医学
专业
心理干预
四分位间距
随机对照试验
干预(咨询)
药店
物理疗法
急诊医学
内科学
家庭医学
护理部
作者
Amanda M Kibbons,Ryan Moore,Leena Choi,Autumn Zuckerman
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.amjmed.2023.03.007
摘要
Background Specialty medication nonadherence results in poor clinical outcomes and increased costs. This study evaluated the impact of patient-tailored interventions on specialty medication adherence. Methods A pragmatic, randomized controlled trial was conducted at a single-center health-system specialty pharmacy from May 2019 to August 2021. Participants included recently nonadherent patients prescribed self-administered specialty medications from multiple specialty clinics. Eligible patients were stratified by historical clinic rates of nonadherence and randomized 1:1 to usual care or intervention arms. Intervention patients received patient-tailored interventions and 8 months of follow-up. A Wilcoxon test was used to analyze the difference in 6-, 8-, and 12-month post-enrollment adherence, calculated using proportion of days covered, between the intervention and usual care arms. Results Four hundred and thirty eight patients were randomized. Baseline characteristics were similar between groups: mostly women (68%), white (82%), with a median age of 54 years (interquartile range, 40, 64). The most common reasons for nonadherence in the intervention arm were memory (37%) and unreachability (28%). There was a significant difference in median proportion of days covered between patients in the usual care and intervention arms at 8-months (0.88 vs 0.94, P < .001), 6-months (0.90 vs 0.95, P = .003), and 12-months post-enrollment (0.87 vs 0.93, P < .001). Conclusions Patient-tailored interventions resulted in significant specialty medication adherence improvement compared with standard of care. Specialty pharmacies should consider targeting nonadherent patients for adherence interventions.
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