| Literature DB >> 29138431 |
Sarah Chapman1, Peter Dale2,3, Henrik Svedsater2, Gillian Stynes2,4, Nicola Vyas5, David Price6, Rob Horne7.
Abstract
People with asthma who do not adhere to their maintenance medication may experience poorer asthma control and need more healthcare support than those who adhere. People (N = 1010) aged 18-55 years with self-reported asthma, taking one or more asthma maintenance medication(s), from five European countries, participated in a survey using validated scales (Medication Adherence Report Scale [MARS], Asthma Control Test™ [ACT], Beliefs about Medicine Questionnaire [BMQ] and the Asthma Treatment Intrusiveness Questionnaire [ATIQ]). We performed a post hoc evaluation of adherence to maintenance medication, asthma control, beliefs about medication, preferences for once-daily vs. twice-daily asthma maintenance medication and treatment intrusiveness, using structural equation modelling to investigate the relationships between these factors. Most participants reported potential problems with asthma control (ACT < 19: 76.8% [n = 776]), low adherence (median MARS = 3.40) and preferred once-daily medication (73.5% [n = 742/1010]). Non-adherence was associated with worse asthma control (r = 0.262 [P < 0.001]) and a expressed preference for once-daily medication over a "twice daily medication that works slightly better" (test statistic [T] = 2.970 [P = 0.003]). Participants reporting non-adherence/preferring once-daily medication had negative beliefs about their treatment (BMQ necessity-concerns differential: r = 0.437 [P < 0.001]/T = 6.886 [P < 0.001]) and found medication intrusive (ATIQ: r = -0.422 [P < 0.001]/T = 2.689[P = 0.007]). Structural equation modelling showed complex relationships between variables, including: (1) high concerns about treatment associated with increased perceived treatment intrusiveness and reduced adherence, which influenced asthma control; (2) high concerns about treatment and healthcare seeking behaviour, which were predictive of preferring twice-daily asthma medication. Concerns about medication and perceived treatment intrusiveness were predictive of poor adherence, and were associated with preference for once-daily asthma medication. Confirm the utility of the PAPA model and NCF in explaining nonadherence linked to poor asthma control.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29138431 PMCID: PMC5686129 DOI: 10.1038/s41533-017-0061-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Prim Care Respir Med ISSN: 2055-1010 Impact factor: 2.871
Participant characteristics and clinical factor
| Participants |
| ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Demographic characteristic |
| ||
| Countrya | Germany | 200 (19.8) | |
| UK | 204 (20.2) | ||
| Spain | 201 (19.9) | ||
| France | 206 (20.4) | ||
| Italy | 199 (19.7) | ||
| Gender | Male | 499 (49.4) | |
| Female | 511 (50.6) | ||
| Marital status | Married/cohabiting/living with partner | 655 (64.9) | |
| Single | 284 (28.1) | ||
| Separated/divorced/widowed | 71 (7.0) | ||
| Area of residence | Urban | 509 (50.4) | |
| Rural | 501 (49.6) | ||
| Employment | Employed, full time | 559 (55.3) | |
| Employed, part time | 98 (9.7) | ||
| Self-employed | 97 (9.6) | ||
| Unemployed | 81 (8.0) | ||
| Student | 71 (7.0) | ||
| Home maker | 59 (5.8) | ||
| Other | 45 (4.5) | ||
| Asthma characteristics |
| ||
| Age at asthma diagnosis | 18.00 (10.00–30.00) | ||
| Years since asthma diagnosis | 15.00 (7.00–23.00) | ||
| Number of lifetime asthma attacks | 2.00 (0.00–3.00) | ||
| Clinical characteristics |
| ||
| Smoking history | I’ve never smoked | 451 (44.7) | |
| I did smoke, but don’t smoke now | 274 (27.1) | ||
| I only smoke at social occasions | 65 (6.4) | ||
| I smoke less than 5 cigarettes a day on average | 52 (5.1) | ||
| I smoke 5–15 cigarettes a day on average | 107 (10.6) | ||
| I smoke over 15 cigarettes a day on average | 61 (6.0) | ||
| Severityb | Mild | 139 (13.8) | |
| Moderate | 694 (68.7) | ||
| Severe | 117 (11.6) | ||
| Not disclosed | 60 (5.9) | ||
| Medication regimen stepc | Step 1 | 94 (9.3) | |
| Step 2 | 380 (37.6) | ||
| Step 3 | 461 (45.6) | ||
| Step 4 | 32 (3.2) | ||
| Step 5 | 43 (4.3) | ||
| Healthcare service use in relation to asthma in the prior year |
|
| |
| Consultations | GP | 887 (87.8) | 3 (1–5) |
| Practice/community nurse | 336 (33.3) | 0 (0–1) | |
| Specialist/consultant | 557 (55.1) | 1 (0–2) | |
| Specialist nurse | 207 (20.5) | 0 (0–0) | |
| Dietician | 150 (14.9) | 0 (0–0) | |
| Other HCP | 153 (15.1) | 0 (0–0) | |
| All consultations | 964 (95.4) | 5 (2–10) | |
| Emergencies | Emergency GP appointments | 499 (49.4) | 0 (0–1) |
| Emergency service uses | 361 (35.7) | 0 (0–1) | |
| Overnight hospital stays following emergency care | 204 (20.2) | 0 (0–0) | |
| Taken to hospital by ambulance | 166 (16.4) | 0 (0–0) | |
| Sent to hospital by GP/specialist | 243 (24.1) | 0 (0–0) | |
| Hospitalisations | 332 (32.9) | 0 (0–1) | |
| Total days spent hospitalised | N/A | 2 (1–5) | |
GP, general practitioner, HCP healthcare professional, IQR interquartile range, N/A not available
a Country of recruitment
b “How has your doctor described your asthma?”
