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Abstract

Factors contributing to medication nonadherence among patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are poorly understood.

To identify patient characteristics that are predictive of adherence to inhaled medications for COPD and, for patients on multiple inhalers, to assess whether adherence to one medication class was associated with adherence to other medication classes.

Cohort study using data from Veteran Affairs (VA) electronic databases.

This study included 2,730 patients who underwent pulmonary function testing between 2003 and 2007 at VA facilities in the Northwestern United States, and who met criteria for COPD.

We used pharmacy records to estimate adherence to inhaled corticosteroids (ICS), ipratropium bromide (IP), and long-acting beta-agonists (LABA) over two consecutive six month periods. We defined patients as adherent if they had refilled medications to have 80 % of drug available over the time period. We also collected information on their demographics, behavioral habits, COPD severity, and comorbidities.

Adherence to medications was poor, with 19.8 % adherent to ICS, 30.6 % adherent to LABA, and 25.6 % adherent to IP. Predictors of adherence to inhaled therapies were highly variable and dependent on the medication being examined. In adjusted analysis, being adherent to a medication at baseline was the strongest predictor of future adherence to that same medication [(Odds ratio, 95 % confidence interval) ICS: 4.79 (3.22-7.12); LABA: 6.60 (3.92-11.11); IP: 14.13 (10.00-19.97)], but did not reliably predict adherence to other classes of medication.

Among patients with COPD, past adherence to one class of inhaled medication strongly predicted future adherence to the same class of medication, but only weakly predicted adherence to other classes of medication.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
Predictors of Adherence to Inhaled Medications Among Veterans with COPD
Author
Huetsch, John C, MD; Uman, Jane E, MPH; Udris, Edmunds M, MPH; Au, David H, MD, MS
Pages
1506-12
Publication year
2012
Publication date
Nov 2012
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
08848734
e-ISSN
15251497
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1113188622
Copyright
Society of General Internal Medicine 2012