Literature DB >> 31814712

Fixed Versus Free Combinations Of Antihypertensive Drugs: Analyses Of Real-World Data Of Persistence With Therapy In Italy.

Daria Putignano1, Valentina Orlando1, Valeria Marina Monetti1, Gaetano Piccinocchi2, Umberto Maria Musazzi3, Roberto Piccinocchi4, Paola Minghetti3, Enrica Menditto1.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To analyse the pattern of use and cost of antihypertensive drugs in new users in an Italian population, and explore the patient/treatment factors associated with the risk of therapy discontinuation. PATIENTS AND METHODS: In this retrospective study, information was collected from a population-based electronic primary-care database. Persistence with medication use 1 year from therapy initiation was evaluated for each user using the gap method. Each new user was classified according to his/her pattern of use as: "continuer", "discontinuer" "switching" or "add-on". A Cox regression model was used to analyse the factors influencing therapy discontinuation. Primary-care costs comprised specialists' visits, diagnostic procedures and pharmacologic therapies.
RESULTS: Among 14,999 subjects included in persistence analyses, 55.1% of cases initially started on monotherapy were classified as discontinuers vs 36.5% of cases taking combination therapy (42.3% vs 32.7%, respectively, for free and fixed combinations, P < 0.01). Old age, high cardiovascular risk and being in receipt of fixed-combination therapy were associated with greater persistence. Overall, the primary-care cost/person/year of hypertension management was ~€95.3 (IQR, 144.9). The monotherapy cost was €88 per patient (IQR, 132.9), and that for combination therapy was €151±148.3. The median cost/patient with a fixed combination was lower than that for a free combination (€98.4 (IQR, 155.3) and €154.9 (IQR, 182.6), respectively).
CONCLUSION: The initial type of therapy prescribed influences persistence. Prescribing fixed combinations might be a good choice as initial therapy.
© 2019 Putignano et al.

Entities:  

Keywords:  adherence; drug-utilization; fixed combination; hypertension

Year:  2019        PMID: 31814712      PMCID: PMC6858287          DOI: 10.2147/PPA.S225444

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


Introduction

Hypertension affects 31.1% of the global population (1.4 billion people) and results in 9.4 million deaths every year.1,2 Pharmacologic treatment can be very successful with the potential to reduce blood pressure (BP) to recommended levels in almost all patients (<140/90 mmHg or <130/80 mmHg for patients with diabetes mellitus or chronic kidney disease). Monotherapy fails to control BP in ~50% of patients. Hence, national and international guidelines suggest starting therapy with combinations of more than one antihypertensive drug, which increases the complexity of the therapeutic regimen.3 Therapy using a combination of antihypertensive drugs offers an advantage over monotherapy (at least in part) due to the: (i) different sites of action of each drug; (ii) lower risk of adverse events. It is important for patients to take their medications appropriately and continue to take them long term.4 However, poor adherence and persistence in taking medications are common problems in hypertensive patients, partly because of complex treatment regimens and high pill burdens. These factors result in sustained periods of uncontrolled hypertension, leading to disease progression and the associated economic consequences. Various strategies have been implemented to improve compliance with drug regimens. A combination of two pharmacologic agents in a single medicinal product has been available for hypertension therapy since the mid-1960s. Nowadays, numerous fixed-dose combinations (hereafter termed “fixed combinations”) are available for the treatment of hypertension and other chronic diseases with high risks for morbidity and mortality.5,6 In recent years, fixed combinations have acquired an important role in hypertension management.7–9 Guidelines set in 2018 by the European Society of Hypertension (ESH)/European Society of Cardiology (ESC) stated that fixed combinations can be used as first as well as second-line therapies to achieve the recommended BP target.3 More than 27 fixed combinations are available for daily use in Italy. Of these, 18 consist of an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor (ACEI) and a diuretic or calcium-channel blocker (CCB); 9 consist of an angiotensin-receptor blocker (ARB) and a diuretic or a CCB. Data on pharmacy claims have been suggested to be powerful tools to analyze compliance with antihypertensive therapy.10,11 However, studies that evaluate the therapeutic approach to hypertension in primary care in Italy are lacking. We investigated the prescription patterns for hypertensive patients in a real-world practice and whether drug combinations improve persistence with drug therapy. Furthermore, we discussed some aspects related to legal authorization of fixed combinations.

