| Literature DB >> 25713726 |
Kevin Cheng1, Nicola Ingram1, Jan Keenan2, Robin P Choudhury3.
Abstract
Adherence to secondary prevention medications following acute coronary syndrome (ACS) is disappointingly low, standing around 40-75% by various estimates. This is an inefficient use of the resources devoted to their development and implementation, and also puts patients at higher risk of poor outcomes post-ACS. Numerous factors contribute to low adherence including poor motivation, forgetfulness, lack of education about medications, complicated polypharmacy of ACS regimens, (fear of) adverse side effects and limited practical support. Using technology to improve adherence in ACS is an emerging strategy and has the potential to address many of the above factors-computer-based education and mobile phone reminders are among the interventions trialled and appear to improve adherence in patients with ACS. As we move into an increasingly technological future, there is potential to use devices such as smartphones and tablets to encourage patient responsibility for medications. These handheld technologies have great scope for allowing patients to view online medical records, education modules and reminder systems, and although research specific to ACS is limited, they have shown initial promise in terms of uptake and improved adherence among similar patient populations. Given the overwhelming enthusiasm for handheld technologies, it would seem timely to further investigate their role in improving ACS medication adherence.Entities:
Keywords: QUALITY OF CARE AND OUTCOMES
Year: 2015 PMID: 25713726 PMCID: PMC4329405 DOI: 10.1136/openhrt-2014-000166
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Heart ISSN: 2053-3624
Studies investigating the effect of technological interventions on adherence to secondary prevention medications after acute coronary syndromes
| Study | Technological intervention | Study population | Medications | Design | Study size (mean age) | Duration | Main adherence measure | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Quilici | Mobile-phone—daily personalised SMS reminders | Patients who had undergone coronary stenting for ACS with good in-hospital aspirin response defined by AA-Ag lower than 30% | Aspirin | RCT | 546 patients (intervention: 64±10; control 64±14) | 1 month | Self-reporting and AA-Ag testing | Improved medication adherence with daily SMS reminders—self-reported aspirin non-adherence: 3.6% (SMS intervention) vs 6.4% (standard care) p=0.02; AA-Ag testing: 5.2% SMS intervention) vs 11.2% (standard care); p=0.01 |
| Rinfret | Telephone contact by nurses—4 sessions (<7 days, 1, 6 and 9 months) after stent implantation | Patients who had undergone drug-eluting stent implantation | Aspirin and clopidogrel | RCT | 300 patients (64±10) | 12 months | Proportion of days covered with aspirin and clopidogrel as assessed by pharmacy refill data | Significant improvement in adherence with four telephone calls—median scores for aspirin (99.2% vs 90.2%; intervention vs standard care respectively) and clopidogrel (99.3% vs 91.5%); p<0.0001 for aspirin and clopidogrel |
| Ho | Multifaceted—including voice messaging (educational and medication refill reminder calls) | Patients admitted with ACS | Clopidogrel, β-blockers, statins, ACEI/ARB | RCT | 253 patients (intervention: 63.8±9.25; control: 64.0±8.57) | 12 months | Proportion of patients adherent to medication regimens based on mean proportion of days covered greater than 0.80 using pharmacy refill data | Increased adherence—89.3% vs 73.9% of patients were adherent (intervention vs usual care); p=0.003 |
AA-Ag: arachidonic acid induced platelet aggregation; ACEI: angiotensin-converting-enzyme inhibitor; ACS: acute coronary syndromes; ARB: angiotensin receptor blocker; RCT: randomised controlled trial; SMS: short messaging service.
Advantages and disadvantages of technologies designed to improve chronic medication adherence in cardiovascular disease
| Technology | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| Medication container alarms | Simple, cheap, evidence for improved adherence | Poor uptake |
| SMS reminders | Cheap, convenient for patients, evidence for short term benefit on adherence | No proven effect in long term |
| Nurse-led telephone calls | Patient-specific, evidence for improved adherence | Resource-heavy in terms of staff hours |
| Computer-based education modules | Encourages patient participation, patients better informed about their condition | May be inconvenient for patients, no evidence of improved adherence. |
| Interactive Voice Response technology | Useful for large numbers of patients, can create tailored responses, evidence for improved adherence | May be viewed as impersonal |
| Online records | Convenient for patients | Risk of confidentiality breach, no evidence of improved medication adherence |
| Smartphone/tablet applications | Interactive, tailored to individual patients, evidence for improved adherence | Expensive, may not be accessible to all cohorts of patients |