| Literature DB >> 20696034 |
Oliver Schwalbe1, Christian Scheerans, Ines Freiberg, Andrea Schmidt-Pokrzywniak, Andreas Stang, Charlotte Kloft.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Compliance represents a major determinant for the effectiveness of pharmacotherapy. Compliance reports summarising electronically compiled compliance data qualify healthcare needs and can be utilised as part of a compliance enhancing intervention. Nevertheless, evidence-based information on a sufficient level of compliance is scarce complicating the interpretation of compliance reports. The purpose of our pilot study was to determine the compliance of ambulatory Alzheimer patients to antidementia drugs under routine therapeutic use using electronic monitoring. In addition, the forgiveness of donepezil (i.e. its ability to sustain adequate pharmacological response despite suboptimal compliance) was characterised and evidence-based guidance for the interpretation of compliance reports was intended to be developed.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20696034 PMCID: PMC2928215 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-10-232
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic models for donepezil.
| Model type (name) & equation | Variables and parameters | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|
| for D = 5 mg: | for D = 10 mg: | [ | |
| Emax = 100.8% | [ | ||
Parameter values and reference to literature, utilised for the in silico simulation.
C = total plasma drug concentration [ng/mL]
t = time [h]
D = dose
A, B = intercepts of the two exponential terms
α, β = macro (hybrid) rate constants
ka = absorption rate constant
E = effect, i.e. inhibition of peripheral cholinesterase, %
Emax = maximum effect
EC50 = drug concentration at half of maximum effect
Characteristics of the patients at baseline (n = 31) and study characteristics.
| Characteristics | |
|---|---|
| Sex: women | 17 (55) |
| Responsibility for pharmacotherapy | |
| Patient only | 2 (6) |
| Patient supported by caregiver | 6 (19) |
| Caregiver only | 22 (71) |
| Professional care only | 1 (3) |
| Antidementia drugs in MEMSa | |
| Donepezil | 12 (39) |
| Galantamine | 12 (39) |
| Memantine | 7 (23) |
| Rivastigmine | 1 (3) |
| Regimen of antidementia drug in MEMSa | |
| Once daily | 24 (75) |
| Twice daily | 8 (25) |
| Age in years | 76 (47-96) |
| Duration of MEMS monitoring in daysb | 180 (140-180) |
| Duration of antidementia pharmacotherapy at inclusion in months | 18 (0-78) |
| Number of regularly administered drugs | 6 (2-12) |
MEMS, medication event monitoring system; a one patient was started on donepezil (MEMS monitoring during 49 days), but later in the course of the study he was switched to memantine (MEMS monitoring during 111 days); b eight out of 31 patients (26%) had non-monitored periods (e.g. due to hospital stays) or incomplete follow-up of less than 180 days.
Figure 1Daily compliance during study observation period for each month and the entire observation period. The ends of the whiskers represent the lowest data value within 1.5 times the box height from the lower box edge and the highest data value within 1.5 times the box height from the upper box edge, respectively. Index numbers represent individual patients ID: if associated with circle, this ID was regarded as outlier (1.5-3 times box height from the box edge), if with a star as extreme value (> 3 times box height from the box edge); mo. = month.
Figure 2Intraindividual daily compliance during the observation period. Compliant months (daily compliance ≥ 80%, white bars) or non-compliant months (daily compliance < 80%, grey bars); patient #11 and patient #31 participated five months only.
Figure 3Forgiveness characterisation: Simulation approach B. Time with therapeutic undersupply (TTU) in percentage of total time versus discrete daily compliance values.
Figure 4Forgiveness characterisation: Simulation approach C. Total time with therapeutic undersupply (TTU) in hours versus number of dosage omissions at steady-state.