Literature DB >> 30587940

Association of medication adherence and depression with the control of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and blood pressure in patients at high cardiovascular risk.

Julius L Katzmann1, Felix Mahfoud2, Michael Böhm2, Martin Schulz3,4, Ulrich Laufs1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Many patients at high cardiovascular risk do not reach targets for low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) and blood pressure (BP). Depression is a frequent comorbidity in these patients and contributes to poor medication adherence.
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to elucidate the associations between adherence to lipid-and BP-lowering drugs, the diagnosis of depression, and the control of LDL-C and BP. PATIENTS AND METHODS: This study was conducted as multicenter, single-visit cross-sectional study in Germany. Adherence was assessed by the Morisky Medication Adherence Scale-8 (MMAS-8), and depression was assessed as documented in the patient chart.
RESULTS: A total of 3,188 ambulatory patients with hypercholesterolemia (39.8%), stable coronary artery disease (CAD; 7.4%), or both (52.9%) were included. Patients had a history of myocardial infarction (30.8%), diabetes (42.0%), were smokers (19.7%), and 16.1% had the investigator-reported diagnosis of depression. High or moderate adherence to lipid-lowering medication compared to low adherence was associated with lower LDL-C levels (105.5±38.3 vs 120.8±42.4 mg/dL) and lower BP (systolic BP 133.4±14.5 vs 137.9±13.9 mmHg, diastolic BP 78.3±9.6 vs 81.8±9.6 mmHg) and with a higher proportion of patients achieving the guideline-recommended LDL-C (16.9% vs 10.1%) and BP target (52.2% vs 40.8%, all comparisons P<0.0001). Adherence was worse in patients with depression. Correspondingly, patients with depression showed higher LDL-C levels, higher BP, and a lower probability of achieving the LDL-C and BP goal. Medication adherence correlated between BP- and lipid-lowering medications.
CONCLUSION: Self-reported medication adherence can be easily obtained in daily practice. A low adherence and the diagnosis of depression identify patients at risk for uncontrolled LDL-C and BP who likely benefit from intensified care.

Entities:  

Keywords:  LDL cholesterol; MMAS-8; adherence; blood pressure; cardiovascular disease; coronary artery disease; depression; lipids; prevention; statin

Year:  2018        PMID: 30587940      PMCID: PMC6302826          DOI: 10.2147/PPA.S182765

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Patient Prefer Adherence        ISSN: 1177-889X            Impact factor:   2.711


Introduction

Cardiovascular diseases (CVD) such as coronary artery disease (CAD) are the leading cause of death worldwide.1 Large randomized controlled trials have shown that lowering of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) and blood pressure (BP) is beneficial in primary and secondary prevention of CVD.2,3 The current European Society of Cardiology (ESC)/European Atherosclerosis Society (EAS) guidelines recommend achieving LDL-C levels of <70 and <100 mg/dL for patients at very high and high risk, respectively.4 However, despite the availability of effective and well-tolerated drugs, the LDL-C of the majority of patients remains uncontrolled.5–7 There are several factors influencing the risk factor control including adherence to medication defined as “the extent to which patients take medications as prescribed by their health care providers”.8 Adherence to lipid- and BP-lowering medication gets worse over time. A few months after initiation, a very significant part of the patients stops taking the prescribed medication.9–11 Poor statin adherence has been linked to cardiovascular and all-cause mortality.12–14 Adherence to statins is associated with improved LDL-C levels.15 Similarly, improving adherence to BP medication has been shown to improve BP control and clinical outcomes.16,17 However, it is not well studied whether the data regarding adherence to BP-lowering medication can be extrapolated to adherence to lipid-lowering medication. In general, poor adherence to cardiovascular medication causes a considerable proportion of cardiovascular events and deaths.18,19 Up to 20% of patients with CVD suffer from major depression.20 A bidirectional relationship has been assumed between these two disease entities.21 Depression is likely to contribute to non-adherence to lipid- and BP-lowering drugs, which may represent a link between depressive symptoms and risk of CVD.22 Therefore, the aim of this study was to elucidate the association between adherence to lipid- and BP-lowering drugs and the diagnosis of depression.

