Measurement of treatment adherence with antipsychotic agents in patients with schizophrenia
Date
2009-10-12
DOI
Authors
Ren, Xinhua S.
Herz, Lawrence
Qian, Shirley
Smith, Eric
Kazis, Lewis E.
Version
OA Version
Citation
Ren, Xinhua S, Lawrence Herz, Shirley Qian, Eric Smith, Lewis E Kazis. "Measurement of treatment adherence with antipsychotic agents in patients with schizophrenia" Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment 5: 491-498. (2009)
Abstract
The importance of medication adherence in sustaining control of schizophrenic symptoms has generated a great deal of interest in comparing levels of treatment adherence with different antipsychotic agents. However, the bulk of the research has yielded results that are often inconsistent. In this prospective, observational study, we assessed the measurement properties of 3 commonly used, pharmacy-based measures of treatment adherence with antipsychotic agents in schizophrenia using data from the Veterans Health Administration during 2000 to 2005. Patients were selected if they were on antipsychotics and diagnosed with schizophrenia (N = 18,425). A gap of ≥30 days (with no filled index medication) was used to define discontinuation of treatment as well as medication "episodes," or the number of times a patient returned to the same index agent after discontinuation of treatment within a 1-year period. The study found that the 3 existing measures differed in their approaches in measuring treatment adherence, suggesting that studies using these different measures would generate different levels of treatment adherence across antipsychotic agents. Considering the measurement problems associated with each existing approach, we offered a new, medication episode-specific approach, which would provide a fairer comparison of the levels of treatment adherence across different antipsychotic agents.
Description
License
Copyright 2009 Ren et al, publisher and licensee Dove Medical Press Ltd.