| Literature DB >> 35023906 |
Kristina S Boye1, Shraddha Shinde1, Tessa Kennedy-Martin2, Susan Robinson2, Vivian T Thieu1.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Type 2 diabetes (T2D) medication adherence is poor and is impacted by individual drug characteristics. Treatment-associated weight change can affect medication-taking behavior. This review aimed to explore weight change on T2D therapy and consider its impact on adherence and discontinuation.Entities:
Keywords: adherence; discontinuation; type 2 diabetes; weight
Year: 2022 PMID: 35023906 PMCID: PMC8747793 DOI: 10.2147/PPA.S328583
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient Prefer Adherence ISSN: 1177-889X Impact factor: 2.711
Study Eligibility Criteria
| Study Characteristic | Eligible | Ineligible |
|---|---|---|
| Patient population | - Adults (≥18 years) with T2D | - Pediatric (<18 years) people with T2D |
| Intervention | - Pharmacologic treatment for T2D | - Non-pharmacologic treatment for T2D |
| Outcomes | - Adherence | - Other outcomes |
| Measures of weight change | - Weight | - Other measures (such as hip-to-waist ratio) |
| Study type | - Real-world cross-sectional study | - Case studies |
| Language | - English | - Non-English |
Abbreviations: BMI, body mass index; EHR, electronic health records; T1D, type 1 diabetes; T2D, type 2 diabetes.
Figure 1Literature review: study selection.
Overview of Studies Identified in the Literature Review Evaluating the Association Between Weight and Medication Adherence or Discontinuation
| Author/Year (Country) | Objective (as it Relates to this Review) | Study Type and Data Source | PwD Population | Study Duration | Drugs Evaluated | Adherence/Discontinuation Measure |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carls et al, 2017 (USA) | To examine real-world weight change and the role of medication adherence among PwD initiating 1 of 3 drug classes | Retrospective cohort study using Optum/ Humedica SmartFile database (administrative claims and EMR) | Adults with T2D (N=5818) | 12 months (+ 12 weeks baseline) | GLP-1 RA; SU DPP-4i (disaggregated) | PDC: very adherent, ≥90%; adherent, ≥80%; poorly adherent, <80%; very poorly adherent, <50% |
| Gordon et al, 2018 (UK) | To examine relationships between medication adherence and clinical outcomes | Retrospective cohort study using UK CPRD | Adults with T2D (N=33,849) | 12 months | OADs (grouped by mono, dual, and triple therapy) | MPR: adherence, ≥80% (data excluded from PwD with MPR >120%) |
| Grandy et al, 2013 (USA) | To investigate whether individuals who lost weight had better medication adherence than those who gained weight | Prospective survey-based study (SHIELD); weight change evaluated between 2007 and 2008; adherence captured in 2008 | Adults with T2D enrolled in the SHIELD study (N=2209) | 12 months | SU; GLP-1 RA; insulin; TZD (grouped by weight change profile)a | MMAS |
| McAdam-Marx et al, 2014 (USA) | To examine the association between weight loss and adherence with glycemic goal attainment in PwD with inadequately controlled T2D | Retrospective cohort study using EMR data from GHS and PCP and self-reported adherence surveys | Adults with T2D initiated on drug class not previously received (N=477) | 6 months | Metformin; GLP-1 RA; SU; TZP; DPP-4i; insulin (disaggregated) | MARS-5 |
| McAdam-Marx et al, 2014 (USA) | To describe the relationships between medication adherence, weight change, and glycemic control in people with T2D | Retrospective cohort study using EMR data from GHS and PCP and self-reported adherence surveys | Adults with T2D initiated on drug class not previously received (N=166) | 6 months | Metformin; GLP-1 RA; SU; TZP; DPP-4i; insulin (pooled) | MARS-5 (9–15 months after index date); MPR |
| Patel et al, 2019 (USA) | To evaluate adherence with GLP-1 RA + BI vs BBI and effects of adherence on clinical and PRO, and baseline predictors of adherence | Prospective randomized pragmatic trial (SIMPLE) | Adults with T2D (N=120) | 6 months | GLP-1 RA; insulin | Adherence defined as amount of product (for the treatment arms) used vs that expected at each study visit |