Materials And Methods

Study Design And Data Sources

This was a retrospective cohort study on the pattern of use of antihypertensive drugs in primary-care settings in the Campania region of southern Italy. The study was carried out according to Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) guidelines. Data were retrieved from a population-based database for general practitioners (COMEGEN Social Cooperative Society) which oversees ~190,000 subjects.12 All participating general practitioners use the same software to record data during their daily practice, and receive formal and periodic training for data entry (Millewin; Millenium Dedalus, Florence Italy). For the present study, data were retrieved using an encrypted patient code linking demographic details with medical diagnoses, drug prescriptions, diagnostic tests (with their relevant values) and date of death. All diagnoses were coded according to the International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM). Drugs were coded according to the Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical (ATC) Classification System (ATC/Defined Daily Doses methodology). The influence of dosage forms was not the focus of our study. The term “pill”, even though it is not a standard term employed by the European Directorate for the Quality of Medicines, was used to identify the solid oral dosage forms used by patients regardless the type of pharmaceutical dosage form (e.g., tablets, capsules) or release profile (e.g., immediate, prolonged).13 The quality characteristics of this data source have been described.14 COMEGEN has been used to provide drug-utilization information and to undertake studies.15–19 This automated system is anonymous so, according to the Italian Data Protection Authority, neither Ethical Committee approval nor informed consent were required for our study.20 Our research protocol adhered to the tenets of the Declaration of Helsinki and its amendments.

Case Definitions

All patients with at least one prescription of an antihypertensive drug were defined as “users” or “cases”. Antihypertensive drugs were classified as belonging to C03 (diuretics), C07 (beta-blockers), C08 (CCBs), C09 (agents acting on the renin–angiotensin system) groups of the ATC Classification System. The target population was classified into two groups: “prevalent” cases and “incident” cases (cases with no antihypertensive prescriptions during the 365 previous days). The index date was the date of the first prescription. The study period was from 1 January 2010 to 31 December 2015. The year 2010 was the reference for selecting incident cases with an index prescription in 2011. 2011–2014 was the “recruitment” period of the study population (identification of prevalent cases and incident cases). The year 2015 was used to follow-up incident cases with an index prescription in 2014.

Outcomes

The first prescriptions for incident cases were analyzed. To identify the first-line therapeutic approach, the number and type of antihypertensive drugs were recorded, and incident cases in monotherapy and combination therapy were identified. That is: cases in monotherapy receiving a prescription of only one drug, including diuretics (ATC: C03), beta-blockers (ATC: C07), CCBs (ATC: C08), ACEIs (ATC: C09AA), angiotensin II receptor antagonists (ATC: C09CA); cases in fixed-combination therapy receiving products belonging to C07BB, C07CB, C07FB, C09BA, C09BB, C09DA, or C09DB ATC subgroups (); cases in free-combination therapy receiving two drugs belonging to C03 and/or C07 and/or C08 and/or C09AA and/or C09CA ATC groups; cases in “multiple mix” combinations receiving two or more fixed combinations belonging to C09BA, C09BB, C09DA or C09DB ATC subgroups and/or and free combinations of two or more drugs belonging to C03 and/or C07 and/or C08 and/or C09AA and/or C09CA ATC groups. Concomitant therapy with anti-diabetes agents (ATC: A10), lipid‐lowering drugs (ATC: C10), antiplatelets (ATC: B01AC) and hospitalizations for the diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction (ICD 9 CM: 410–414), congestive heart failure (ICD 9CM: 428) and cerebrovascular disease (ICD 9 CM: 430–438) were analyzed. Medication Persistence 1 year after therapy initiation was evaluated according to the International Society of Pharmacoeconomics and Outcome Research definition21 Recently, the European Society of Patient Adherence and Compliance developed a Taxonomy of Adherence. This defines medication adherence “as the process by which patients take their medication as prescribed” and subdivides adherence into three essential elements to capture the sequence of events that must occur for a patient to experience the optimal benefit from his/her prescribed treatment regimen: initiation, implementation, and discontinuation. The present study focused on the discontinuation phase (medication persistence)22 Medication persistence was assessed using the gap method. A gap was defined as the period during which no medication is available to the patient. A user of antihypertensive drugs was considered to be a “discontinuer” if a gap of >60 days between two prescriptions was recorded. The number of days of available medication (days of therapy) was estimated based on the pill number. These assumptions are based on studies undertaken on antihypertensive drugs in an identical setting.23,24 Only the number of days of therapy from the prescription dispensed most recently was used to evaluate the gap. Subjects were censored if the gap allowed was exceeded without purchasing a new prescription or upon reaching the end of the follow-up period (365 days after the index date). As described by Halpern and colleagues25 persistence in the separated-drugs cohort was assessed as “therapy persistence” (i.e., continuation with any antihypertensive medication was sufficient to be considered as persistent). Each incident user was classified according to his/her pattern of use as: “continuer”, “discontinuer”, “switching” or “add-on”. A “spot user” (only one prescription during the study period) and multiple mix (due to the complexity of the regimen) were excluded from the analysis of persistence.

