Cardiology Department, Hospital Clínico San Carlos, Servicio de Cardiología, C/Profesor Martín Lagos s/n, 28040, Madrid, Spain.
1st Department of Propedeutic Medicine, School of Medicine, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens, Greece.
Adv Ther. 2024 Aug;41(8):3407-3418. doi: 10.1007/s12325-024-02916-8. Epub 2024 Jul 4.
Adherence to cardiovascular drug treatment can significantly benefit from a reduced pill burden, but data on this matter derived from real-life settings are currently scanty. This analysis assessed the possible changes in adherence in patients treated with rosuvastatin and ezetimibe (ROS/EZE) as free multi-pill combination who switched to ROS/EZE as single-pill combination in the setting of real clinical practice in Italy.
A retrospective analysis was conducted on the administrative databases for a catchment area of about seven million health-assisted residents. Adults receiving ROS/EZE as a single-pill combination from January 2010 to June 2020 (followed up to 2021) were identified. The date of the first prescription of single-pill combination of ROS/EZE was considered as the index date. The analysis included the users of ROS/EZE as a free combination during the year before the index date. Baseline demographic and clinical characteristics were collected during the period of data availability prior to the index date. Adherence to therapy was evaluated as proportion of days covered (PDC), namely the percentage of days during which a patient had access to medication, in the 12-month interval preceding or following the index date (PDC < 25% non-adherence; PDC = 25-75% partial adherence; PDC > 75% adherence).
A total of 1219 patients (61.1% male, aged 66.2 ± 10.4 years) were included. Cardiovascular comorbidities were found in 83.3% of them, diabetes in 26.4%, and a combination of both in 16.2%. Single-pill combination of ROS/EZE was associated with a higher proportion of adherent patients compared to free-pill combination (75.2% vs 51.8%, p < 0.001).
This real-world analysis suggested that switching from a regimen based on separate pills to one based on a single-pill combination resulted in improved adherence to ROS/EZE therapy.
降低药物治疗负担可显著提高心血管药物治疗的依从性,但目前来自真实环境的数据仍十分有限。本分析评估了意大利真实临床实践中,将瑞舒伐他汀和依折麦布(ROS/EZE)固定复方制剂转换为单片复方制剂后,患者的依从性可能发生的变化。
对约 700 万医疗辅助居民的一个覆盖地区的行政数据库进行回顾性分析。确定 2010 年 1 月至 2020 年 6 月(随访至 2021 年)期间接受 ROS/EZE 单片复方制剂的成年人。将首次处方 ROS/EZE 单片复方制剂的日期视为索引日期。该分析包括索引日期前一年使用 ROS/EZE 自由复方制剂的患者。在索引日期之前的可获取数据时间段内收集了基线人口统计学和临床特征。通过在索引日期之前或之后的 12 个月内,患者可获得药物的天数比例(PDC)来评估治疗依从性,即患者获得药物的天数占比,PDC<25%为不依从,PDC=25-75%为部分依从,PDC>75%为依从。
共纳入 1219 例患者(61.1%为男性,年龄 66.2±10.4 岁)。其中 83.3%的患者存在心血管合并症,26.4%患有糖尿病,16.2%同时患有这两种疾病。与自由复方制剂相比,ROS/EZE 单片复方制剂与更高比例的依从性患者相关(75.2%比 51.8%,p<0.001)。
本真实世界分析表明,从基于分开的药丸的治疗方案转换为基于单片复方制剂的治疗方案,可提高 ROS/EZE 治疗的依从性。