Aminde Leopold N, Agbor Valirie N, Fongwen Noah T, Ngwasiri Calypse A, Nkoke Clovis, Nji Miriam A, Dzudie Anastase, Schutte Aletta E
Public Health & Economics Modelling Group, School of Medicine and Dentistry Griffith University Gold Coast Australia.
Non-Communicable Diseases Unit Clinical Research Education, Networking & Consultancy (CRENC) Douala Cameroon.
J Am Heart Assoc. 2025 May 6;14(9):e037555. doi: 10.1161/JAHA.124.037555. Epub 2025 May 2.
Nonadherence to blood pressure (BP)-lowering medication is a strong predictor of poor BP control. Sub-Saharan Africa has extremely low BP control rates (~10%), but it is unclear what the burden of medication nonadherence among Africans with hypertension is. This systematic review estimated the prevalence and determinants of nonadherence to BP-lowering medications in Sub-Saharan Africa.
Multiple databases were searched from inception to December 6, 2023. Two reviewers performed independent screening, extraction, and quality assessment of studies. We pooled the prevalence estimates using random effects meta-analyses and summarized the determinants using a narrative synthesis. From the 1307 records identified, we included 95 studies published between 1995 and 2023. The overall prevalence of nonadherence to BP-lowering medication among 34 102 people treated for hypertension in 27 countries was 43.9% (95% CI, 39.2-48.6). There was no change in the prevalence of nonadherence over time. Nonadherence varied by measurement method and by median age (39.4%, ≥57 years versus 47.9%, <57 years). Socioeconomic and patient-related factors were the most frequent factors influencing adherence. Active patient participation in management, accurate perceptions, and knowledge of hypertension and its treatment predicted good medication adherence, whereas high pill burden, medication cost, side effects, and comorbidities predicted poor adherence.
Two out of every 5 people are nonadherent to their BP treatment. With the African population projected to increase from 1.4 to ~2.5 billion by 2050, targeted strategies are urgently needed to optimize medication adherence in people with hypertension in Sub-Saharan Africa.
不坚持服用降压药物是血压控制不佳的一个重要预测因素。撒哈拉以南非洲地区的血压控制率极低(约10%),但目前尚不清楚非洲高血压患者中药物治疗不依从的负担情况。本系统评价旨在估计撒哈拉以南非洲地区降压药物治疗不依从的患病率及其决定因素。
检索了多个数据库,检索时间跨度从建库至2023年12月6日。两名研究者独立进行文献筛选、数据提取和质量评估。我们采用随机效应荟萃分析汇总患病率估计值,并通过叙述性综合分析总结决定因素。在检索到的1307条记录中,我们纳入了1995年至2023年发表的95项研究。在27个国家接受高血压治疗的34102人中,降压药物治疗不依从的总体患病率为43.9%(95%CI,39.2 - 48.6)。随着时间推移,不依从的患病率没有变化。不依从情况因测量方法和年龄中位数而异(≥57岁者为39.4%,<57岁者为47.9%)。社会经济因素和患者相关因素是影响依从性的最常见因素。患者积极参与管理、对高血压及其治疗有准确认知和了解可预测良好的药物依从性,而高药物负担、药物成本、副作用和合并症则预示依从性较差。
每5人中就有2人不坚持接受血压治疗。预计到2050年,非洲人口将从14亿增加到约25亿,因此迫切需要采取针对性策略,以优化撒哈拉以南非洲地区高血压患者的药物依从性。