| Literature DB >> 29187249 |
Tim Mathes1, Kirsten Großpietsch2, Edmund A M Neugebauer3,4, Dawid Pieper3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Immunosuppressive drugs have to be taken through the whole duration of kidney transplant survival to avoid rejection. Low adherence can increase the risk of allograft rejection. The objective was to evaluate the effectiveness of adherence-enhancing interventions (AEI) in kidney transplantation recipients taking immunosuppressive drugs.Entities:
Keywords: Compliance; Immunosuppressive drugs; Kidney transplantation; Patient adherence; Systematic review
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29187249 PMCID: PMC5707897 DOI: 10.1186/s13643-017-0633-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
Results of included studies
| Study | Adherence measure | Implementation adherence measurement (measurement time points) | Results for adherencea (I vs. C; | Clinical and other adherence outcomes | Results for other outcomesa (I vs. C; |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Annunziato 2015 | Standard deviation of tacrolimus blood levels (mean) | NR (median 8 measures) | 2.68 vs. 3.37; | Episodes of rejection ( | 3 vs.4; |
| Breu-Dejean 2016 | NR | Questionnaire (5 months) | 74.5 vs. 47.3%; | Mortality | 12.7 vs.9.1%; |
| – | – | – | Allograft survival | 69.1 vs.87.3%; | |
| Chisholm 2001 | Percent of patients taking ≥ 80% (monthly) | Prescription refill (monthly at each visit) | I > C; | Duration of compliance since transplant | 75 vs. 33.3%; |
| Mean doses taken | Prescription refill (monthly at each visit) | 96.1 vs. 81.6%; | Time to first non-compliance (month) | 11; 95%CI 10–12 vs. 9; 95%CI 7–11 | |
| Blood level within range (cyclosporine 250–400 ng/mL and tacrolimus 8–15 ng/mL) | Serum concentrations (monthly at each visit) | 64 vs. 48%; | – | – | |
| Chisholm 2013 | Mean doses taken | Prescription refill (baseline + every 3 months) | 89 vs. 79%; | – | – |
| De Geest 2006 | Patients taking < 98% and/or ≥ 1 drug holiday (no medication intake > 36 h for a twice daily dosing regimen, or > 60 h for a once daily dosing regimen) | EM (daily measurement over 9 months) | Decrease: I > C; | – | – |
| Fennell 1994 | Mean doses taken | Pill count (4–6 weeks and 8–12 weeks) | Increase: 67% (azathioprine); 56% (prednisone) vs. 33% (azathioprine); 35% (prednisone); | – | – |
| Blood level within range (cyclosporine) | NR (4–6 weeks and 8–12 weeks) | I > C; | – | – | |
| Garcia 2015 | Non-adherent patients (questionnaire score < 12) | Questionnaire (immunosuppressant Therapy Adherence Scale, score 0–12, 3 months) | 14.5 vs. 46.4%; | Mortality | 1.8 vs. 1.8%; |
| Mean sum score values | Questionnaire (immunosuppressant Therapy Adherence Scale, score 0–12, 3 months) | 11.82 vs.11.2; | Acute reaction | 16.4 vs. 14.3%; | |
| Mean tacrolimus blood levels (ng/dL) | NR (at each outpatient visit up to the 3 months and were also assessed at 6 months and 1 year) | 8.74 vs. 8.78; | Graft lose | 1.8 vs. 7.1%; | |
| Hardstaff 2003 | Number of patients showing adherence improvement | EM (first outpatient visit and after feedback, 3 months) | 6 vs. 5; NR (first outpatient visit) | – | – |
| Henriksson 2016 | Tacrolimus blood levels (mean) | NR (twice weekly over the first 3 months, once a week from then until 6 months, and once a month from 6 months to 1 year) | NR; | Emergency hospital admissions | 22 vs. 31; |
| – | – | – | Rejection | 6 vs. 27; | |
| Joost 2014 | Daily adherence (Percentage of days with correct dosing) | EM (daily measurement) | 91 vs. 75%; | Physical sum scale (SF-36) | I > C; |
| Patients with daily adherence ≥80% | 84 vs. 57%; | ||||
| Mean doses taken | 95 vs. 82%; | Mental sum scale (SF-36) | I > C; | ||
| Patients taking ≥90% ≤ 110% of doses | 84 vs. 57%; p = 0.015 | ||||
| Timing adherence (percentage doses taken within 6-h interval ± 3 h) | 95 vs. 94%; | Anxiety scale (SF-36) | 4.74 vs. 4.33; | ||
| Timing adherence ≥ 80% | 97 vs. 86%; | ||||
| Patients without drug holidays (no intake > 48 h) | 81 vs. 43%; | Depression scale (SF-36) | 2.89 vs. 2.64; | ||
| Mean doses taken | Pill count | 97 vs. 90%; | |||
| Patients taking ≥ 90 ≤ 110% of doses | 84 vs. 63%; | ||||
| No missed intake during the last 2 weeks | Self report (12 months) | 72 vs. 77%; | |||
| Fully adherent | Morisky questionnaire (12 months) | 63 vs. 63%; | |||
| Russel 2011 | Mean medication adherence score (0.5 if medication-dose was taken within 3 h of prescribed 12 h time frame; 0.25 if not within 3 h but 12 h; and 0 if not within 12 h) | EM (daily measurement over 6 months) | 0.88 vs. 0.77; | – | – |
| Tschida 2013 | Mean doses taken | Prescription refill | 87 vs. 83%; | Discontinuation (≥ 60 days without medications never followed by re-initiation within the study period) | 39 vs. 104; |