Patients and methods

This multicenter, single-visit cross-sectional study was conducted in Germany between March 15, 2017, and September 15, 2017. General practitioners and specialists treating outpatients were encouraged to include 10 consecutive patients scheduled for routine appointment. Inclusion criteria were as follows: ≥18 years of age Hypertension as documented diagnosis Hypercholesterolemia or stable CAD as documented diagnosis Current medication with at least one antihypertensive drug Current medication with a statin Signed informed consent. Patients who had been hospitalized because of a cardiovascular event within the past 3 months were excluded. After the patients had signed the informed consent, the participating physicians collected the following data: Age and sex Cardiovascular risk factors and comorbidities Depression (yes/no) Current antihypertensive medication Current statin medication Systolic and diastolic BP (SBP, DBP) values, measured at the documentation visit according to the ESC/European Society of Hypertension (ESH) guideline23 Control of hypertension according to physician Serum lipid levels (total cholesterol, LDL-C, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol [HDL-C], triglycerides), if measured within the past 12 months Control of LDL-C according to physician Eligibility of the patient for taking a fixed-dose combination (FDC) according to the physician and the reason for prescribing FDC pills. Adherence to antihypertensive and lipid-lowering medication was determined using the Morisky Medication Adherence Scale-8 (MMAS-8), a self-report questionnaire comprising eight items.24 MMAS-8 values of <6 were classified as “low adherence”, 6 or 7 as “moderate adherence”, and 8 as “high adherence”. Results regarding adherence are based on the MMAS-8 scores for adherence to lipid-lowering medication. LDL-C goals were defined according to the current ESC/EAS guideline as <70 mg/dL in patients with CAD or at very high cardiovascular risk and <100 mg/dL in patients at high cardiovascular risk.4 The study protocol was in accordance with the ethical guidelines of the 1975 Declaration of Helsinki and approved by the ethics committee (Ärztekammer des Saarlandes 307/16).

Statistical analyses

Categorical values are expressed as the percentage of the evaluable patients for each variable, excluding patients with missing data. Continuous data are expressed as mean ± SD. Categorical data were compared using the chi-squared test; for continuous data, the two-sample t-test was used. For comparison of BP and LDL-C control according to ESC guideline vs investigator, the McNemar test was utilized. Logistic regression was used to identify factors associated with adherence, LDL-C control, and BP control. The following factors were included in the regression analyses: age (defined as males older than 55 years and females older than 65 years), sex, smoking, depression, history of myocardial infarction, diabetes, peripheral vascular disease, stroke or transient ischemic attack, chronic heart failure, renal disease, positive family history of CAD, positive family history of hypercholesterolemia, adherence to, respectively, lipid- and BP-lowering medication, single-pill combination treatment for hypertension, and single-pill combination treatment for hypercholesterolemia. The analyses were performed with SAS, version 9.4 (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, USA). A P-value of <0.05 was considered statistically significant.

Results

A total of 1,247 physicians participated, who included 3,312 patients (76.5% included by general practitioners, 23.5% by specialists), of whom 3,188 were available for final analysis.

Demographic characteristics and risk factors

The baseline characteristics are summarized in Table 1. Of the 3,188 patients, 60.9% were male, 61.4% were aged between 60 and 79 years. 39.8% of the patients had a diagnosis of hypercholesterolemia, 7.4% had a diagnosis of stable CAD, and 52.9% had both diagnoses. 30.8% of the patients had a history of myocardial infarction. The most present cardiovascular risk factors were age (76.3%, defined as males older than 55 years or females older than 65 years), diabetes (42.0%), and positive family history of CAD (28.8%); 19.7% of the patients were smoking.
Table 1

Demographic parameters, comorbidities, and medication adherence for the total population, for patients with vs without depression, and for patients with low vs moderate or high adherence

