| Literature DB >> 32014839 |
Eulalia Roig1,2, Sonia Mirabet1, Mar Gomis-Pastor3,1, Jan T De Pourcq4, Irene Conejo4, Anna Feliu4, Vicens Brossa1, Laura Lopez1, Andreu Ferrero-Gregori5, Anna Barata6, M Antonia Mangues4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Medication nonadherence in heart transplant recipients (HTxR) is related to graft loss and death. mHeart is a mobile app that uses electronic patient-reported outcome measures (ePROMs) to identify and manage medication nonadherence in the outpatient heart transplant (HTx) population.Entities:
Keywords: behavioral sciences; early medical intervention; mobile health; patient satisfaction; patient-reported outcome measures; self-report; telemedicine; transplantation; treatment adherence and compliance; validation studies
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32014839 PMCID: PMC7055830 DOI: 10.2196/15957
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Mhealth Uhealth ISSN: 2291-5222 Impact factor: 4.773
Figure 1Val-mHeart study patient flowchart. Early-stage: <1.5 years from HTx; ePROMs: electronic patient-reported outcome measures; HTx: heart transplant.
Figure 2Intervention algorithm summarizing the procedures performed throughout the study period. ePROM: electronic patient-reported outcome measure; HTx: heart transplant; PROMs: patient-reported outcome measures.
Figure 3The mHeart functional layer and cloud architecture. AWS: Amazon Web Services; BI: business intelligence; HIS: hospital information system; HL7: high level-7; LOPD: the Spanish Organic Data Protection Law; WS: Web server.
mHeart platform features related to medication adherence management.
| Features | Descriptions |
| Patient drug intakes | Push text reminds patients of medication intakes on their mobile phone. |
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| Patients can accept or reject the intakes scheduled. If a patient cancels a dose, they are asked to specify their reason for doing so on a checklist. |
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| Doses taken versus the total number of doses prescribed can be tracked. A Detailed data are presented for patients and professionals in tables or graphs, including reasons for not taking medication. |
| Medication adherence ePROMsa | The ePROMs included to detect MNAb are the 1-item Haynes-Sackett questionnaire [ |
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| The professional sets up the frequency of the electronic questionnaire on the patient’s diary. |
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| Push text alerts on the phone remind the patient to perform the programmed task. |
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| Test results are shown in tables and graphs to patients and professionals directly from the HISc or the mHeart platform website. |
aePROM: electronic patient-reported outcome measure.
bMNA: medication nonadherence.
cHIS: hospital information system.
Figure 4Electronic version of the Haynes-Sackett questionnaire, including 6 additional responses by patients to aid provider understanding of their difficulties with medication adapted for use with the mHeart platform. The score is based on the item 1 response: No (adherent) or Yes (nonadherent).
Brief description of the validity properties assessed for the mHeart medication adherence electronic patient-reported outcome measures.
| Validity properties | Descriptiona |
| Content validity | The interrater agreement among an expert panel was performed to assess the following three content validity aspects. The expert panel comprised 14 health professionals, including 3 nurses, 7 cardiologists, and 4 clinical pharmacists. The suitability of the questionnaires proposed for inclusion in the mHeart app. The discussion was verbal, and voting was by hand. The suitability of the ePROMsb compared with the traditional in-clinic version. After written records were taken, a verbal discussion was held. The suitability of the six medication difficulties added to the electronic version of the Haynes-Sacket questionnaire. After written records were taken, a verbal discussion was held. |
| Convergent and discriminant validity | Convergent and discriminant validity were assessed using the following aspects: The correlation between the ePROM rates and a standard questionnaire was assessed. The complementarity of the adherence to medication domains of the ePROMs included in the mHeart system was measured. |
| Reliability (reproducibility) | Reliability and reproducibility were assessed using two methods with different purposes: The equivalent forms reliability method was used to assess the adequate association between the ePROMs scores and the in-clinic scores. With this aim, the PROMs were assessed in the same group of patients and on the same day. The test-retest reliability method was used to assess the stability of the ePROM scores during a short time period (7 days) in clinically stable patients. |
| Responsiveness (sensitivity to change) | Change over time in medication adherence was measured by the difference in ePROM scores while a theory-based intervention program was performed. A 1-month interval was considered adequate to measure the validity of an indirect smartphone measure [ |
| Interpretability | Three aspects of the interpretability property were analyzed and discussed: The interpretation of the ePROM scores. The meaningful change detected. The scores obtained versus those published by other authors. |
| Respondent and administrative burden | Several criteriaa were assessed regarding the time, effort, and other criteria of the ePROMs, depending on the respondents’ and administrative points of view. |
aFull details on validity properties assessed are provided in Multimedia Appendix 7.
bePROM: electronic patient-reported outcome measure.