c Stepwise treatment framework (GINA, 2015, summary of medication at each regimen step: step 1, SABAs alone or in combination with allergy treatment; step 2, ICS alone or leukotriene modifiers or ICS in combination with SABAs or allergy-induced asthma treatment; step 3, LABAs in combination with ICS or theophylline/related compounds or ICS in combination with allergy-induced asthma treatment; step 4, ICS in combination with LABAs and allergy-induced asthma treatment; step 5, omalizumab)
Participant scores for perceived treatment necessity, concerns about treatment and treatment intrusiveness
| Median (IQR) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| BMQ necessity scorea (potential range: 1–5) | BMQ concerns scorea (potential range: 1–5) | BMQ necessity-concernsb differential score | ATIQ total scorec (potential range: 13–65) | |
| Gender | Female | 3.60 (3.00–4.00) | 2.44 (2.00–3.11) | 0.80 (0.13–1.69) | 23.00 (14.00–36.00) |
| Male | 3.40 (3.00–4.00) | 2.89 (2.22–3.44) | 0.38 (0.00–1.09) | 33.00 (20.00–39.00) | |
| Countryd | Germany | 3.60 (3.00–4.00) | 2.56 (1.89–3.11) | 0.69 (0.04–1.64) | 25.50 (15.50–38.00) |
| UK | 3.60 (3.00–4.00) | 2.39 (1.89–3.00) | 0.91 (0.21–1.61) | 19.50 (14.00–37.50) | |
| Spain | 3.60 (3.00–4.00) | 2.89 (2.44–3.44) | 0.38 (0.00–0.98) | 33.00 (19.00–40.00) | |
| France | 3.80 (3.00–4.00) | 2.56 (2.00–3.33) | 0.66 (0.09–1.78) | 25.00 (16.00–38.00) | |
| Italy | 3.40 (2.00–4.00) | 3.00 (2.22–3.56) | 0.31 (0.00–1.07) | 32.00 (19.00–40.00) | |
| Marital status | Married/cohabiting/living with partner | 3.60 (3.00–4.00) | 2.67 (2.00–3.22) | 0.49 (0.00–1.33) | 26.00 (15.00–38.00) |
| Other | 3.40 (3.00–4.00) | 2.78 (2.22–3.22) | 0.62 (0.07–1.47) | 29.00 (19.00–39.00) | |
| Area of residence | Urban | 3.60 (3.00–4.00) | 2.78 (2.11–3.33) | 0.44 (0.00–1.33) | 28.00 (17.00–39.00) |
| Rural | 3.60 (3.00–4.00) | 2.56 (2.00–3.11) | 0.69 (0.09–1.60) | 26.00 (15.00–38.00) | |
| Employment | Full-time employment | 3.60 (3.00–4.00) | 2.78 (2.11–3.33) | 0.49 (0.00–1.40) | 30.00 (16.00–39.00) |
| Other employment | 3.60 (3.00–4.00) | 2.56 (2.00–3.11) | 0.64 (0.04–1.51) | 25.00 (16.00–37.00) | |
| Asthma severitye | Mild | 3.20 (2.60–4.00) | 2.44 (1.78–3.11) | 0.47 (0.00–1.36) | 19.00 (13.00–36.00) |
| Moderate | 3.60 (3.00–4.00) | 2.89 (2.22–3.33) | 0.51 (0.00–1.33) | 30.00 (17.00–39.00) | |
| Severe | 4.00 (3.40–4.40) | 2.67 (2.00–3.33) | 1.16 (0.18–2.11) | 31.00 (18.00–39.00) | |
| Medication regimen stepf | Step 1 | 3.40 (3.00–4.00) | 2.83 (2.22–3.33) | 0.49 (0.00–1.16) | 33.00 (20.00–40.00) |
| Step 2 | 3.40 (3.00–3.80) | 2.67 (2.00–3.11) | 0.51 (0.00–1.27) | 27.00 (16.00–39.00) | |
| Step 3 | 3.60 (3.00–4.00) | 2.67 (2.00–3.11) | 0.69 (0.09–1.67) | 24.00 (15.00–37.00) | |
| Step 4 | 4.00 (3.40–4.20) | 3.22 (2.06–4.00) | 0.50 (−0.01–1.30) | 36.50 (18.00–43.00) | |
| Step 5 | 3.60 (3.00–4.00) | 3.11 (2.67–3.67) | 0.11 (0.00–0.73) | 38.00 (30.00–41.00) | |
| Smoking | Current smoker | 3.60 (3.00–4.00) | 2.56 (2.00–3.11) | 0.71 (0.07–1.64) | 24.00 (14.00–38.00) |
| Not current smoker | 3.60 (3.00–4.00) | 2.78 (2.11–3.33) | 0.53 (0.00–1.36) | 28.00 (17.00–39.00) | |
| Current asthma medication | Overall score | 3.60 (3.00–4.00) | 2.67 (2.00–3.22) | 0.58 (0.00–1.42) | 26.00 (16.00–39.00) |
| Preference for treatment | Once-daily asthma medication | 3.40 (3.00–4.00) | 2.78 (2.11–3.44) | 0.42 (0.00–1.24) | 28.00 (16.00–39.00) |