Total n=3,188Depression n=512No depression n=2,676P-value, depression vs no depressionLow adherence (MMAS-8, <6) n=1,273Moderate or high adherence (MMAS-8, 6–8) n=1,757P-value, low vs moderate or high adherence
Age (years)
<6022.320.222.70.2326.219.6<0.0001
60–6414.315.914.10.275416.013.00.0234
65–7428.230.227.80.274226.929.50.1198
75–7918.919.818.70.543916.420.40.0051
≥8016.213.916.60.13114.517.50.0315
Sex
Female39.157.435.5<0.000138.839.70.4889
Male60.942.664.5<0.000161.260.30.0432
Risk factors and comorbidities
Hypercholesterolemia39.836.739.60.222839.339.00.8564
Stable CAD7.46.67.40.54367.66.60.2814
Hypercholesterolemia and stable CAD52.954.551.60.222451.752.80.5491
History of myocardial infarction30.828.331.30.177131.730.80.6186
Stroke/transient ischemic attack11.616.810.6<0.000112.810.60.0598
Positive family history of CAD28.832.228.10.059633.225<0.0001
Positive family history of hypercholesterolemia25.032.223.6<0.000129.521.7<0.0001
Smoker19.724.418.80.003227.114.7<0.0001
Diabetes42.044.941.40.137143.041.00.2787
Chronic heart failure19.026.417.6<0.000120.117.80.1119
Depression16.1100020.013.4<0.0001
Peripheral vascular disease11.613.711.20.111813.310.10.0074
Renal disease14.920.513.8<0.000114.515.00.7014
Familial hypercholesterolemia25.634.024.0<0.000128.922.6<0.0001
Number of daily tablets (mean ± SD)6.4±3.27.2±3.36.2±3.2<0.00016.3±3.06.5±3.30.2101
BP
SBP in mmHg (mean ± SD)135.3±14.4138.1±15.7134.8±14.1<0.0001137.9±13.9133.4±14.5<0.0001
DBP in mmHg (mean ± SD)79.8±9.781.8±10.179.4±9.6<0.000181.8±9.678.3±9.6<0.0001
BP control according to ESC guideline47.239.148.7<0.000140.852.2<0.0001
MMAS-8 questionnaire, lipid-lowering medication
High adherence (score 8)29.921.831.4<0.0001
Moderate adherence (score 6 or 7)28.126.328.50.3805
Low adherence (score <6)42.051.840.1<0.0001
MMAS-8 questionnaire, BP-lowering medication
High adherence (score 8)30.321.931.9<0.0001
Moderate adherence (score 6 or 7)29.027.929.20.6681
Low adherence (score <6)40.750.238.9<0.0001

Note: Values are in percentage if not stated otherwise.

Abbreviations: BP, blood pressure; CAD, coronary artery disease; DBP, diastolic BP; ESC, European Society of Cardiology; MMAS-8, Morisky Medication Adherence Scale-8; SBP, systolic BP.

Patients with depression

Depression was diagnosed in 16.1% of the patients (n=512). The majority of patients with depression were female (57.4%), corresponding to 23.9% of the female patients and 11.4% of the male patients were with depression (P<0.0001). Among the patients with depression, a higher proportion had a history of previous stroke or transient ischemic attack (16.8% vs 10.6%), a positive family history of hypercholesterolemia (32.2% vs 23.6%), chronic heart failure (26.4% vs 17.6%), renal disease (20.5% vs 13.8%), and familial hypercholesterolemia (34.0% vs 24.0%, for all comparisons P<0.0001). Patients with depression were more often smokers (24.4% vs 18.8%, P=0.0032) and were prescribed more pills per day (7.2±3.3 vs 6.2±3.2, P<0.0001). Adherence to lipid-lowering medication was worse in patients with depression (Table 1). In logistic regression analyses, depression was associated with poor BP control (P=0.0211), poor LDL-C control (P=0.0452), and poor medication adherence (P<0.0001).

Patients with low vs moderate or high adherence to lipid-lowering medication

42.0% of the patients exhibited low, 28.1% moderate, and 29.9% high self-reported adherence to their lipid-lowering medication. There were no significant differences between patients with high vs moderate adherence in LDL-C levels as well as LDL-C and BP control. Therefore, patients with high and moderate adherence were analyzed as one group and compared to patients with low adherence (Figure 1).
Figure 1

BP (A) and LDL-C control (B) in different subgroups.

Notes: BP (A) and LDL-C control (B) according to ESC guideline for the total population, patients with vs without depression and patients with low vs moderate or high adherence to BP- and lipid-lowering medication. MMAS-8, <6: low adherence; MMAS-8, 6–7: moderate adherence; MMAS-8, 8: high adherence.

Abbreviations: BP, blood pressure; ESC, European Society of Cardiology; LDL-C, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol; MMAS-8, Morisky Medication Adherence Scale-8.

