2 diabetes. A targeted literature review was performed using PubMed to identify recent studies (2000-2016) reporting measures of non-persistence with insulin therapy. Practical strategies to identify and prevent non-persistence were based on the authors' direct experience in primary care. Non-modifiable factors associated with non-persistence included gender, age, prior treatments, and cost of therapy. Before/at insulin initiation, modifiable factors included patients' perception of diabetes, preference for oral medication, and concerns/expectations about treatment complexity, inconvenience, or side effects. After initiation, modifiable factors included syringe use, difficulties during the first week of therapy, side effects, and insufficient glycemic control. Open-ended and patient-centered questions and a blame-free environment can help physicians identify, prevent, and reduce non-persistence behaviors. Possible questions to start a conversation with patients are provided. Effective physician-patient communication is essential to the management of diabetes. Primary care physicians should be familiar with the most common reasons for insulin non-persistence.
继续使用药物是有效治疗和积极健康结果的关键,特别是在糖尿病等慢性疾病中。然而,在初级保健中,2 型糖尿病患者的胰岛素治疗不持续(即停止或中断治疗)是一个常见问题。为了帮助初级保健医生管理不持续或可能不持续的患者,本综述旨在概述与胰岛素不持续相关的可改变和不可改变因素,并提供解决这些问题的实用策略。数据从评估 2 型糖尿病患者不持续与胰岛素治疗相关因素的已发表研究中提取。使用 PubMed 进行有针对性的文献综述,以确定最近(2000-2016 年)报告胰岛素治疗不持续措施的研究。用于识别和预防不持续的实用策略基于作者在初级保健中的直接经验。与不持续相关的不可改变因素包括性别、年龄、既往治疗和治疗费用。在开始胰岛素治疗之前/时,可改变的因素包括患者对糖尿病的认知、对口服药物的偏好,以及对治疗复杂性、不便或副作用的担忧/期望。开始治疗后,可改变的因素包括注射器使用、治疗第一周的困难、副作用和血糖控制不足。开放式和以患者为中心的问题以及无责环境可以帮助医生识别、预防和减少不持续行为。提供了一些可能用于与患者展开对话的问题。有效的医患沟通对于糖尿病的管理至关重要。初级保健医生应该熟悉胰岛素不持续的最常见原因。