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Medication adherence in patients with severe asthma prescribed oral corticosteroids in the U-BIOPRED cohort

Ahmed, H.; Auffray, C.; Bakke, P.; Bush, A.; Baribaud, F.; Bates, Stewart; Bel, E. H.; Bigler, J.; Bisgaard, H.; Boedigheimer, M. J.; Bønnelykke, K.; Brandsma, J.; Brinkman, P.; Bucchioni, E.; Burg, D.; Caruso, M.; Chaiboonchoe, A.; Chanez, P.; Chung, F. K.; Compton, C. H.; Corfield, J.; D'Amico, A.; Dahlèn, B.; De Meulder, B.; Djukanovic, R.; Erpenbeck, V. J.; Erzen, D.; Fichtner, K.; Fitch, N.; Fleming, L. J.; Formaggio, E.; Fowler, S. J.; Frey, U.; Gahlemann, M.; Geiser, T.; Goss, V.; Guo, Y.; Hashimoto, S.; Haughney, J.; Hedlin, G.; Hekking, P. W.; Higenbottam, T.; Hohlfeld, J. M.; Holweg, C.; Horváth, I.; Howarth, P.; James, A. J.; Knowles, R. G.; Knox, A. J.; Krug, N.; Lefaudeux, D.; Loza, M. J.; Lutter, R.; Manta, A.; Masefield, S.; Matthews, J. G.; Mazein, A.; Meiser, A.; Middelveld, R. J.M.; Miralpeix, M.; Montuschi, P.; Mores, N.; Murray, C. S.; Musial, J.; Myles, D.; Singer, Florian; Wagers, Scott; Chung, Kian Fan; Dahlen, Sven Erik; Dahlén, Barbro; Horvath, Ildiko; Sun, Kai...

Authors

H. Ahmed

C. Auffray

P. Bakke

A. Bush

F. Baribaud

Stewart Bates

E. H. Bel

J. Bigler

H. Bisgaard

M. J. Boedigheimer

K. Bønnelykke

J. Brandsma

P. Brinkman

E. Bucchioni

D. Burg

M. Caruso

A. Chaiboonchoe

P. Chanez

F. K. Chung

C. H. Compton

J. Corfield

A. D'Amico

B. Dahlèn

B. De Meulder

R. Djukanovic

V. J. Erpenbeck

D. Erzen

K. Fichtner

N. Fitch

L. J. Fleming

E. Formaggio

S. J. Fowler

U. Frey

M. Gahlemann

T. Geiser

V. Goss

Y. Guo

S. Hashimoto

J. Haughney

G. Hedlin

P. W. Hekking

T. Higenbottam

J. M. Hohlfeld

C. Holweg

I. Horváth

P. Howarth

A. J. James

R. G. Knowles

A. J. Knox

N. Krug

D. Lefaudeux

M. J. Loza

R. Lutter

A. Manta

S. Masefield

J. G. Matthews

A. Mazein

A. Meiser

R. J.M. Middelveld

M. Miralpeix

P. Montuschi

N. Mores

C. S. Murray

J. Musial

D. Myles

Florian Singer

Scott Wagers

Kian Fan Chung

Sven Erik Dahlen

Barbro Dahlén

Ildiko Horvath

Kai Sun

Ioannis Pandis

Fahad H Alahmadi

Cristina Gomez

Magnus Ericsson

John Olof Thörngren

Craig Wheelock

Dominic E Shaw

Louise J Fleming

Graham Roberts

John Riley

Stewart Bates

Ana R Sousa

Richard Knowles

Aruna T Bansal

Julie Corfield

Ioannis Pandis

Kai Sun

Per S Bakke

Massimo Caruso

Pascal Chanez

Barbro Dahlén

Ildiko Horvath

Norbert Krug

Paolo Montuschi

Florian Singer

Scott Wagers

Ian M Adcock

Ratko Djukanovic

Kian Fan Chung

Peter J Sterk

Sven Erik Dahlen

Stephen J Fowler

U-BOPRED Study Group



Abstract

Background: Although estimates of suboptimal adherence to oral corticosteroids in asthma range from 30% to 50%, no ideal method for measurement exists; the impact of poor adherence in severe asthma is likely to be particularly high. Research Questions: What is the prevalence of suboptimal adherence detected by self-reporting and direct measures? Is suboptimal adherence associated with disease activity? Study Design and Methods: Data were included from individuals with severe asthma taking part in the U-BIOPRED (Unbiased Biomarkers for the Prediction of Respiratory Disease Outcomes) study and prescribed daily oral corticosteroids. Participants completed the Medication Adherence Report Scale, a five-item questionnaire used to grade adherence on a scale from 1 to 5, and provided a urine sample for analysis of prednisolone and metabolites by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. Results: Data from 166 participants were included in this study: mean (SD) age, 54.2 (± 11.9) years; FEV1, 65.1% (± 20.5%) predicted; female, 58%; 37% completing the Medication Adherence Report Scale reported suboptimal adherence; and 43% with urinary corticosteroid data did not have detectable prednisolone or metabolites in their urine. Good adherence by both methods was detected in 49 of the 142 (35%) of participants in whom both methods were performed; adherence detection did not match between methods in 53%. Self-reported high adherers had better asthma control and quality of life, whereas directly measured high adherers had lower blood eosinophil levels. Interpretation: Low adherence is a common problem in severe asthma, whether measured directly or self-reported. We report poor agreement between the two methods, suggesting some disassociation between self-assessment of medication adherence and regular oral corticosteroid use, which suggests that each approach may provide complementary information in clinical practice.

Citation

Ahmed, H., Auffray, C., Bakke, P., Bush, A., Baribaud, F., Bates, S., …Study Group, U. (2021). Medication adherence in patients with severe asthma prescribed oral corticosteroids in the U-BIOPRED cohort. Chest, 160(1), 53-64. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chest.2021.02.023

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Feb 2, 2021
Online Publication Date Feb 19, 2021
Publication Date Jul 1, 2021
Deposit Date Feb 3, 2021
Publicly Available Date Feb 20, 2022
Journal Chest
Print ISSN 0012-3692
Electronic ISSN 1931-3543
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 160
Issue 1
Pages 53-64
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chest.2021.02.023
Keywords Asthma; Adherence; Urinary corticosteroids
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/3709738

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