Division of Cardiology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas (R.K., S.R.D., J.A.d.L.).
Center for Outcomes Research and Evaluation, Yale New Haven Health, CT (J.V.-E., H.M.K.).
Circulation. 2019 Dec 17;140(25):2067-2075. doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.119.041974. Epub 2019 Nov 25.
Medication nonadherence is associated with worse outcomes in patients with atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD), a group who requires long-term therapy for secondary prevention. It is important to understand to what extent drug costs, which are potentially actionable factors, contribute to medication nonadherence.
In a nationally representative survey of US adults in the National Health Interview Survey (2013-2017), we identified individuals ≥18 years with a reported history of ASCVD. Participants were considered to have experienced cost-related nonadherence (CRN) if in the preceding 12 months they reported skipping doses to save money, taking less medication to save money, or delaying filling a prescription to save money. We used survey analysis to obtain national estimates.
Of the 14 279 surveyed individuals with ASCVD, a weighted 12.6% (or 2.2 million [95% CI, 2.1-2.4]) experienced CRN, including 8.6% or 1.5 million missing doses, 8.8% or 1.6 million taking lower than prescribed doses, and 10.5% or 1.9 million intentionally delaying a medication fill to save costs. Age <65 years, female sex, low family income, lack of health insurance, and high comorbidity burden were independently associated with CRN, with >1 in 5 reporting CRN in these subgroups. Survey respondents with CRN compared with those without CRN had 10.8-fold higher odds of requesting low-cost medications and 8.9-fold higher odds of using alternative, nonprescription, therapies.
One in 8 patients with ASCVD reports nonadherence to medications because of cost. The removal of financial barriers to accessing medications, particularly among vulnerable patient groups, may help improve adherence to essential therapy to reduce ASCVD morbidity and mortality.
在动脉粥样硬化性心血管疾病(ASCVD)患者中,药物依从性差与预后较差相关,此类患者需要长期接受二级预防治疗。了解潜在可干预因素——药物费用在多大程度上导致药物依从性差非常重要。
我们在全国健康访谈调查(2013-2017 年)中对美国成年人进行了一项全国代表性调查,确定了有 ASCVD 报告史的≥18 岁个体。如果参与者在过去 12 个月内为省钱而漏服、减少药物剂量或延迟配药,他们被认为经历了与费用相关的不依从(CRN)。我们使用调查分析获得全国估计值。
在接受调查的 14279 名 ASCVD 患者中,有 12.6%(或 220 万[95%CI,2.1-2.4])的患者经历了 CRN,包括 8.6%或 150 万漏服剂量、8.8%或 160 万服用低于规定剂量的药物,以及 10.5%或 190 万故意延迟配药以节省费用。年龄<65 岁、女性、低家庭收入、缺乏医疗保险和高合并症负担与 CRN 独立相关,>1/5 的报告者在这些亚组中存在 CRN。与无 CRN 相比,有 CRN 的调查应答者请求开低价药物的可能性高 10.8 倍,使用替代非处方治疗的可能性高 8.9 倍。
每 8 名 ASCVD 患者中就有 1 名因费用而不遵医嘱服药。消除获取药物的经济障碍,特别是在脆弱患者群体中,可能有助于提高对基本治疗的依从性,从而降低 ASCVD 的发病率和死亡率。