In comparison to patients with moderate or high adherence, patients with low adherence were younger; a higher proportion had a family history of CAD (33.2% vs 25.0%) and hypercholesterolemia (29.5% vs 21.7%) and a history of depression (20.0% vs 13.4%, for all comparisons P<0.0001), peripheral vascular disease (13.3% vs 10.1%, P=0.0074), and familial hypercholesterolemia (28.9% vs 22.6%, P<0.0001). Patients with low adherence were significantly more often smokers (27.1% vs 14.7%, P<0.0001). The number of daily doses was comparable in both groups (6.3±3.0 vs 6.5±3.3, P=0.2101). There was no correlation between the number of daily doses and adherence measured by MMAS-8 (Spear-man’s correlation coefficient -0.00434, P=0.8118). The data are summarized in Table 1. High adherence was more common in women than in men (31.0% vs 25.8%, P=0.0035). However, the proportion of low adherence was comparable in men and women (41.7% vs 41.1%, P=0.7849). An FDC treatment was thought to contribute to treatment goal attainment in 63.1% of all patients by improving adherence (45.1%), patient convenience (43.8%), cardiovascular protection (32.2%), LDL-C control (30.1%), BP control (26.2%), and costs (17.2%). Logistic regression revealed that depression and smoking are strongly associated with poor adherence (P<0.0001), independent of using the categorized MMAS-8 or the score as continuous variable. In the model of MMAS-8 score as continuous variable, additional but less strong associations with poor adherence were found for stroke (P=0.0456), age (men older than 55 years or women older than 65 years, P=0.0330), and positive family history of CAD (P=0.0213) and hypercholesterolemia (P=0.0041).

Blood pressure

The mean office SBP was 135.3±14.4 mmHg, and the mean DBP was 79.8±9.7 mmHg. BP control was achieved in 47.2% and 90.9% of the patients according to ESC/ESH guideline on hypertension (target <140/90 mmHg) and as assessed by the investigator, respectively (P<0.0001). In patients with depression, BP was significantly higher and BP control was achieved in a significantly lower proportion of patients (SBP 138.1±15.6 vs 134.8±14.1 mmHg, DBP 81.8±10.4 vs 79.4±9.6 mmHg, BP control according to ESC guideline 39.1% vs 48.7%, for all comparisons P<0.0001, BP control according to investigator 87.7% vs 91.6%, P=0.0053). Patients with low adherence compared to those with moderate or high adherence had higher BP values and worse BP control according to ESC guideline and according to the treating physician’s assessment (SBP 137.9±13.9 vs 133.4±14.5 mmHg, DBP 81.8±9.6 vs 78.3±9.6 mmHg, BP control according to ESC guideline 40.8% vs 52.2%, BP control according to investigator 87.9% vs 93.4%, for all comparisons P<0.0001). BP was higher in women than in men (136.2±14.28 vs 134.9±14.24 mmHg, P=0.0255), and BP control was achieved in 47.4% of men and 45.7% of women (P=0.4032). In logistic regression analyses, low adherence (MMAS-8 <6) was strongly associated with poor BP control, whereas a history of myocardial infarction was associated with better BP control (P<0.0001). An association with poor BP control was also found for depression (P=0.0211), renal disease (P=0.0065), and FDC antihypertensive treatment (P=0.0062). The data are given in Table 1 and Figure 1A. The comparisons of SBP in the six subgroups with low, moderate, and high adherence with and without depression are depicted in Figure 2A and indicate that SBP is related to both parameters. The results for DBP were comparable (not shown).
Figure 2

(A) SBP in patients with low, moderate, and high adherence with and without depression. (B) LDL-C levels in patients with low, moderate, and high adherence with and without depression.

Notes: (A) Low adherence: depression vs no depression: P=0.0007, moderate adherence: depression vs no depression: P=0.0978, high adherence: depression vs no depression: P=0.2765; depression: low vs moderate adherence: P=0.0015, moderate vs high adherence: P=0.6904, no depression: low vs moderate adherence: P<0.0001, moderate vs high adherence: P=0.8798. (B) Low adherence: depression vs no depression: P=0.9571, moderate adherence: depression vs no depression: P=0.2460, high adherence: depression vs no depression: P=0.1827; depression: low vs moderate adherence: P=0.0224, moderate vs high adherence: P=0.8997, no depression: low vs moderate adherence: P<0.0001, moderate vs high adherence: P=0.6721. MMAS-8, <6: low adherence; MMAS-8, 6–7: moderate adherence; MMAS-8, 8: high adherence.