| Durden et al, 2018 (USA) | To analyze how outcomes affect adherence and persistence | Retrospective cohort study using EMRs from the IBM Watson Health Explorys Universe Dataset | Adults with T2D initiating GLP-1 RA (N=8329) | 18 months (within 3–6 months = early responders) | GLP-1 RA | Adherence: PDC >0.80 |
| Bell et al, 2014 (USA) | To assess the impact of weight change on treatment discontinuation among metformin-treated people with T2D | Retrospective cohort study using administrative data in EMRs and progress notes from the Health Alliance Plan | Adults with T2D treated with metformin (N=2110) | 18 months + 6 months pre-index | NIAD (90.6% metformin monotherapy) | >30 days elapsed without drugs belonging to index class |
| Melzer-Cohen et al, 2019 (Israel) | To compare outcomes in people with T2D who continued liraglutide for 12 months vs discontinuers | Retrospective cohort study using EMR data from Maccabi Healthcare Services | Adults with T2D initiating liraglutide (N=3580) | 24 months | Liraglutide | Gap of ≥120 days between dispenses (after refill date) |
Notes: aTwo drug groups were defined based on the weight association for each antidiabetic drug class: (1) drugs associated with weight loss, including GLP-1 RA and metformin; and (2) drugs associated with weight gain, including TZDs, insulin, and SUs. Respondents who received a diabetes treatment regimen with 41 antidiabetic drugs that included any weight-gain drug (TZDs, insulin, SUs) were grouped into the weight-gain drug group regardless of other antidiabetes drugs (GLP-1 RAs, metformin, DPP-4i) in that treatment regimen. Respondents who received DPP-4 inhibitors and no other antidiabetes drug (monotherapy) were not included in the analysis of adherence by drug group because DPP-4 inhibitors are weight neutral.
Abbreviations: BBI, basal-bolus insulin; BI, basal insulin; CPRD, Clinical Practice Research Datalink; DPP-4i, dipeptidyl peptidase 4 inhibitor; EMR, electronic medical record; GHS, Geisinger Health System (an integrated health system in central Pennsylvania); GLP-1 RA, glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist; MARS-5, 5-item Medication Adherence Report Scale; MMAS, Morisky Medication Adherence Survey; MPR, medication possession ratio; NIAD, non-insulin antidiabetes drug; OAD, oral antidiabetes drug; PCP, primary care physician; PDC, proportion of days covered; PRO, patient-reported outcomes; PwD, person/people with diabetes; SHIELD, Study to Help Improve Early evaluation and management of risk factors Leading to Diabetes; SIMPLE, Simple basal Insulin titration, Metformin Plus Liraglutide for type 2 diabetes with very Elevated HbA1c; SU, sulfonylurea; T2D, type 2 diabetes; TZD, thiazolidinedione.
Overview of Main Study Findings with Respect to Weight and Adherence
| Author/Year | Study Drug(s) | Weight Measure | Adherence | Absolute Weight Change/ Proportion of PwD with Weight Change from Baseline (95% CI where Reported) | Weight Loss Associated with Better Adherence | Weight Gain Associated with Better Adherence | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adherent | Non-adherent | ||||||
| Patel et al, 2019 | Liraglutide plus BI | Baseline to 6 months | Amount of medication used/amount expected to be used over days between clinic visits (adherent: measure assessed at 2/3 clinic visits and time-adjusted adherence rate for study duration ≥80%) | –1.3 kg (–0.32, 0.7) | +0.3 kg (–2.2, 2.9) | ✔ | |
| BBI | +4.6 kg (2.2, 7.0) | +2.1 kg (0.1, 4.0) | ✔ | ||||
| Study author observation: “Those with ≥80% adherence, compared with those who had lower adherence, had numerically greater effects on … weight” | |||||||
| Carls et al, 2017 | GLP-1 RA | Baseline to 1 year | PDC (adherent: ≥0.80) | –3.77 kg | –2.04 kg | ✔ (p<0.01)a | |
| DPP-4i | –1.18 kg | –1.29 kg | No effect | ||||
| SU | +0.85 kg | –0.26 kg | ✔ (p<0.01)a | ||||
| Study author observations: “Adherence to GLP-1 RA appears to enhance its weight-loss effect and adherence to SU appears to amplify weight gain. In contrast, patients treated with DPP4 experience small weight changes and adherence to DPP4 treatment had no effect on weight” | |||||||
| Gordon et al, 2018 | OAD monotherapy | Baseline to 1 year | MPR (adherent: ≥0.80) | –2.65 kg (–2.80, –2.50) | –1.64 kg (–1.94, –1.34) | ✔ (p<0.001)a | |
| OAD dual therapy | +0.67 kg (0.46, 0.88) | +0.31 kg (–0.22, 0.83) | ✔ | ||||
