AARP Public Policy Institute, Washington, DC; Visiting Fellow, OptumLabs, Cambridge, Mass.
OptumLabs, Cambridge, Mass.
Am J Med. 2020 Jun;133(6):690-704.e19. doi: 10.1016/j.amjmed.2019.12.021. Epub 2020 Jan 24.
Chronic conditions are common and costly for older Americans and for the health system. Adherence to daily maintenance medications may improve patient health and lead to lower health care spending.
To identify predictors of adherence and to quantify associations with health care utilization and spending among older adults with chronic conditions, we conducted a longitudinal retrospective analysis using the OptumLabs Data Warehouse. This database of deidentified administrative claims includes medical and eligibility information for more than 200 million commercial and Medicare Advantage enrollees. We identified adults age 50+ years initiating treatment for atrial fibrillation (N = 33,472), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD; N = 44,130), diabetes (N =76,726), and hyperlipidemia (N= 249,391) between January 2010 and December 2014. We assessed adherence, health care utilization, and spending during the first 2 years of treatment.
During the first year of treatment, 13%-53% of each condition cohort was adherent (proportion of days covered ≥0.80). White race, Midwest residence, and having fewer comorbidities consistently and independently predicted adherence among enrollees initiating treatment for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, diabetes, and hyperlipidemia. Male sex and higher net worth were also independently associated with adherence among commercial enrollees with these conditions. Patients in most condition cohorts who were adherent to treatment had significantly lower odds of hospitalization or emergency department use compared to patients who were not adherent. Additional spending on pharmacy claims by patients who were adherent was not consistently offset by lower spending on medical claims over a 2-year horizon.
Although many patient factors are strongly associated with medication adherence, the problem of non-adherence is common across all groups and may increase risk of adverse health outcomes.
慢性疾病在美国老年人和医疗体系中普遍存在且费用高昂。坚持服用日常维持药物可能会改善患者的健康状况,并降低医疗保健支出。
为了确定遵医嘱用药的预测因素,并量化其与患有慢性疾病的老年人的医疗保健利用和支出之间的关联,我们使用 OptumLabs 数据仓库进行了一项纵向回顾性分析。这个包含超过 2 亿商业和 Medicare Advantage 参保者的匿名行政索赔数据库包含了医疗和资格信息。我们确定了在 2010 年 1 月至 2014 年 12 月期间开始治疗心房颤动(N=33472)、慢性阻塞性肺疾病(COPD;N=44130)、糖尿病(N=76726)和高脂血症(N=249391)的 50 岁以上成年人。我们评估了治疗的前 2 年内的遵医嘱用药情况、医疗保健利用和支出。
在治疗的第一年,每个疾病队列中有 13%-53%的患者是遵医嘱用药的(覆盖天数比例≥0.80)。在开始治疗慢性阻塞性肺疾病、糖尿病和高脂血症的参保者中,白人种族、中西部居住和较少的合并症始终一致地独立预测了遵医嘱用药的情况。在患有这些疾病的商业参保者中,男性和更高的净资产也与遵医嘱用药独立相关。与不遵医嘱的患者相比,在大多数疾病队列中遵医嘱用药的患者住院或急诊就诊的可能性显著降低。在 2 年的时间里,遵医嘱用药的患者在药房索赔上的额外支出并没有被医疗索赔上的较低支出所抵消。
尽管许多患者因素与药物依从性密切相关,但不依从的问题在所有人群中都很常见,并且可能会增加不良健康结果的风险。