| Literature DB >> 29872306 |
Peter Lansberg1, Andre Lee2, Zhen-Vin Lee3, Kannan Subramaniam4, Sajita Setia5.
Abstract
Poor adherence to statin therapy is linked to significantly increased risk of cardiovascular events and death. Unfortunately, adherence to statins is far from optimal. This is an alarming concern for patients prescribed potentially life-saving cholesterol-lowering medication, especially for those at high risk of cardiovascular events. Research on statin adherence has only recently garnered broader attention; hence, major reasons unique to adherence to statin therapy need to be identified as well as suggestions for countermeasures. An integrated approach to minimizing barriers and enhancing facilitation at the levels of the patient, provider, and health system can help address adherence issues. Health care professionals including physicians, pharmacists, and nurses have an obligation to improve patient adherence, as routine care. In order to achieve sustained results, a multifaceted approach is indispensable.Entities:
Keywords: cardiovascular disease; myopathy; nocebo; nonadherence; statins
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29872306 PMCID: PMC5973378 DOI: 10.2147/VHRM.S158641
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vasc Health Risk Manag ISSN: 1176-6344
Classification of SAMS
| Category | Definition |
|---|---|
| Myalgia | Muscle pain or weakness only |
| Myopathy | Muscle symptoms with a raised CK <10×ULN |
| Rhabdomyolysis | Muscle symptoms with a raised CK >10×ULN |
| Autoimmune myopathy | Muscle symptoms with muscle cell necrosis and presence of HMG-CoA reductase autoantibodies. CK levels persist ≥10 times the ULN 8 weeks after discontinuation of the statin. |
Notes: Data compiled from Collins et al, Sathasivam and Lecky, Mammen, and Sweidan et al.28–31
Abbreviations: CK, creatinine kinase; HMG-CoA, 3-hydroxy-3-methyl-glutaryl-coenzyme A; SAMS, statin-associated muscle symptoms; ULN, upper limit of normal.
Figure 1Factors associated with statin nonadherence.
Measures to quantify medication adherence
| Direct methods | Indirect methods |
|---|---|
| • Direct observation by health care provider | • Patient education/adherence scale |
| • Measuring blood levels to yield quantitative data | • Pill counts |
| – Costly and time consuming | • Statistics on repeated prescriptions |
| • Electronic monitoring systems in blister packs | |
| – Does not assure if the patient actually ingests the medication or | |
| whether patient takes the correct dose | |
| • Patient diaries | |
| • Combined electronic opening, pill counts, and interviews | |
| + Minimize patient manipulation by revealing openings without pill intake |
Note: Data compiled from Laufs et al, Maningat et al, and Gagnon et al.13,14,92
Figure 2Interventions for improving medication adherence.
Notes: Overall, the interventions can be differentiated as “before” and “after” prescription interventions. The strategies are multimodal varying from “patient education/counseling” to “adopting team-based” approaches. Effective approaches must involve strong partnerships between patients and health providers.