SAT0064 Therapy Adherence, Prescribed Medications, Disease Activity and Psychosocial Consequences in Patients with Rheumatoid Arthritis
BackgroundAdherence to rheumatoid arthritis (RA) treatment is essential for therapeutic success.Factors contributing to therapy adherence and their consequences are under debate.ObjectivesTo investigate the relationship between therapy adherence and disease activity as well as patients' quality...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Annals of the rheumatic diseases 2016-06, Vol.75 (Suppl 2), p.687 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | BackgroundAdherence to rheumatoid arthritis (RA) treatment is essential for therapeutic success.Factors contributing to therapy adherence and their consequences are under debate.ObjectivesTo investigate the relationship between therapy adherence and disease activity as well as patients' quality of life.MethodsThe survey included a representative, nationwide sample of German physicians specialized in RA and patients with RA. The physician questionnaire assessed disease activity (DAS28), patients' adherence to therapy and medical prescriptions. The patient questionnaire assessed quality of life (SF-12), health education literacy (i.e., the understanding and use of medical information, HELP), activities of daily living (MDHAQ), fatigue (EORTC QLQ-FA13) and patients' listings of their medications. Adherence was assessed with a combined measure of physician rating (1= very adherent, 0 = less adherent) and the match between physicians' prescriptions and patients' accounts of their medications (1 = perfect match, 0 = no perfect match). Three groups of patients could be distinguished: high (very adherent according to physician and perfect medication match, n=180), medium (either high physician rated adherence or perfect medication match, n=279), and low (0 in both adherence criteria) (n=205). An ANOVA was used to analyze differences in continuous variables among the three groups.Results671 pairs of patient and physician questionnaires were analyzed. Mean patients' age (73% female) was 60 years (SD=12). At the time of assessment, 67.2% the patients showed low disease activity (DAS28 5,1). There was no relation between adherence and demographic variables. However, it was related to disease activity, numerous psychosocial variables and the number of prescribed medications (Table 1).Table 1AdherencepHighMediumLowDAS28*2.45 (1.11)2.80 (1.20)3.06 (1.26) |
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ISSN: | 0003-4967 1468-2060 |
DOI: | 10.1136/annrheumdis-2016-eular.4908 |