Expert panel interrater agreement on the most suitable questionnaires to measure medication adherence using the mHeart platform, measured by the group consensus method.
| Round & adherence electronic patient-reported outcome measure | Agreementa, n (%) | Inclusion in mHeart | ||
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| Haynes-Sackett | 13 (93) | .11 | N/Ac |
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| Morisky-Green-Levine | 12 (86) | .27 | N/A |
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| SMAQd | 10 (71) | .50 | N/A |
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| Haynes-Sackett | 14 (100) | .03 | Included |
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| Morisky-Green-Levine | 13 (93) | .11 | Included |
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| SMAQ | 6 (43) | .99 | Nonincluded |
aPercentages of agreement. An agreement >75% of the expert panel was considered adequate.
bP value was one-sided to test whether P was greater than .75 (75%).
cN/A: not applicable.
dSMAQ: Simplified Medication Adherence Questionnaire validated in Spanish transplant population.
Expert panel interrater agreement on several criteria for the six reasons for medication nonadherence Haynes-Sackett electronic patient-reported outcome measure, measured by the nominal group consensus method.
| Reasons for medication nonadherence | Intuitivea, n (%) | Easya, n (%) | Briefa, n (%) | Usefula, n (%) | Percentage of overall agreementb, n (%) | |
| I sometimes forget to take my medication | 14 (100) | 14 (100) | 14 (100) | 14 (100) | 14 (100) | <.001 |
| I lack information on medication and/or the disease | 14 (100) | 13 (93) | 14 (100) | 14 (100) | 13.8 (98) | <.001 |
| I feel demotivated about taking my medication | 12 (86) | 11 (79) | 14 (100) | 13 (93) | 12.5 (89) | .01 |
| Because of side effects or fear of having them | 13 (93) | 13 (93) | 14 (100) | 13 (93) | 13.3 (95) | <.001 |
| Because of complex regimens and/or inconvenient regimens | 13 (93) | 8 (57) | 14 (100) | 14 (100) | 12.3 (88) | .02 |
| Because of other reasons | 12 (86) | 14 (100) | 13 (93) | 12 (86) | 12.8 (91) | .004 |
aItem criteria full description: true to the original in-clinic test, useful to evaluate medication adherence construct, intuitive, brief or fast to complete, and easy-to-understand language.
bPercentages of agreement. An agreement >75% of the expert panel was considered adequate.
cP value was one-sided to test whether P is greater than .75 (75%).
Expert panel agreement on item characteristics of electronic patient-reported outcome measures compared with on-site patient-reported outcome measures, measured by the nominal group consensus method.
| Patient-reported outcome measure item | Truea | Usefula | Intuitivea | Briefa | Easya | |||||
| Kappa value | Kappa value | Kappa value | Kappa value | Kappa value | ||||||
| Item 1 MGLb | 1 | <.001 | 1 | <.001 | 1 | <.001 | 1 | <.001 | 1 | <.001 |
| Item 2 MGL | 1 | <.001 | 1 | <.001 | 1 | <.001 | 1 | <.001 | 1 | <.001 |
| Item 3 MGL | 1 | <.001 | 1 | <.001 | 1 | <.001 | 1 | <.001 | 1 | <.001 |
| Item 4 MGL | 1 | <.001 | 1 | <.001 | 1 | <.001 | 1 | <.001 | 1 | <.001 |
| Item 1 HSc | 1 | <.001 | 0.6 | <.01 | 0.4 | .04 | 1 | <.001 | 1 | <.001 |
aItem characteristics’ full description: true to the original in-clinic test, useful to evaluate medication adherence construct, intuitive, brief or fast to complete, and easy-to-understand language.
bMGL: Morisky-Green-Levine 4-item questionnaire.
cHS: Haynes-Sackett questionnaire.