Cost Analyses

Cost analyses were carried out on incident cases. The methodology used for cost assessment was bottom–up because this methodology values each cost component for an individual patient. This approach enabled statistical analyses aimed at the detection of cost differences among patients and among cost components. For each type of therapy, primary-care costs were expressed as the cost of hypertension management per person year of follow-up. They included specialists’ visits, diagnostic procedures, laboratory costs, and pharmacologic therapies quantified according to the Italian National Health Service (NHS) by means of charges pertaining in 2015. Cost analyses were conducted from the perspective of the third-party payer, the NHS which, in Italy is in charge of financing and providing healthcare services. Costs are expressed in terms of median patient cost/year, and interquartile range (IQR), stratified by the first-line approach (monotherapy; free combination; fixed combination). The total cost was computed as the sum of the different cost items (drugs, visits, procedures). Values were expressed in Euros at the time of the analyses.

Statistical Analyses

Data are the mean ± standard deviation for continuous variables or as absolute and relative frequencies for categorical variables. The chi-square test and analysis of variance were undertaken to determine the difference between categorical and continuous variables. Cox regression models estimated the likelihood of non-persistence over 1 year after therapy initiation, and evaluated the factors influencing the probability of discontinuation. Hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% confidence intervals (95%CIs) were calculated to assess crude and adjusted associations for all covariates. Cost data were skewed, and the nonparametric Kruskal–Wallis test was used to examine significant differences in median values across different therapy categories. Data management was undertaken with SQL server v2018 (Microsoft, Redmond, WA, USA). Analyses were carried out using SPSS v17.1 (IBM, Armonk, NY USA). P < 0.05 was considered significant.

Results

During the study period, 46,482 subjects were identified as chronic users of antihypertensive drugs (prevalent cases). Overall, 18,504 (44.8% male) were incident cases. shows the main characteristics of the cohort. For the overall cohort, the mean BP was 143±18.7/87±11.1 mmHg. Also, 4474 subjects (24.2% of incident cases) were also taking lipid‐lowering drugs and 4027 (21.8% of incident cases) were also taking antiplatelets. The most used first-line therapeutic approach was monotherapy (67.0% of subjects): 31.4% of cases in monotherapy began with an ACEI, 25.8% with beta-blockers, 18.1% with diuretics and 24.7% with ARBs or CCBs. Among subjects starting combination therapy, fixed combinations were the most used (60.0%). During the 12 months after the index prescription, 51.8% of incident cases, of the total cohort, discontinued the initial treatment, 19.3% remained with the same antihypertensive drug, 20.2% switched to another antihypertensive drug, and 8.6% received prescriptions for a new drug in addition to the initial therapy (). We found that 14,999 subjects (excluding spot therapy and multiple-mix therapy) were included in the persistence analysis. Overall, 55.1% of cases with initial monotherapy were classified as discontinuers vs 36.5% of cases in combination therapy (p < 0.001). Among subjects starting with combination therapy, the highest percentage of discontinuers was for free combinations (42.3%) compared with fixed combinations (32.7%) (p < 0.01) (Figure 1).
Figure 1

Pattern of persistence with monotherapy, fixed dose and free combination (prevalence, 95%CI).