| Twice-daily asthma medication | 3.80 (3.20–4.00) | 2.44 (1.89–3.00) | 1.01 (0.34–1.83) | 24.00 (15.00–36.00) | |
ATIQ Asthma Treatment Intrusiveness Questionnaire, BMQ Beliefs about Medicines Questionnaire, ICS inhaled corticosteroid, IQR interquartile range, LABA long-acting beta2 agonist, SABA short-acting beta2 agonist
a Rated on a 5-point Likert scale (from ‘strongly disagree’ = 1 to ‘strongly agree’ = 5)
b BMQ Concerns score subtracted from BMQ Necessity score
c Sum of 13 possible intrusions of asthma on participants’ daily lives, each rated on a 5-point Likert-type scale (from ‘low’ = 1 to ‘high’ = 5
d Country of recruitment
e “How has your doctor described your asthma?”
f Stepwise treatment framework (GINA, 2015, summary of medication at each regimen step: step 1, SABAs alone or in combination with allergy treatment; step 2, ICS alone or leukotriene modifiers or ICS in combination with SABAs or allergy-induced asthma treatment; step 3, LABAs in combination with ICS or theophylline/related compounds or ICS in combination with allergy-induced asthma treatment; step 4, ICS in combination with LABAs and allergy-induced asthma treatment; step 5, omalizumab)
Fig. 1BMQ attitudinal analysis. BMQ, Beliefs about Medicines Questionnaire
Continuous variables significantly correlated with asthma control, treatment adherence and perceptual barriers to treatment, and associated with preference for once-daily asthma medication
| Correlation between: Significance level | ACT (asthma control) | ATIQ (treatment intrusiveness) | BMQ necessity (treatment necessity) | BMQ concerns (treatment concerns) | BMQ NCD (treatment evaluation) | MARS (adherence) | Preference for once-daily asthma medication |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Asthma control (ACT score) |
|
|
|
| NS | NS | |
| Adherence (MARS score) |
|
| NS |
|
|
| |
| Age | NS |
|
|
| NS |
| NS |
| Duration of asthma |
|
|
|
| NS | NS | NS |
| Number of lifetime asthma attacks |
|
|
|
|
|
| NS |
| Number of asthma medications |
|
|
|
| NS |
|
|
| Number of HCP consultationsa |
| NS | NS | NS | NS |
| NS |
ACT Asthma Control Test™ (high score = good asthma control), ATIQ Asthma Treatment Intrusiveness Questionnaire (high score = high perceived treatment intrusiveness), BMQ Beliefs about Medicines Questionnaire (high BMQ necessity score = high perceived treatment necessity; high BMQ Concerns score = high level of concerns about treatment), HCP healthcare professional, MARS Medication Adherence Report Scale (high score = good adherence); NCD necessity-concerns differential, NS not significant, r Pearson's correlation coefficient (negative correlations indicate an inverse relationship), t test statistic
*P < 0.05
**P < 0.01
***P < 0.001
a n = 1009
b In the prior year
Bivariate relationships between demographic and clinical variables and asthma control, treatment adherence, perceptual barriers to treatment and treatment preference. (a) Relationships between demographic variables and asthma control, treatment adherence, perceptual barriers to treatment and treatment preference; (b) Relationships between clinical variables and asthma control, treatment adherence, perceptual barriers to treatment and treatment preference
| (a) | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Comparison [degrees of freedom]: Significance level |