| OAD triple therapy | +0.50 kg (0.03, 0.97) | +0.26 (–0.65, 1.17) | ✔ | ||||
| Study author observations: “Within each OAD cohort, adherent patients tended to lose more weight (OAD monotherapy) or gain more weight (OAD dual and triple therapy) compared with non-adherent patients” | |||||||
| McAdam-Marx et al, 2014 | Pooled metformin, GLP-1 RA, SU, TZD, DPP-4i, and insulin | Baseline to 6 months | MPR (adherent: ≥0.80) | –1.6 kg | –1.3 kg | ✔ | |
| MARS-5 (adherent: 25) | –1.7 kg | –1.1 kg | ✔ (p=0.016)b | ||||
| Study author observations: “Adherent patients had significant changes in body weight from baseline, but non-adherent patients did not” | |||||||
| Durden et al, 2019 | GLP-1 RA | >3% body weight loss at 3–6 months | PDC (adherent: ≥0.80) | Early weight-loss responders: 43.3% | ✔ | ||
| Study author observations: “Early response was associated with a higher likelihood of medication adherence … over a period of up to 18 months compared with those patients who did not achieve changes of … >3% reduction in body weight within 3–6 months” | |||||||
| McAdam-Marx et al, 2014 | All | ≥3% body weight loss at 6 months | MARS-5 (adherent: 25) | 29.9% | 24.2% | ✔ | |
| Metformin | 47.1% | 42.1% | ✔ | ||||
| GLP-1 RA | 50.0% | 40.0% | ✔ | ||||
| SU | 16.5% | 11.5% | ✔ | ||||
| TZD | 23.8% | 16.7% | ✔ | ||||
| DPP-4i | 20.8% | 16.7% | ✔ | ||||
| Insulin | 27.5% | 12.9% | ✔ | ||||
| Other | 25.0% | 0% | ✔ | ||||
| Study author observations: “This study showed that medication adherence is associated with … weight loss” | |||||||
Notes: ✔: Numerical (not statistically significant) difference or difference based on author conclusions; ✔ (p-value)a: statistically significant difference between adherent and non-adherent PwD reported; ✔ (p-value)b: from SEM, adherent PwD were more likely to experience weight loss compared with non-adherent PwD when assessed by MARS-5 (OR 1.70, 95% CI 1.11, 2.61); however, no significant association found with adherence assessed by MPR (OR 1.59, 95% CI 0.66, 3.83; p = 0.305); ✔c: odds of early weight-loss responders being adherent versus those with no early weight-loss response.
Abbreviations: BBI, basal-bolus insulin; BI, basal insulin; CI, confidence interval; DPP-4[i], dipeptidyl peptidase 4 [inhibitor]; GLP-1 RA, glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist; MARS-5, 5-item Medication Adherence Report Scale; MPR, medication possession ratio; NS, not statistically significant; OAD, oral antidiabetes drug; PDC, proportion of days covered; PwD, people/person with diabetes; SU, sulfonylurea; TZD, thiazolidinedione.
Figure 2Adherence with T2D medications according to categorical weight change from baseline to 12 months. Data from Grandy et al.39
Overview of Main Study Findings with Respect to Weight and Discontinuation
| Melzer-Cohen et al, 2019 | Liraglutide | Baseline to 24 months | Gap of ≥120 days between dispensing before 12 months | Weight, −3.57 kg† | Weight, −1.25 kg | ✔ | |
| Study author observations: “Patients with type 2 diabetes who persist with liraglutide treatment are characterized by … greater reductions in body weight … compared with patients who discontinue liraglutide therapy” | |||||||
| Bell et al, 2014 | NIAD (90.6% metformin monotherapy) | >3% body weight loss, >3% gain, or ≤3% loss of gain (neutral) at 6 months | >30-day lapse without index drug or switch | 43%*, a | 50% (neutral)a | ✔ | |
| Study author observations: “Overall, the results suggest that modest weight loss is associated with … lower rates of treatment discontinuation compared with no weight change” | |||||||
| Durden et al, 2019 | GLP-1 RA | >3% body weight loss at 3–6 months (early response) | Index therapy lasting <18 months | 61.9%** | 67.5% | ✔ | |
| Study author observations: “Early response was associated with a … lower likelihood of discontinuation over a period of up to 18 months compared with those patients who did not achieve changes of … >3% reduction in body weight within 3–6 months” | |||||||
Notes: *p < 0.001 vs weight neutral; **p < 0.001 early weight-loss response (3–6 months) vs no early response; †p < 0.001 vs discontinuers. aPercentages from Figure 4 in Bell et al (2014).43
Abbreviations: BMI, body mass index; GLP-1 RA, glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist; NIAD, non-insulin antidiabetes drug.