Systematic review of antihypertensive adherence interventions and investigation of antihypertensive drug discontinuation in the Glasgow Blood Pressure Clinic cohort.
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Saudi Digital Library
Abstract
Hypertension (HTN) is a major risk factor for cardiovascular diseases. Suboptimal
medication adherence is a well-recognized factor contributing to the poor control of blood
pressure (BP) in HTN. Estimated HTN prevalence in Scotland in the adult population from
2014 to 2017 for all age groups in both sexes was 58.7%. While systematic reviews have
demonstrated improvements in adherence and clinical outcomes for atherosclerotic
cardiovascular disease secondary prevention, the evidence for BP response is inconsistent.
This systematic review evaluates the effectiveness of medication adherence interventions on
antihypertensive related BP response.
We searched bibliographic databases between 2000 and 2019 using EMBASE, Medline, and
Cochrane without language restrictions. Eligible studies were required to be randomised
controlled trials, incorporating participants identified as having hypertension, and utilizing
interventions aimed at improving adherence antihypertensive therapy with measurement of
both BP response and adherence. Two reviewers independently determined the eligibility of
studies and extracted data. Standardized mean difference effect sizes were calculated in
random effect models. We identified 52 trials (n= 19673 participants).
The majority of trials (90%) were from high-income countries. Most had unclear risk of bias
because of poor methodological descriptions. Studies which provided mean difference in
SBP (N=13740 from 31 trials) or DBP (N=10665 from 29 trials) were included in the meta analysis. The interventions resulted in significant reductions in both SBP (MD −2.55 mmHg
[95% CI −3.87 to −1.23]) and DBP (-1.47 mmHg [CI −2.23 to -0.71]). Seven subgroups
were analysed because of significant heterogeneity (SBP: I
2=82%; DBP I
2=73): intervention
type, age, use of home BP, study duration, geographical factors, effect on Medication
Adherence, health provider, care setting and geographical. Education intervention, studies
of 6-month duration, and interventions that concomitantly increased MA showed significant
reductions in SBP and DBP. Funnel plot demonstrated publication bias. Egger's Regression
test was statistically significant with both SBP and DBP (p< 0.001). In term of medication
adherence (MA), 12 trials (n= 6450) reported MD in MA were included in the quantitative
analysis and divided into 6 groups based on the MA assessment method (MMAS-4, MMAS8, MARS-5, Hill-bone, Medication refill and Electronic Drug Monitoring. Better effect on
MA in studies that used MMAS-4, MMAS-8, and Hill-Bone self-report assessment methods.
The studies that used the MARS-5 self-report assessment method and the studies that used
Medication refill showed results favouring control. The Electronic Drug Monitoring group
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results showed extremely wide confidence intervals. Electronic drug monitoring presented
as outliers in funnel plot. The variation among studies in terms of intervention, duration,
sample size and population precluded any formal comparison between the included studies.
Longer trials with clearly defined methodologies are recommended to establish whether
adherence and BP control can be maintained with reduction in clinical events.
In chapter four, Glasgow Blood Pressure Clinic data were used to investigate the patterns of
antihypertensive drug discontinuation in a large cohort of treated hypertensive patients. The
study start date was Jan 1st 2006 and the study end date was March 31st 2013. The
prescription data was classified into the following antihypertensive drug class groups –
ACEI, ALPHABLOCKER, ARB, BB, DHP-CCB, NONDHP-CCB, DIURETIC, MRA,
OTHER. The definition of a new antihypertensive drug class prescription was based on the
patient showing no receipt of the drug class in the prescription data available from 2004
onwards. Disconti