Pattern of persistence with monotherapy, fixed dose and free combination (prevalence, 95%CI). Cox regression analysis () shows that subjects in combination therapy were less likely to be non-persistent compared with those in monotherapy. In particular, subjects in free-combination therapy were ~17% less likely to have a period of discontinuation, and subjects in fixed-combination therapy were ~43% less likely to be non-persistent (free combination: HR, 0.83 [95%CI 0.77–0.90]; fixed combination: 0.57, 0.54–0.61). With increasing age, the risk of non-persistent therapies increased (40–49 years: HR, 0.74 [95%CI 0.69–0.80]; 50–59 years: 0.71, 0.66–0.76; 60–69 years: 0.64, 0.59–0.69; 70–79 years: 0.62, 0.57–0.67; 80 years: 0.68, 0.62–0.75); concomitant treatment with lipid‐lowering drugs and/or antiplatelet therapy decreased the risk of non-persistence with therapy (0.83, 0.78–0.88; 0.75, 0.71–0.80) (). Overall, the primary-care costs per person per year of hypertension management were estimated to be €95.3 (IQR, 144.9). On average, monotherapy cost €88 per patient (IQR, 132.9), whereas combination therapy cost €151±148.3. The median cost per patient with a fixed combination was lower than that of a patient with a free combination, €98.4 (IQR, 155.3) and €154.9 (IQR, 182.6), respectively. Figure 2 shows median costs stratified by persistence patterns. Stratification of total costs, according to the pattern of persistence and the prescribed combination (fixed vs free), showed that patients changing therapy in the follow-up period (add-on and switchers) had the highest direct costs for both combinations, followed by the continuers for the fixed combination and discontinuers for the free combination.
Figure 2

Annual primary-care costs (median and IQR) by drug cohort and persistence category.

Annual primary-care costs (median and IQR) by drug cohort and persistence category.

