| Literature DB >> 28483983 |
Yichen Zhu1,2, Yifan Zhou3, Lei Zhang1,2, Jian Zhang1,2, Jun Lin1,2.
Abstract
Immunosuppressive treatment regimens are complex and require ongoing self-management. Medication adherence can be difficult to achieve for several reasons. The current meta-analysis and systematic review investigated whether adherence interventions improved immunosuppressive treatment adherence in kidney transplant recipients. Medline, Cochrane, EMBASE, and Google Scholar were searched until October 17, 2016 using the following search terms: kidney transplantation, compliance, adherence, and immunosuppressive therapy. Randomized controlled trials and two-arm prospective, retrospective, and cohort studies were included. The primary outcomes were adherence rate and adherence score. Eight studies were included with a total for 546 patients. Among participants receiving intervention, the adherence rate was significantly higher than the control group (pooled OR=2.366, 95% CI 1.222 to 4.578, p=0.011). Participants in the intervention group had greater adherence scores than those in the control group (pooled standardized difference in means =1.706, 95% CI 0.346 to 3.065, p=0.014). Sensitivity analysis indicated that findings for adherence rate were robust. However, for adherence score, the significance of the association disappeared after removing one of the studies indicating the findings may have been overly influenced by this one study. Intervention programs designed to increase immunosuppressive adherence in patients with kidney transplant improve treatment adherence.Entities:
Keywords: Immunosuppression; Kidney Transplantation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28483983 PMCID: PMC5847104 DOI: 10.1136/jim-2016-000265
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Investig Med ISSN: 1081-5589 Impact factor: 2.895
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram.
Summary of characteristics of included studies
| First author (year) | Study design | Intervention groups | Intervention protocol | Number of patients | Mean age (year) | Male (%) | Immunosuppressive therapy | Length of follow-ups |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bessa (2016) | RCT | Pharmaceutical care | Pharmacist's contribution to the care of individuals to optimize medicines use and improve health outcomes | 62 | 45.8 | 59.40 | Tacrolimus, prednisolone, mycophenolate sodium, or azathioprine | 3 months |
| Control | NR | 62 | ||||||
| Garcia (2015) | RCT | Continuing education | Continuing education | 55 | 46 | 56.40 | Tacrolimus—92.7% | 12 months |
| Control | Standard care | 56 | 49.29 | 62.50 | Tacrolimus—94.6% | 12 months | ||
| Joost (2014) | Prospective | Intensified care group | Educational behavior and technique intervention | 35 | 51 | 77.00 | Cyclosporine A: 6 (17%) | 1 year |
| Control | Standard care | 39 | 54 | 62.00 | Cyclosporine A: 7 (18%) | |||
| Chisholm-Burns (2013) | RCT | Intervention group | Behavior contract intervention | 76 | 52.78 | 56.60 | Cyclosporine—8 (10.5%) | 15 months |
| Control | Standard treatment | 74 | 51.32 | 55.40 | Cyclosporine—7 (9.5%) | |||
| McGillicuddy (2013) | RCT | mHealth intervention | mHealth system with reminder via smartphone | 9 | 42.44 | 44.40 | NR | 3 months |
| Control | Standard care | 10 | 57.6 | 70.00 | ||||
| Russell (2011) | RCT | Continuous self-improvement | Continuous self-improvement intervention | 8 | 55 | 50.00 | NR | 6 months |
| Control | Attention control management | 7 | 44 | 42.90 | ||||
| Chisholm-Burns (2001) | RCT | With clinical pharmacist interaction | Clinical pharmacist–patient interaction over the telephone | 12 | 49.2 | 75.00 | Cyclosporine—8 (10.5%) | 1 year |
| Control | NA | 12 | Cyclosporine—7 (9.5%) | |||||
| Fennell (1994) | Prospective | Family-based interventional program | Family-based interventional program with booklet and calendar | 14 | 12 | 57.10 | Azathioprine and Prednisone | NR |
| Control | Standard care | 15 | 60.00 |
NR, not reported; RCT, randomized controlled trial.
Figure 2Forest plots for effect of intervention on (A) adherence rate and (B) adherence score.
Figure 3Sensitivity analysis for effect of intervention on (A) adherence rate and (B) adherence score.
Figure 4Quality assessment.