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Complex antithrombotic therapy: determinants of patient preference and impact on medication adherence

PURPOSE: For years, older patients have been prescribed multiple blood-thinning medications (complex antithrombotic therapy [CAT]) to decrease their risk of cardiovascular events. These therapies, however, increase risk of adverse bleeding events. We assessed patient-reported trade-offs between card...

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Autores principales: Abraham, Neena S, Naik, Aanand D, Street, Richard L, Castillo, Diana L, Deswal, Anita, Richardson, Peter A, Hartman, Christine M, Shelton, George, Fraenkel, Liana
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dove Medical Press 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4657793/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26640372
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/PPA.S91553
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author Abraham, Neena S
Naik, Aanand D
Street, Richard L
Castillo, Diana L
Deswal, Anita
Richardson, Peter A
Hartman, Christine M
Shelton, George
Fraenkel, Liana
author_facet Abraham, Neena S
Naik, Aanand D
Street, Richard L
Castillo, Diana L
Deswal, Anita
Richardson, Peter A
Hartman, Christine M
Shelton, George
Fraenkel, Liana
author_sort Abraham, Neena S
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: For years, older patients have been prescribed multiple blood-thinning medications (complex antithrombotic therapy [CAT]) to decrease their risk of cardiovascular events. These therapies, however, increase risk of adverse bleeding events. We assessed patient-reported trade-offs between cardioprotective benefit, gastrointestinal bleeding risk, and burden of self-management using adaptive conjoint analysis (ACA). As ACA could be a clinically useful tool to obtain patient preferences and guide future patient-centered care, we examined the clinical application of ACA to obtain patient preferences and the impact of ACA on medication adherence. PATIENTS AND METHODS: An electronic ACA survey led 201 respondents through medication risk–benefit trade-offs, revealing patients’ preferences for the CAT risk/benefit profile they valued most. The post-ACA prescription regimen was categorized as concordant or discordant with elicited preferences. Adherence was measured using VA pharmacy refill data to measure persistence of use prior to and 1 year following preference-elicitation. Additionally, we analyzed qualitative interviews of 56 respondents regarding their perception of the ACA and the preference elicitation experience. RESULTS: Participants prioritized 5-year cardiovascular benefit over preventing adverse events. Medication side effects, medication-associated activity restrictions, and regimen complexity were less important than bleeding risk and cardioprotective benefit. One year after the ACA survey, a 15% increase in adherence was observed in patients prescribed a preference-concordant CAT strategy. An increase of only 6% was noted in patients prescribed a preference-discordant strategy. Qualitative interviews showed that the ACA exercise contributed to increase inpatient activation, patient awareness of preferences, and patient engagement with clinicians about treatment decisions. CONCLUSION: By working through trade-offs, patients actively clarified their preferences, learning about CAT risks, benefits, and self-management. Patients with medication regimens concordant with their preferences had increased medication adherence at 1 year compared to those with discordant medication regimens. The ACA task improved adherence through enhanced patient engagement regarding treatment preferences.
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spelling pubmed-46577932015-12-04 Complex antithrombotic therapy: determinants of patient preference and impact on medication adherence Abraham, Neena S Naik, Aanand D Street, Richard L Castillo, Diana L Deswal, Anita Richardson, Peter A Hartman, Christine M Shelton, George Fraenkel, Liana Patient Prefer Adherence Original Research PURPOSE: For years, older patients have been prescribed multiple blood-thinning medications (complex antithrombotic therapy [CAT]) to decrease their risk of cardiovascular events. These therapies, however, increase risk of adverse bleeding events. We assessed patient-reported trade-offs between cardioprotective benefit, gastrointestinal bleeding risk, and burden of self-management using adaptive conjoint analysis (ACA). As ACA could be a clinically useful tool to obtain patient preferences and guide future patient-centered care, we examined the clinical application of ACA to obtain patient preferences and the impact of ACA on medication adherence. PATIENTS AND METHODS: An electronic ACA survey led 201 respondents through medication risk–benefit trade-offs, revealing patients’ preferences for the CAT risk/benefit profile they valued most. The post-ACA prescription regimen was categorized as concordant or discordant with elicited preferences. Adherence was measured using VA pharmacy refill data to measure persistence of use prior to and 1 year following preference-elicitation. Additionally, we analyzed qualitative interviews of 56 respondents regarding their perception of the ACA and the preference elicitation experience. RESULTS: Participants prioritized 5-year cardiovascular benefit over preventing adverse events. Medication side effects, medication-associated activity restrictions, and regimen complexity were less important than bleeding risk and cardioprotective benefit. One year after the ACA survey, a 15% increase in adherence was observed in patients prescribed a preference-concordant CAT strategy. An increase of only 6% was noted in patients prescribed a preference-discordant strategy. Qualitative interviews showed that the ACA exercise contributed to increase inpatient activation, patient awareness of preferences, and patient engagement with clinicians about treatment decisions. CONCLUSION: By working through trade-offs, patients actively clarified their preferences, learning about CAT risks, benefits, and self-management. Patients with medication regimens concordant with their preferences had increased medication adherence at 1 year compared to those with discordant medication regimens. The ACA task improved adherence through enhanced patient engagement regarding treatment preferences. Dove Medical Press 2015-11-19 /pmc/articles/PMC4657793/ /pubmed/26640372 http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/PPA.S91553 Text en © 2015 Abraham et al. This work is published by Dove Medical Press Limited, and licensed under Creative Commons Attribution – Non Commercial (unported, v3.0) License The full terms of the License are available at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/. Non-commercial uses of the work are permitted without any further permission from Dove Medical Press Limited, provided the work is properly attributed.
spellingShingle Original Research
Abraham, Neena S
Naik, Aanand D
Street, Richard L
Castillo, Diana L
Deswal, Anita
Richardson, Peter A
Hartman, Christine M
Shelton, George
Fraenkel, Liana
Complex antithrombotic therapy: determinants of patient preference and impact on medication adherence
title Complex antithrombotic therapy: determinants of patient preference and impact on medication adherence
title_full Complex antithrombotic therapy: determinants of patient preference and impact on medication adherence
title_fullStr Complex antithrombotic therapy: determinants of patient preference and impact on medication adherence
title_full_unstemmed Complex antithrombotic therapy: determinants of patient preference and impact on medication adherence
title_short Complex antithrombotic therapy: determinants of patient preference and impact on medication adherence
title_sort complex antithrombotic therapy: determinants of patient preference and impact on medication adherence
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4657793/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26640372
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/PPA.S91553
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