Discussion

This retrospective cohort study elicited several important findings. ESH/ESC 2018 guidelines emphasize that monotherapy can reduce BP values efficaciously in a limited number of patients, and that most of them require the association of at least two drugs to achieve BP control.3 Our results showed that monotherapy was the most used first-line therapeutic approach (72.5% of incident cases). We found that 27.5% of incident cases were in combination therapy, and this was probably due to excessive confidence in the efficacy of monotherapy, with consequent scarce and insufficient use of combination therapy in the hypertensive population.26 In the present study, ACEIs were the most used drugs in monotherapy, a finding that is consistent with the literature.27 Indeed, studies have suggested that patients initiated on ACEIs and beta-blockers have slightly better BP control.28 We showed that 50.0% of the study population discontinued their initial treatment within 1 year, whereas 22% of patients switched to another drug class during the same period. Suboptimal adherence to medication-taking is frequent in real-world practices: usually, ~50% of all prescribed medications for chronic diseases are not taken as prescribed.29,30 Focusing research on adherence to treatment is very much a research focus currently.31,32 The factors underlying the lack of adherence to therapy are many and varied.33,34 They are related to physicians’ behavior or to the willingness of the patients to follow the prescriptions or to the characteristics of the drugs (which are sometimes impediments to correct long-term treatment).35,36 With regard to factors related to patients, concerns about medications and their adverse effects should be noted, as well as a lack of knowledge of their own disease and the presence of comorbidities, which are accentuated in the presence of socio-economic and psychological/cognitive limitations.37–41 Moreover, factors related to therapy, such as complexity and multiple medications, must be taken into account. We showed that patients taking combination therapy were less likely to be non-persistent compared with those in monotherapy. These results are in accordance with data from other studies carried out with the same methodology in Italian settings.42,43 Interestingly, among subjects taking combination therapy, a higher percentage of subjects in free combination were discontinuers (42.3%) compared with those in fixed combination (32.7%) (P < 0.01). The persistence of patients with regard to antihypertensive therapy may decrease with an increasing number of drugs in multiple pill regimens. Furthermore, better persistence has been associated with old age and greater cardiovascular risk. The most persistent subjects were those who received antiplatelets and/or lipid‐lowering drugs together with antihypertensive agents. That is, greater persistence seems to be associated with greater awareness of the risks related to the disease. Fixed combinations have been developed to reduce the pill burden for hypertensive patients. According to the European regulatory framework, a fixed combination is a medicinal product which contains at least two active substances combined to improve the therapeutic efficacy or safety profiles in comparison with monotherapy44 In this context, fixed combinations can be classified according to three therapeutic goals: (a) add-on treatment of patients whose disease is not controlled by existing therapies; (b) substitution therapies in monitored patients to simplify the multiple-drug daily regimen; (c) initial combination therapies for treatment-naïve patients. If the drug substances contained in a fixed combination are not new, an abridged (or hybrid) application can be followed to achieve the marketing authorization. In this light, the authorization dossier is simplified. A full characterization of physicochemical and technologic properties must be provided to support the quality of the fixed combination. However, the preclinical and clinical data required by regulatory agencies vary based on the complexity of assessment of the efficacy–safety balance of the new drug product (in addition to the established scientific and clinical knowledge). Indeed, according to article 10b of Directive 2001/83/EC, in the case of a fixed combination for add-on treatments or treatments containing drug substances already present in authorized medicinal products but not hitherto used in combination for therapeutic purposes (e.g., initial combination therapies), the applicant must include in the dossier the results of preclinical or clinical studies to support the pharmacologic and medical rationale of the combination and to determine the benefit–risk balance on the basis of the desired therapeutic effect. In the case of add-on treatment, the superiority of fixed combinations compared with monotherapies should be demonstrated. However, preclinical and clinical studies on individual drug substances should not be provided because data can be derived from already authorized medicinal products. Conversely, if the drug substances are already being used in clinical practice as free-combination or fixed-combination products (e.g., substitution therapies), the preclinical and clinical studies required may be simplified significantly and based on demonstration of therapeutic equivalence. Indeed, bioequivalence studies vs the free-combination or fixed-combination originator can be accepted. Such studies are fundamental to support substitution of monotherapies with fixed combinations. Comparative efficacy studies of treatment strategies using antihypertensive therapeutic classes in hypertension control in primary care showed that patients beginning antihypertensive therapy with a fixed combination had significantly greater reductions in BP than patients initiated on a free combination or monotherapy.34 By reducing the overall pill burden and simplifying medication regimens, fixed combinations have been shown to improve medication compliance and medication persistence in several studies.45–51 A recent retrospective cohort study carried out in Canada showed that patients taking a fixed combination had greater rates of medication adherence than the free-combination group (70% vs 42%, P < 0.01) and a significantly lower risk of composite clinical outcomes, which may have been related to better adherence to therapy.44 We also evaluated the primary-care costs of fixed and free combinations. After 12-month follow-up, the fixed-combination group had an annual mean cost per patient lower than free combinations. Furthermore, for both drug combinations, patient-changing therapy was the most expensive. This reduction in healthcare costs is consistent with the results observed in other reports. In a meta-analysis comparing annual healthcare costs of fixed vs free equivalent combination regimens for hypertension treatment, Sherrill et al estimated a $2039 reduction in all-cause total costs and a $709 reduction in hypertension- and cardiovascular-related costs in the fixed-combination group.52 Combination therapy with a fixed combination may be less costly than if the drugs are administered separately. Furthermore, recently many fixed combinations have become available as generic formulations in Italy, and this may encourage the use of the drugs used in fixed combinations.

Strengths And Limitations Of Our Study

Our study was conducted in >170,000 subjects and covered a 5-year period. Only subjects living in the Campania region and receiving prescriptions from general practitioners belonging to the COMEGEN Medical Association were included in analyses, so prescribing patterns may not be fully representative of those in Italy. For assessment of persistence, patients with at least one discontinuation episode were considered to be non-persistent. However, an intrinsic limitation of retrospective analyses of databases (such as COMEGEN) is that tracking the reason for the discontinuation is not possible, such as whether discontinuation was recommended by the clinician (e.g., a temporary suspension due to an adverse reaction). Also, pharmacy-refill records provide details only on whether patients were dispensed their medication, and do not provide details on whether patients ingested their medications. Healthcare databases can be used to support evaluation of the use of drugs in real-world practice allowing tracing (over time) of their type, mode and use. In particular, through pharmaceutical prescriptions, it was possible to trace the profiles of persistence to pharmacologic therapies. Some factors not included in our analyses, such as governmental regulation of prescribing, as well as monitoring the drug-expenditure budget of general practitioners and the pharmaceutical industry, could influence the prescriber’s choice of therapeutic regimen. In addition, it was not possible to assess the costs of hospital admission or indirect costs because such information was scarce or not available.

