4.6 Review

Detecting, preventing and treating non-adherence to immunosuppression after kidney transplantation

Journal

CLINICAL KIDNEY JOURNAL
Volume 15, Issue 7, Pages 1253-1274

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/ckj/sfac017

Keywords

behaviour therapy; drug monitoring; graft rejection; immunosuppressive agents; medication adherence; organ transplantation; patient education; risk factors

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Medication non-adherence is a significant issue in kidney transplantation, and the best strategies for diagnosis, prevention, and treatment are still unclear. Non-adherence can be intentional or unintentional, and diagnosis can rely on direct or indirect methods. Identifying individual risk factors may personalize the treatment approach. Short-term effects of various strategies have been observed, but long-term effects remain unclear.
Medication non-adherence (MNA) is a major issue in kidney transplantation and it is associated with increased risk of rejection, allograft loss, patients' death and higher healthcare costs. Despite its crucial importance, it is still unclear what are the best strategies to diagnose, prevent and treat MNA. MNA can be intentional (deliberate refusal to take the medication as prescribed) or unintentional (non-deliberate missing the prescribed medication). Its diagnosis may rely on direct methods, aiming at measuring drug ingestions, or indirect methods that analyse the habits of patients to adhere to correct drug dose (taking adherence) and interval (time adherence). Identifying individual risk factors for MNA may provide the basis for a personalized approach to the treatment of MNA. Randomized control trials performed so far have tested a combination of strategies, such as enhancing medication adherence through the commitment of healthcare personnel involved in drug distribution, the use of electronic reminders, therapy simplification or various multidisciplinary approaches to maximize the correction of individual risk factors. Although most of these approaches reduced MNA in the short-term, the long-term effects on MNA and, more importantly, on clinical outcomes remain unclear. In this review, we provide a critical appraisal of traditional and newer methods for detecting, preventing and treating non-adherence to immunosuppression after kidney transplantation from the perspective of the practising physician.

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