Convergent and discriminant validity assessed by the correlation of medication adherence patient-reported outcome measures with the Simplified Medication Adherence Questionnaire.
| Validity property | Adherence to medication PROMsa | Electronic | In clinic | Interpretation | ||
| Phi coefficient | Phi coefficient | |||||
| Convergent | Morisky-Green-Levine versus SMAQb | 0.6 | <.001 | 0.9 | <.001 | Strong correlation; measures similar adherence domains |
| Divergent | Haynes-Sackett versus SMAQ | 0.3 | .12 | 0.4 | .04 | Weak correlation; measures different adherence domains |
aPROMs: patient-reported outcome measures to assess medication adherence.
bSMAQ: Simplified Medication Adherence Questionnaire validated in Spanish transplant population.
Reliability of medication adherence electronic patient-reported outcome measures compared with on-site patient-reported outcome measures using the equivalent forms reliability method.
| Adherence to medication PROMsa | Phi coefficient | |
| HSb overall | 0.8 | <.001 |
| MGLc overall | 0.7 | <.001 |
| MGL item 1 | 0.7 | <.001 |
| MGL item 2 | 0.7 | <.001 |
| MGL item 3 | 0.6 | <.001 |
| MGL item 4 | 1 | <.001 |
aPROMs: patient-reported outcome measures to assess medication adherence.
bHS: Haynes-Sackett questionnaire.
cMGL: Morisky-Green-Levine 4-item questionnaire.
Test-retest reliability method to measure stability of medication adherence electronic patient-reported outcome measure scores over time.
| ePROMsa | Assessment 2 | Assessment 3 | Kappa value | Interpretation | |||
| Adherent, n (%) | Nonadherent, n (%) | Adherent, n (%) | Nonadherent, n (%) | ||||
| HSb | 29 (94) | 2 (7) | 31 (100) | 0 (0) | 0.6 | .002 | Moderate stability |
| MGLc | 28 (90) | 3 (10) | 30 (97) | 1 (3) | 0.3 | .11 | Poor stability |
aePROMs: electronic patient-reported outcome measures to assess medication adherence.
bHS: Haynes-Sackett questionnaire.
cMGL: Morisky-Green-Levine 4-item questionnaire.
Medication adherence rates and improvement between study assessments.
| Measure | Adherence to medication ratesa | ||||||||||||
| Assessment 1b | Assessment 2b | Assessment 3b | |||||||||||
| Adherent, n (%) | Nonadherent, n (%) | Adherent, n (%) | Nonadherent, n (%) | Adherent, n (%) | Nonadherent, n (%) | A1 vs A2 | A1 vs A3 | ||||||
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| HSd | 25 (81) | 6 (19) | 29 (94) | 2 (7) | 31 (100) | 0 (0) | .10 | .01 | ||||
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| MGLe | 25 (81) | 6 (19) | 28 (90) | 3 (10) | 30 (97) | 1 (3) | .26 | .06 | ||||
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| HS | 22 (71) | 9 (29) | 28 (90) | 3 (10) | N/Af | N/A | .03 | N/A | ||||
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| MGL | 21 (68) | 10 (32) | 27 (87) | 4 (13) | N/A | N/A | .06 | N/A | ||||
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| SMAQg | 19 (61) | 12 (39) | 27 (87) | 4 (13) | N/A | N/A | .005 | N/A | ||||
aMedication adherence in the implementation phase is expressed as a binary variable: adherent or nonadherent. The Haynes-Sackett and Morisky-Green-Levine questionnaires measures adherence to overall medication. The Simplified Medication Adherence Questionnaire validated in the Spanish transplant population measures adherence to immunosuppression.
bThe behavior-based interventional program established by the pharmacist was performed between assessments 1 and 2 (1 month at least). There was a 7-day gap between assessments 2 and 3 to allow the reproducibility test retest study without provider interactions. Only the electronic questionnaires were administered in Assessment 3.
cePROM: electronic patient-reported outcome measures to assess medication adherence.
dHS: Haynes-Sackett.
eMGL: Morisky-Green-Levine.
fN/A: not applicable.
gSMAQ: Simplified Medication Adherence Questionnaire validated in the Spanish transplant population.