Abbreviations: LDL-C, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol; MMAS-8, Morisky Medication Adherence Scale-8; SBP, systolic blood pressure.

Lipid-lowering medication, serum lipid levels, and LDL-C control

Mean total cholesterol was 193.9±52.6 mg/dL, LDL-C was 112.3±40.8 mg/dL, HDL-C was 54.1±29.2 mg/dL, and triglycerides were 148.6±93.7 mg/dL. LDL-C control was achieved in 13.9% and 75.8% according to ESC guideline and investigator, respectively (P<0.0001). The mean score of the MMAS-8 regarding lipid-lowering medication was 5.6±2.3. Patients with depression were characterized by significantly higher LDL-C levels compared to patients without depression (116.4±42.0 vs 111.5±40.5 mg/dL, P=0.0238) and had a lower probability of achieving LDL-C control according to ESC guideline (10.4% vs 14.6%, P=0.0114). LDL-C control as reported by the treating physician was not different between the groups (78.4% vs 75.3%, P=0.1269). In addition, triglycerides were significantly higher in patients with depression (161.2±93.8 vs 146.1±93.5 mg/dL, P=0.0032). The proportion of patients taking statins, ezetimibe, or other lipid-lowering medication was comparable. Patients with low adherence to lipid-lowering medication showed significantly higher LDL-C levels compared to patients with moderate or high adherence (120.8±42.4 vs 105.5±38.3 mg/dL, P<0.0001). A smaller proportion of patients with low adherence achieved LDL-C control (LDL-C control according to ESC guideline 10.1% vs 16.9% P<0.0001, LDL-C control according to investigator 72.4% vs 78.4%, P=0.0001). Patients with low adherence had higher levels of triglycerides (162.8±94.4 vs 136.6±90.8, P<0.0001). The proportion of patients taking statins, ezetimibe, or other lipid-lowering medication was comparable. Women had higher LDL-C levels than men (120.3±43.6 vs 109.1±38.86 mg/dL, P<0.0001), whereas in men triglycerides were higher (152.9±97.15 vs 142±86.7 mg/dL, P=0.0081) and HDL-C was lower (51.4±28.57 vs 57.9±24.45 mg/dL, P<0.0001). LDL-C control according to guideline was documented in 15.5% of men and 10.8% of women (P=0.0006). Logistic regression revealed that male sex (P=0.0006), stroke (P=0.0014), and statin/ezetimibe single-pill combination treatment (P=0.0005) were associated with better LDL-C control, whereas depression (P=0.0452), renal disease (P=0.0071), and low adherence (MMAS-8 <6, P=0.0015) were associated with worse LDL-C control. The data are given in Table 2 and Figure 1B.
Table 2

Serum lipid levels, LDL-C control, and lipid-lowering medication for the total population, patients with vs without depression, and patients with low vs moderate or high adherence to lipid-lowering medication

Total N=3,188Depression n=512No depression n=2,676P-value, depression vs no depressionLow adherence (MMAS-8, <6) n=1,273Moderate or high adherence (MMAS-8, 6–8) n=1,757P-value low vs moderate or high adherence
Total cholesterol193.9±52.6203.5±52.4192.0±52.5<0.0001206.4±52.9184.5±51.0<0.0001
LDL-C112.3±40.8116.4±42.0111.5±40.50.0238120.8±42.4105.5±38.3<0.0001
Triglycerides148.6±93.7161.2±93.8146.1±93.50.0032162.8±94.4136.6±90.8<0.0001
HDL-C51.1±29.253.3±20.354.3±30.70.449553.8±31.953.7±21.00.9248
LDL-C controlled according to investigator (%)75.878.475.30.126972.478.40.0001
LDL-C controlled according to ESC guideline (%)13.910.414.60.011410.116.9<0.0001
Lipid-lowering medication
Statin (%)80.878.181.30.367781.180.90.2407
Statin/ezetimibe FDC (%)12.113.911.70.123311.012.80.219
Others (%)4.54.44.60.90924.74.10.3812
Ezetimibe (%)2.63.62.40.11213.12.20.0961

Note: Values are in milligram per deciliter and presented as mean ± SD if not stated otherwise.