| Higher ACT score (better asthma control) | Lower ATIQ score (lower treatment intrusiveness) | Higher BMQ Necessity score (higher treatment necessity) | Lower BMQ Concerns score (fewer treatment concerns) | Lower BMQ NCD score (more negative treatment evaluation) | Lower MARS score (lower adherence) | Preference for twice-daily asthma medication |
| Males (vs. females) | NS | MWU = 158938.5*** | NS | MWU = 151661.0*** | NS | MWU = 03758.0*** | NS | |
| Countrya | All countries |
|
| NS |
|
|
|
|
| Significant pairwise comparisons | Germany (vs. France/Italy) | Germany/UK (vs. Italy/Spain); France (vs. Italy) | France/Germany/ UK (vs. Italy/Spain) | Italy/Spain (vs. France/ Germany/UK) | Italy/Spain (vs. Germany) | UK (vs. Germany) | ||
| Cohabiting (vs. living alone)c | NS | MWU = 101935.0** | NS | NS | MWU = 125149.5* | NS | NS | |
| Residents in rural areas (vs. urban areas) |
| MWU = 117460.5*** | NS | MWU = 107909.5*** | NS | NS | NS | |
| Not employed full-time (vs. employed full-time) | NS | MWU = 140320.0** | NS | MWU = 137733.5* | NS |
|
| |
| Smokers (vs. not current smokers) | NS | MWU = 116190.5** | NS | MWU = 113952.0* | NS | NS | NS | |
ATIQ Asthma Treatment Intrusiveness Questionnaire, BMQ Beliefs about Medicines Questionnaire, F F-statistic, determined by one-way ANOVA, MARS Medication Adherence Report Scale (high score = good adherence), MWU Mann–Whitney U test, NCD necessity–concerns differential, NS not significant, t test statistic, χ 2 determined by Kruskal–Wallis H test#
*P < 0.05
**P < 0.01
***P < 0.001
a Country of recruitment
b n = 1005
c Married/cohabiting/living with their partner (vs. single/widowed/divorced/separated)
d n = 1008
e “How has your doctor described your asthma?”
f n = 1006
g Stepwise treatment framework (GINA, 2015, summary of medication at each regimen step: step 1, SABAs alone or in combination with allergy treatment; step 2, ICS alone or leukotriene modifiers or ICS in combination with SABAs or allergy-induced asthma treatment; step 3, LABAs in combination with ICS or theophylline/related compounds or ICS in combination with allergy-induced asthma treatment; step 4, ICS in combination with LABAs and allergy-induced asthma treatment; step 5, omalizumab)
Fig. 2Simplified structural equation models identifying a predictors of adherence, healthcare seeking and asthma control, and b predictors of preference for once-daily vs. twice-daily treatment. ACT, Asthma Control Test™; ATIQ, Asthma Treatment Intrusiveness Questionnaire; BMQ, Beliefs about Medicines Questionnaire; MARS, Medication Adherence Report Scale. a Simplified structural equation model of association between adherence barriers, adherence, healthcare seeking, asthma control and asthma severity. All paths represent standardised regression weights of latent variables, corrected by bootstrapping, and are significant at P = 0.01. Paths with a positive score have a positive impact of the connected variables, while negative scores indicate negative impacts. b Simplified structural equation model of predictors of preference for once-daily vs. twice-daily treatment. All paths represent standardised regression weights of latent variables, corrected by bootstrapping, and are significant at P = 0.01. Positive paths are equivalent to an increased preference for twice-daily medication. Negative paths mean an increased preference for once-daily medication. ACT, Asthma Control Test™; ATIQ, Asthma Treatment Intrusiveness Questionnaire; BMQ, Beliefs about Medicines Questionnaire; MARS, Medication Adherence Report Scale