| Literature DB >> 29033555 |
Courtney D Thornburg1, Natalie A Duncan2.
Abstract
Prophylactic clotting-factor regimens reduce the occurrence of bleeding episodes and maintain joint health in individuals with moderate and severe hemophilia. However, these outcomes are only achieved with adherence to prescribed prophylaxis regimens. There are several types of barriers to adherence related to key patient, condition, treatment, health-care system, and/or socioeconomic variables. Notably, health-care professionals may not prescribe prophylaxis if they perceive that a patient will be nonadherent. Prophylactic treatment strategies should be developed with the patient and family, focused on individualized treatment goals. Personalized strategies are needed to reinforce the importance of and encourage confidence in administering the regular infusions required for prophylactic therapy. These strategies may include verbal and written information delivered by health-care professionals, peers, and inter-active media. The advent of extended half-life clotting factors requiring less frequent infusion may improve adherence.Entities:
Keywords: VERITAS-Pro; adherence; hemophilia; prophylaxis
Year: 2017 PMID: 29033555 PMCID: PMC5630068 DOI: 10.2147/PPA.S139851
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient Prefer Adherence ISSN: 1177-889X Impact factor: 2.711
Adherence rates with continuous prophylaxis for patients with hemophilia over time
| Data source | Type of study | Time frame | Rate of prophylaxis by disease severity (%)
| |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Severe | Moderate | Mild | Unknown | |||
| CDC UDC program | Observational prospective | 1998–2004 | A: 35.3 | A: 13.4 | A: 0.6 | NA |
| B: 27.1 | B: 6 | B: 0.7 | ||||
| A + B: 34 | A + B: 11 | A + B: 0.7 | ||||
| CDC UDC program | Observational prospective | 2005–2009 | A + B: 48 | A + B: 16.2 | A + B: 2.1 | A + B: 27.8 |
| Blanchette et al | Survey of North American HTC clinicians | 2002 | A: 47 | A: 13 | A: 0 | NA |
| B: 30 | B: 3 | B: 0 | ||||
| A + B: 44.2 | A + B: 12.9 | A = B | ||||
| Zappa et al | Survey of North American HTC clinicians | 2010 | A: 58 | NA | NA | NA |
| B: 51 | ||||||
| A + B: 56.8 | ||||||
| ATHN data set | Registry | 2010–2015 | A: 67.6 | A: 30.1 | A: 4.4 | A: 7.5 |
| B: 60.7 | B: 14.1 | B: 4.5 | B: 6.2 | |||
Note:
Patients aged ≤18 years only.
Abbreviations: CDC, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; UDC, Universal Data Collection; NA, not applicable; HTC, hemophilia-treatment center; ATHN, American Thrombosis and Hemostasis Network; A, FVIII deficiency; B, FIX deficiency.
Patient-reported rates of adherence with prophylaxis
| Reference | Data source | Age | Definition of adherence | Reported adherence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Survey | 1–18 years | >75% of prescribed infusions | 58.8% adherent | |
| Survey | Children and adults | >80% of prescribed infusions | 73% adherent | |
| VERITAS-Pro | Adolescents | Score of ≥57 | 30% adherent | |
| Pharmacy logs | Children and adults | Days supply/days observed ≥60% | Adherence achieved 50% of the time | |
| Infusion logs | Children and adults | >67% weeks of prophylaxis | Children: 26 | |
| Infusion logs | Adults, 18–56 years | Study scoring system to rate adherence with frequency and dosage | Median adherence to frequency: 76% | |
| Randomized controlled trial, infusion logs | 6 months–6 years | Not defined | Mean adherence 96%; 2 of 32 had difficulty with infusion schedule |
Barriers to prophylaxis adherence and potential strategies for addressing these barriers
| Barriers to adherence | Potential strategies to improve adherence |
|---|---|
| • Patient-related factors | • Education (multimedia, peer-to-peer mentors, tailored to patient’s primary language, development, and health literacy) |