| Number of medication gaps (≥ 60 days without medication in post-period but followed by re-initiation before end of post-period) | 29 vs. 53; |
C control group, CI confidence interval, EM electronic monitoring, I intervention group, ns not significant, NR not reported
aUnless otherwise indicated, all values are group means of the last follow-up
b p value for treatment by time interaction
Fig. 1The PRISMA flow-diagram of the study selection process
Description of studies
| Author, year | Study design | Included patients/analyzed patients (I, C) | Setting and region | Patient characteristics (intervention/control or whole population) | Medication (dosing frequency) | Intervention | Control | Intervention period; observation period |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Annunziato 2015 | Cohort study (retrospective chart review) | Included | Two pediatric and adult kidney transplant service; USA | Age (mean, years) 21.68/21.03 | NR |
| Standard care | 1 year; 1 year |
| Breu-Dejean 2016 | RCT | Included | Outpatient | Age (mean, years) 49.7/47.9 | Cyclosporine (dosing NR), | Psychoeducational intervention (every week) | Standard care | 8 weeks; 10 years |
| Chisholm 2001 | RCT | Randomized | Medical College of Georgia (MCG) Hospital and Clinics in Augusta, Georgia, USA | Age (mean, years) 49.2 (10.2) | Cyclosporine (dosing NR) |
| Routine clinic services | 1 year; 1 year |
| Chisholm 2013 | RCT | Randomized | Southwest USA; Avella Specialty Pharmacy | Age (mean, years) 52.78/51.32 Annual income (mean, $) 39,673.96/28,290.44 | Cyclosporine (dosing NR) | Standard specialty pharmacy care |
| 1 year; 1 year |
| De Geest 2006 | (Pilot) RCT | Randomized | University Hospital Basel, Switzerland and Cantonal Hospital, Aarau, Switzerland | Non-adherent renal transplant recipients (identified in a previous study) | Cyclosporine, Mycophenolae-Mofetil, Tacrolimus, Sirolimus (dosing: twice daily) | Enhanced usual care |
| 3 months; 9 months |
| Fennell 1994 | Non-randomized trial (matched according to age and sex) | Included | University of Florida; USA | Age (mean, years) 12.0 | NR |
| Usual care | NR; NR |
| Garcia 2015 | RCT | Included | Universidade Estadual | Age (mean, years) 46.0/49.3 | Tacrolimus (dosing NR), Cyclosporine (dosing NR), Mycophenolate (dosing NR), Azathioprine (dosing NR), Prednisone (dosing NR) | Usual care | Usual transplant | 3 months; 1 year |
| Hardstaff 2003 | RCT | Randomized | NR | Stable (>1 year post-transplant) renal transplant patients | Prednisolone/Azathioprine (dosing: once daily) | Feedback about self-medication behavior at first outpatient clinic visit | Usual care | Unique at first outpatient visit (2–6 months); 4–12 months (depending on first outpatient visit) |
| Henriksson 2016 | RCT | Included | Karolinska University Hospital; Stockholm, Sweden | Age (mean) 44.3/45.0 | Tacrolimus (dosing: twice daily, or in “slow release” form once daily), cyclosporine (dosing: twice daily) |
| Standard care | 2 years; 1 year |
| Joost 2014 | Non-concurrent cohort study | Included | Erlangen University Hospital, Germany | Age (mean, years) 51/54 | Tacrolimus/Cyclosporin/Mycophenolic acid |
|
| 12 months; standard care 2 weeks |
| Russel 2011 | (Pilot) RCT | Randomization | Tertiary care transplant centre; Midwestern USA | Medication non-adherent (taking < 85% of doses before inclusion) | ≥ 1 immunosuppressive medication (medication not specified; dosing: twice daily) |
|
| 6 months; 6 months (plus prior 3 months adherence screening phase) |
| Tschida 2013 | Cohort study (retrospective claims analysis) | Before propensity score matching | Mandatory program for the commercial employers of UnitedHealthcare, USA | UnitedHealthcare enrollees receiving pharmacy and medical benefits through UnitedHealthcare | ≥ 1 prescriptions for an oral transplant study drug (dosing NR) |
| No intervention | 1 year; 1 year after index date (the first immunosuppressive drug prescription fill date) |
NR not reported, RCT randomized controlled trial
Results of the risk of bias assessment
| Author, year | Sequence generation | Allocation concealment | Blinding of participants, personnel and outcome assessors | Incomplete outcome data | Selective outcome reporting | Other sources of bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Annunziato 2015 | - | - | - | ? | ? | ? |
| Breu-Dejean 2016 | + | + | - | ? | ? | ? |
| Chisholm 2001 | ? | ? | - | ? | ? | ? |
| Chisholm 2013 | + | ? | - | + | ? | ? |
| De Geest 2006 | + | + | - | + | ? | ? |
| Fennell 1994 | ? | ? | - | ? | ? | ? |
| Garcia 2015 | + | + | - | ? | ? | ? |
| Henriksson 2016 | ? | + | - | ? | ? | ? |
| Hardstaff 2003 | ? | ? | - | - | ? | ? |
| Joost 2014 | - | - | - | ? | ? | ? |
| Russel 2011 | + | + | - | + | ? | ? |
| Tschida 2013 | - | - | - | ? | ? | ? |
+ low risk of bias, - high risk of bias, ? unclear risk of bias