Conclusions

Our retrospective study presented the real-world results of different regimens for hypertension treatment. We found that use of a fixed combination improved persistence and decreased healthcare costs compared with use of free combinations. Use of a fixed combination provided an important opportunity to improve the quality of hypertension treatment. Therefore, it is reasonable for physicians, pharmacists and regulatory agencies to facilitate use of fixed combinations for patients who need to take two or more antihypertensive drugs. Nevertheless, the improvement of persistence is a complex problem requiring a multifactorial strategy, and simplification of therapy with fixed formulations is a crucial aspect.
  47 in total

Review 1.  Monotherapy versus combination therapy as first line treatment of uncomplicated arterial hypertension.

Authors:  M Ruzicka; F H Leenen
Journal:  Drugs       Date:  2001       Impact factor: 9.546

2.  Fixed-dose combination therapy in type 2 diabetes mellitus.

Authors:  Lawrence Blonde; Zinnia T San Juan; Peggy Bolton
Journal:  Endocr Pract       Date:  2014-12       Impact factor: 3.443

Review 3.  Antihypertensive Combination Treatment: State of the Art.

Authors:  M Burnier
Journal:  Curr Hypertens Rep       Date:  2015-07       Impact factor: 5.369

4.  Single-Pill Triple Fixed Dose Combination Therapy with Single Component Drug Monitoring in Treatment-Resistant Hypertension: A Pilot Study.

Authors:  Reinhold Kreutz; Jurgen Scholze; Antonios Douros
Journal:  Curr Vasc Pharmacol       Date:  2018-01-26       Impact factor: 2.719

Review 5.  Orodispersible dosage forms: biopharmaceutical improvements and regulatory requirements.

Authors:  Francesco Cilurzo; Umberto M Musazzi; Silvia Franzé; Francesca Selmin; Paola Minghetti
Journal:  Drug Discov Today       Date:  2017-10-13       Impact factor: 7.851

6.  Comparative effectiveness of antihypertensive therapeutic classes and treatment strategies in the initiation of therapy in primary care patients: a Distributed Ambulatory Research in Therapeutics Network (DARTNet) study.

Authors:  Michael R Bronsert; William G Henderson; Robert Valuck; Patrick Hosokawa; Karl Hammermeister
Journal:  J Am Board Fam Med       Date:  2013 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 2.657

Review 7.  Adherence to cardiovascular medications: lessons learned and future directions.

Authors:  Ian M Kronish; Siqin Ye
Journal:  Prog Cardiovasc Dis       Date:  2013-03-23       Impact factor: 8.194

8.  Impact of medication adherence on hospitalization risk and healthcare cost.

Authors:  Michael C Sokol; Kimberly A McGuigan; Robert R Verbrugge; Robert S Epstein
Journal:  Med Care       Date:  2005-06       Impact factor: 2.983

9.  Osteoporosis drugs in real-world clinical practice: an analysis of persistence.

Authors:  Giovanni Iolascon; Francesca Gimigliano; Valentina Orlando; Annarita Capaldo; Carolina Di Somma; Enrica Menditto
Journal:  Aging Clin Exp Res       Date:  2013-09-18       Impact factor: 3.636

Review 10.  Interventional tools to improve medication adherence: review of literature.

Authors:  Elísio Costa; Anna Giardini; Magda Savin; Enrica Menditto; Elaine Lehane; Olga Laosa; Sergio Pecorelli; Alessandro Monaco; Alessandra Marengoni
Journal:  Patient Prefer Adherence       Date:  2015-09-14       Impact factor: 2.711

View more
  2 in total

1.  Non-persistence to antihypertensive drug therapy in Lithuania.

Authors:  Indre Treciokiene; Nomeda Bratcikoviene; Jolanta Gulbinovic; Bjorn Wettermark; Katja Taxis
Journal:  Eur J Clin Pharmacol       Date:  2022-08-02       Impact factor: 3.064

Review 2.  Patient Centric Pharmaceutical Drug Product Design-The Impact on Medication Adherence.

Authors:  Enrica Menditto; Valentina Orlando; Giuseppe De Rosa; Paola Minghetti; Umberto Maria Musazzi; Caitriona Cahir; Marta Kurczewska-Michalak; Przemysław Kardas; Elísio Costa; José Manuel Sousa Lobo; Isabel F Almeida
Journal:  Pharmaceutics       Date:  2020-01-03       Impact factor: 6.321

  2 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.