| Literature DB >> 31821323 |
Andrew Vernon1, Katherine Fielding2,3, Rada Savic4, Lori Dodd5, Payam Nahid6.
Abstract
Andrew Vernon and co-authors discuss adherence to therapy and its measurement in tuberculosis treatment trials.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31821323 PMCID: PMC6903706 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002884
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Pooled mITT analysis of 3 TB treatment-shortening trials showing impact of adherence on unfavorable outcome.
| Test arms (4 months, with FQ) | Control arms (6 months, no FQ) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prescribed doses | Unfavorable | Total | Unfavorable | Total |
| 238 (18%) | 1,348 | 85 (9%) | 913 | |
| 64 (22%) | 288 | 37 (16%) | 230 | |
| 15 (47%) | 32 | 16 (37%) | 43 | |
Abbreviations: FQ, fluoroquinolones; mITT, modified intent-to-treat
Strengths and weaknesses of methods for encouraging and/or assessing adherence.
| Methods | Description | Strengths | Weaknesses |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ingestion of each medication dose is observed and recorded by an HCW at home/work. | Monitors adherence in real time; convenience for patient. | Cost | |
| Ingestion of each medication dose is observed and recorded by an HCW at the clinic. | Monitors adherence in real time; lower cost than home or work-based DOT by HCW. | Inconvenience to patient; cost to health system. | |
| Ingestion of each medication dose is observed and recorded by a designated family member. | Convenience for patient; lower cost versus DOT by health worker. | Confidence in the reports from family members; data on real-time adherence not available unless transmitted to HCW on a daily basis. | |
| Ingestion of each medication dose is videoed by patient and observed by an HCW in real time | Monitors adherence in real time; convenience for patient. | Cost (HCW review of live video; smartphone); patient and HCW acceptability. | |
| Ingestion of each medication dose is videoed by patient and sent to HCW to be viewed later | Convenience for patient. | Cost (HCW review; smartphone); patient and HCW acceptability; depending on when videos are viewed, may not monitor adherence in real time; privacy concerns. | |
| Blood sample taken to measure plasma levels of TB medications. | Direct measurement of dose ingested. | Feasibility/logistics; cost; depends on timing of blood sample relative to time of ingestion; limited time window. | |
| | Urine testing for drug metabolites (e.g., isoniazid). | Direct measurement of dose ingested. | Feasibility/logistics; cost; sensitivity may vary depending on acetylator status; limited time window. |
| Ingestible sensor embedded in TB medications. Pill interacts with gastric acid, and a signal is transmitted to adhesive monitor on patient, which in turn transmits information to smartphone. | No reliance on sample collection. | Cost; relies on patient wearing the adhesive monitor; patient acceptability. | |
| Medications placed in pill box/bottle. Opening/closing of box/bottle, a proxy for dose taken, is documented in real time via SIM card. | Monitors adherence in real time (if pill box/bottle cap transmits); low cost (relative to HCW DOT). | Pill box opening/bottle cap removal may not reflect an ingestion of dose; nonopening may not reflect noningestion of dose if medications are not stored in box/bottle. | |
| Patient sends SMS message to HCW when a dose has been ingested. | Monitors adherence in real time; low cost. | Patient needs to be familiar with text messaging; text message sent may not reflect an ingestion of dose; nonreceipt of SMS may not reflect noningestion of dose. |
a HCW observation could be replaced by face recognition and motion-detection software.
b Non–real time use of pillbox also possible where data on pill box opening/closing are downloaded at regular intervals, at a pharmacy refill, for example.
c Costs are important for all modalities; these often vary by setting or country and vary for newer technologies.
Abbreviations: DOT, directly observed therapy; HCW, healthcare worker; SIM, subscriber identity module; SMS, short message service; TB, tuberculosis