Abbreviations: ESC, European Society of Cardiology; FDC, fixed-dose combination; HDL-C, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol; LDL-C, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol; MMAS-8, Morisky Medication Adherence Scale-8.

The comparisons of LDL-C levels in the six subgroups with low, moderate, and high adherence with and without depression are depicted in Figure 2B and indicate that serum LDL-C levels are related to both parameters.

Comparison of adherence to BP- vs lipid-lowering medication

The results of the MMAS-8 scores for BP- and lipid-lowering medication were compared and showed a significant correlation (Figure 3, Spearman’s correlation coefficient 0.92059, P<0.0001).
Figure 3

Correlation of MMAS-8 results for lipid- and BP-lowering medication.

Note: Spearman’s correlation coefficient 0.92059, P<0.0001.

Abbreviations: BP, blood pressure; MMAS-8, Morisky Medication Adherence Scale-8.

Discussion

This study reports three important findings. The data demonstrate that low self-reported medication adherence is strongly associated with insufficient LDL-C and BP control. The information on medication adherence can be reliably obtained in daily practice using the MMAS-8 questionnaire. Second, the clinical diagnosis of depression is associated with low LDL-C and BP target attainment. Low adherence and depression identify individuals among the cardiovascular high-risk population who might benefit from intensified care. Third, adherence to lipid-lowering medication correlates with adherence to BP-lowering medication. This information extends previous data from the literature10,11,16,17,25 on medication adherence to the situation in lipid lowering, which is closely associated with BP control. Control of LDL-C as recommended by the current ESC/EAS guideline4 was achieved in only 13.9% of the patients in this study. The poor LDL-C control is in line with previous reports of LDL-C goal attainment in USA and in Europe, which ranges between 20% and 30%.5,7,26–28 As shown recently, potentially 73.9% of all patients at very high risk are able to reach the LDL-C goal of <70 mg/dL if high-dose statins and ezetimibe are used at appropriate doses.29 Similarly, the ESC/ESH BP targets are achieved in only 50%–60% of the patients in USA and in Europe.7,23,30,31 Several reasons for the underutilization of well-proven therapies in daily practice have been discussed. One frequent reason for not prescribing or up-titrating statins is worries about potential side effects, although observed side effects occur infrequently and have been shown not to outweigh the beneficial effects.32–34 In addition, our data show a lack of awareness regarding the guideline-recommended target values, reflected in our study by the treating physician’s self-reported assessment of LDL-C control being achieved in 75.8% of the patients. Similarly, BP control was thought to be achieved in 90.9% of the patients when judged by treating physician as compared to 47.2% according to the current ESC/ESH guideline. The discrepancy in BP control between guideline recommendation and physicians’ assessment is not of the same magnitude compared to the assessment of LDL-C control, indicating a different grade of awareness and implementation of the guideline recommendations. This is further underpinned by the fact that poor BP control was much stronger associated with poor medication adherence as patient-related factor than poor LDL-C control was, indicating that physicians’ inertia is one main factor in poor LDL-C control. This interesting and novel finding indicates an important opportunity for future educational activities. In light of revised BP targets, the number of patients with controlled hypertension may become even worse.35,36 It is indeed essential to stress the importance of BP lowering to reduce major cardiovascular end points and mortality. Based on a meta-analysis including more than 600,000 patients, an office BP reduction of 10 mmHg is associated with an RR reduction in CAD by 17%, stroke by 27%, heart failure by 27%, and mortality by 13%, respectively.37 There are different methods for assessing adherence such as electronic measures, pharmacy refills, plasma/urine drug and/or metabolite concentrations, pill counts, and self-report.38 Importantly, differences in the estimated adherence depend on the method used.39 The MMAS-8 self-reported questionnaire has the advantage of being relatively quickly to answer, easily applicable, and low cost for use in daily practice.40,41 In our study, patients with low adherence to lipid-lowering medication were younger than those with moderate or high adherence. This is in line with studies in patients with chronic heart failure and hypertension.25,42 Furthermore, patients with low adherence had more CVD risk factors such as smoking, hypercholesterolemia, peripheral vascular disease, and positive family history of CAD. Therefore, these young patients are at high risk for the development and progression of CVD with a high potential for improvements in primary and secondary prevention by improved adherence. The abovementioned findings support the concept of the “healthy adherer effect”, meaning that high medication adherence is a surrogate marker for overall healthy behavior.43,44 Our results confirm that low adherence correlates with fewer patients reaching LDL-C control.45 In our study, the rates of goal attainment did not differ significantly between moderate and high adherence, indicating that there is a certain extent of adherence which should not be undercut to reach a treatment goal. A similar result was reported by Chi et al.15 A possible explanation is that LDL-C lowering can still occur when doses are missed by patients with moderate adherence. Low adherence to lipid-lowering medication not only did result in worse LDL-C control but also was associated with insufficient BP control in patients treated with antihypertensive drugs, further increasing cardiovascular risk. Our study suggests that adherence to BP-lowering medication may predict the intake of lipid-lowering medication. This finding has very important practical implications. Although several studies have proved that FDCs reduce BP to a greater extent compared to the components given separately,46–48 this type of information is missing for lipid-lowering medications, eg, statin–ezetimibe combinations. The observed robust correlation of the MMAS-8 questionnaires for lipid- and BP-lowering medication implies that the data on the potential benefit of FDCs may be extrapolated from BP to lipid lowering. Another important finding of our study is that patients with past or present depression are less likely to achieve the guideline-recommended LDL-C goal.22,49 Patients with depression had more risk factors for CVD such as smoking or past stroke and are therefore at even higher risk for progressive CVD. Noteworthy, the treating physician’s assessment of LDL-C control did not differ between patients with vs without depression in contrast to the goal attainment according to guideline, which was significantly worse in patients with depression. One might suggest that the symptoms attributable to depression may have been dominant in the patients’ treatment, potentially distracting from somatic problems. Patients with depression may benefit from the treatment of depression by an improvement in medication adherence.50 Our study shows a higher prevalence of depression in women (23.9% vs 11.4% in men). Although depression was strongly associated with adherence, sex was no predictor of poor adherence. This is further underpinned by a comparable proportion of men and women with achieved BP control, which was strongly associated with adherence. LDL-C control was worse in women. Poor LDL-C control in women seems to be driven by depression rather than poor adherence, suggesting that especially in women LDL-C is an underappreciated risk factor prone to physicians’ inertia.

