4.5 Article

Methodological considerations on estimating medication adherence from self-report, electronic monitoring and electronic healthcare databases using the TEOS framework

期刊

BRITISH JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY
卷 89, 期 7, 页码 1918-1927

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/bcp.15375

关键词

adherence; methodology; pharmacotherapy

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Measuring medication adherence is complex due to various contexts. The TEOS framework offers a process to operationalize adherence. This study aims to develop recommendations for quantification of medication adherence using self-report, electronic monitoring, and electronic healthcare databases.
Aims Measuring adherence to medication is complex due to the diversity of contexts in which medications are prescribed, dispensed and used. The Timelines-Events-Objectives-Sources (TEOS) framework outlined a process to operationalize adherence. We aimed to develop practical recommendations for quantification of medication adherence using self-report (SR), electronic monitoring (EM) and electronic healthcare databases (EHD) consistent with the TEOS framework for adherence operationalization. Methods An adherence methodology working group of the International Society for Medication Adherence (ESPACOMP) analysed implications of the process of medication adherence for all data sources and discussed considerations specific to SR, EM and EHD regarding the information available on the prescribing, dispensing, recommended and actual use timelines, the four events relevant for distinguishing the adherence phases, the study objectives commonly addressed with each type of data, and the potential sources of measurement error and quality criteria applicable. Results Four key implications for medication adherence measurement are common to all data sources: adherence is a comparison between two series of events (recommended and actual use); it refers to one or more specific medication(s); it applies to regular repeated events coinciding with known recommended dosing; and it requires separate measurement of the three adherence phases for a complete picture of patients' adherence. We propose recommendations deriving from these statements, and aspects to be considered in study design when measuring adherence with SR, EM and EHD using the TEOS framework. Conclusion The quality of medication adherence estimates is the result of several design choices that may optimize the data available.

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