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  • Medication Adherence in Pat...
    Alahmadi, Fahad H.; Simpson, Andrew J.; Gomez, Cristina; Ericsson, Magnus; Thörngren, John-Olof; Wheelock, Craig E.; Shaw, Dominic E.; Fleming, Louise J.; Riley, John; Bates, Stewart; Sousa, Ana R.; Bansal, Aruna T.; Pandis, Ioannis; Sun, Kai; Caruso, Massimo; Chanez, Pascal; Dahlén, Barbro; Horvath, Ildiko; Krug, Norbert; Singer, Florian; Wagers, Scott; Adcock, Ian M.; Djukanovic, Ratko; Dahlen, Sven-Erik; Fowler, Stephen J.; Adcock, I.M.; Ahmed, H.; Auffray, C.; Bakke, P.; Bansal, A.T.; Bates, S.; Bel, E.H.; Bisgaard, H.; Boedigheimer, M.J.; Bønnelykke, K.; Brinkman, P.; Bucchioni, E.; Caruso, M.; Chaiboonchoe, A.; Chanez, P.; Chung, F.K.; D'Amico, A.; Dahlèn, B.; Dahlén, S.E.; Erpenbeck, V.J.; Fichtner, K.; Fitch, N.; Fleming, L.J.; Formaggio, E.; Fowler, S.J.; Gahlemann, M.; Geiser, T.; Goss, V.; Guo, Y.; Hedlin, G.; Hekking, P.W.; Higenbottam, T.; Holweg, C.; Horváth, I.; Howarth, P.; James, A.J.; Knowles, R.G.; Knox, A.J.; Krug, N.; Lefaudeux, D.; Lutter, R.; Manta, A.; Matthews, J.G.; Meiser, A.; Middelveld, R.J.M.; Mores, N.; Murray, C.S.; Musial, J.; Myles, D.; Pahus, L.; Pavlidis, S.; Postle, A.; Powel, P.; Praticò, G.; Valls, M. Puig; Rao, N.; Riley, J.; Roberts, A.; Rowe, A.; Schofield, J.P.R.; Seibold, W.; Selby, A.; Sigmund, R.; Skipp, P.J.; Sousa, A.R.; Sterk, P.J.; Sun, K.; Thornton, B.; van Aalderen, W.M.; Vestbo, J.; Vissing, N.H.; Wagers, S.S.; Weiszhart, Z.; Wheelock, C.E.; Wilson, S.J.

    Chest, 07/2021, Letnik: 160, Številka: 1
    Journal Article

    Although estimates of suboptimal adherence to oral corticosteroids in asthma range from 30% to 50%, no ideal method for measurement exists; the impact of poor adherence in severe asthma is likely to be particularly high. What is the prevalence of suboptimal adherence detected by self-reporting and direct measures? Is suboptimal adherence associated with disease activity? Data were included from individuals with severe asthma taking part in the U-BIOPRED (Unbiased Biomarkers for the Prediction of Respiratory Disease Outcomes) study and prescribed daily oral corticosteroids. Participants completed the Medication Adherence Report Scale, a five-item questionnaire used to grade adherence on a scale from 1 to 5, and provided a urine sample for analysis of prednisolone and metabolites by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. Data from 166 participants were included in this study: mean (SD) age, 54.2 (± 11.9) years; FEV1, 65.1% (± 20.5%) predicted; female, 58%; 37% completing the Medication Adherence Report Scale reported suboptimal adherence; and 43% with urinary corticosteroid data did not have detectable prednisolone or metabolites in their urine. Good adherence by both methods was detected in 49 of the 142 (35%) of participants in whom both methods were performed; adherence detection did not match between methods in 53%. Self-reported high adherers had better asthma control and quality of life, whereas directly measured high adherers had lower blood eosinophil levels. Low adherence is a common problem in severe asthma, whether measured directly or self-reported. We report poor agreement between the two methods, suggesting some disassociation between self-assessment of medication adherence and regular oral corticosteroid use, which suggests that each approach may provide complementary information in clinical practice.