Limitations

Our study has some limitations. The cross-sectional study design carries limited possibilities for exploring causal relationships and does not provide clinical follow-up. The consecutive inclusion of the patients was not supervised; therefore, selection bias was possible. Depression was not diagnosed using special questionnaires or diagnostic criteria, but was assessed according to the treating physician’s diagnosis; however, this reflects the situation in daily practice. Similarly, the self-reported MMAS-8 is less precise and overestimates adherence compared to electronic monitoring, pharmacy claims, or refill data or by measuring drug/metabolite levels in the blood and/or urine;38 however, the advantage of the method is the feasibility and practicality in daily practice that we documented in our study.

Conclusion

The majority of patients at high cardiovascular risk did not reach the guideline-recommended LDL-C und BP goals. Low adherence and the diagnosis of depression identified individuals at risk for reduced LDL-C and BP control who are likely to benefit from intensified care. Self-reported medication adherence can be easily obtained in daily practice.
  47 in total

Review 1.  Adherence to medication.

Authors:  Lars Osterberg; Terrence Blaschke
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2005-08-04       Impact factor: 91.245

Review 2.  Compliance, safety, and effectiveness of fixed-dose combinations of antihypertensive agents: a meta-analysis.

Authors:  Ajay K Gupta; Shazia Arshad; Neil R Poulter
Journal:  Hypertension       Date:  2009-12-21       Impact factor: 10.190

3.  Depression is a risk factor for noncompliance with medical treatment: meta-analysis of the effects of anxiety and depression on patient adherence.

Authors:  M R DiMatteo; H S Lepper; T W Croghan
Journal:  Arch Intern Med       Date:  2000-07-24

4.  Efficacy and safety of cholesterol-lowering treatment: prospective meta-analysis of data from 90,056 participants in 14 randomised trials of statins.

Authors:  C Baigent; A Keech; P M Kearney; L Blackwell; G Buck; C Pollicino; A Kirby; T Sourjina; R Peto; R Collins; R Simes
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2005-09-27       Impact factor: 79.321

5.  Discontinuation of statin therapy following an acute myocardial infarction: a population-based study.

Authors:  Stella S Daskalopoulou; Joseph A C Delaney; Kristian B Filion; James M Brophy; Nancy E Mayo; Samy Suissa
Journal:  Eur Heart J       Date:  2008-07-29       Impact factor: 29.983

Review 6.  Depression, anxiety, and the cardiovascular system: the cardiologist's perspective.

Authors:  D S Sheps; D Sheffield
Journal:  J Clin Psychiatry       Date:  2001       Impact factor: 4.384

7.  Factors associated with drug adherence and blood pressure control in patients with hypertension.

Authors:  Andrew B Morris; Jingjin Li; Kurt Kroenke; Tina E Bruner-England; Jim M Young; Michael D Murray
Journal:  Pharmacotherapy       Date:  2006-04       Impact factor: 4.705

8.  Adherence to antihypertensive medications and cardiovascular morbidity among newly diagnosed hypertensive patients.

Authors:  Giampiero Mazzaglia; Ettore Ambrosioni; Marianna Alacqua; Alessandro Filippi; Emiliano Sessa; Vincenzo Immordino; Claudio Borghi; Ovidio Brignoli; Achille P Caputi; Claudio Cricelli; Lorenzo G Mantovani
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2009-10-05       Impact factor: 29.690

9.  Depression and coronary artery disease: the association, mechanisms, and therapeutic implications.

Authors:  Imran Shuja Khawaja; Joseph J Westermeyer; Prashant Gajwani; Robert E Feinstein
Journal:  Psychiatry (Edgmont)       Date:  2009-01

10.  Predictive validity of a medication adherence measure in an outpatient setting.

Authors:  Donald E Morisky; Alfonso Ang; Marie Krousel-Wood; Harry J Ward
Journal:  J Clin Hypertens (Greenwich)       Date:  2008-05       Impact factor: 2.885

View more
  7 in total

Review 1.  New Insights in the Control of Low-Density Lipoprotein Cholesterol to Prevent Cardiovascular Disease.

Authors:  Julius L Katzmann; Ulrich Laufs
Journal:  Curr Cardiol Rep       Date:  2019-06-21       Impact factor: 2.931

Review 2.  [Update on PCSK9 inhibition].

Authors:  Julius L Katzmann; Florian Custodis; Stephan H Schirmer; Ulrich Laufs
Journal:  Herz       Date:  2022-04-21       Impact factor: 1.443

Review 3.  [Modern lipid-lowering drugs-A means to counter the problem of undertreatment?]

Authors:  Julius L Katzmann; Ulrich Laufs
Journal:  Internist (Berl)       Date:  2022-04-07       Impact factor: 0.743

4.  Trends in Ezetimibe Prescriptions as Monotherapy or Fixed-Dose Combination in Germany 2012-2021.

Authors:  Julius L Katzmann; Marita Kieble; Salka Enners; Michael Böhm; Felix Mahfoud; Ulrich Laufs; Martin Schulz
Journal:  Front Cardiovasc Med       Date:  2022-06-13

5.  Long-Term Benefit and Withdrawal Effect of Statins After Percutaneous Coronary Intervention: A Nationwide Population-Based Cohort Study.

Authors:  Sang Hoon Kim; Jinkwon Kim; Hye Yun Jeong; So-Young Lee
Journal:  Patient Prefer Adherence       Date:  2020-04-05       Impact factor: 2.711

6.  Achievement of European Society of Cardiology/European Atherosclerosis Society lipid targets in very high-risk patients: Influence of depression and sex.

Authors:  Elizabeth A Ellins; Daniel E Harris; Arron Lacey; Ashley Akbari; Fatemeh Torabi; Dave Smith; Geraint Jenkins; Daniel Obaid; Alex Chase; Ann John; Michael B Gravenor; Julian P Halcox
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2022-02-25       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  Non-statin lipid-lowering therapy over time in very-high-risk patients: effectiveness of fixed-dose statin/ezetimibe compared to separate pill combination on LDL-C.

Authors:  Julius L Katzmann; Francesc Sorio-Vilela; Eugen Dornstauder; Uwe Fraas; Timo Smieszek; Sofia Zappacosta; Ulrich Laufs
Journal:  Clin Res Cardiol       Date:  2020-09-19       Impact factor: 5.460

  7 in total

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