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Adherence to Triple Single-Pill Combination of Perindopril/Indapamide/Amlodipine: Findings from Real-World Analysis in Italy
被引:0
|作者:
Claudio Borghi
Pathiyil Balagopalan Jayagopal
Alexandra Konradi
Luiz Aparecido Bortolotto
Luca Degli Esposti
Valentina Perrone
Jacques R. Snyman
机构:
[1] University of Bologna,
[2] IRCCS Ospedale S. Orsola,undefined
[3] Lakshmi Hospital,undefined
[4] Almazov National Medical Research Center,undefined
[5] Instituto do Coração,undefined
[6] Hospital das Clinicas-FMUSP,undefined
[7] CliCon S.r.l,undefined
[8] Società Benefit-Health,undefined
[9] Economics and Outcomes Research,undefined
[10] Forte Research (Pty Ltd) and Private Practice,undefined
关键词:
Hypertension;
Adherence;
Perindopril;
Indapamide;
Amlodipine;
Triple single-pill combination therapy;
D O I:
暂无
中图分类号:
学科分类号:
摘要:
Medication adherence is defined by the World Health Organization as the “extent to which a person’s behavior (in taking medication) corresponds with agreed recommendations from a healthcare provider”. Low levels of medication adherence in hypertension have been linked with increased disease burden and with higher costs for patients. Patients with hypertension whose blood pressure is poorly controlled often need to receive more than one pill. Nevertheless, having to take many pills may result in poor adherence, i.e., patients not taking their treatment as prescribed. Combining multiple drugs into a single pill for the management of hypertension is known to improve adherence; however, limited evidence exists about the benefits of triple single-pill combinations compared with equivalent free combinations in real clinical practice. This analysis evaluated changes in adherence before and after patients switched from a three-drug therapy of perindopril/indapamide single-pill + amlodipine (PER/IND + AML) to perindopril/indapamide/amlodipine (PER/IND/AML) taken as a single pill. In this analysis, real-world data from Italian administrative databases covering around 11% of the Italian population were used. Overall, 158 patients were included. More patients were found to be adherent after switch to PER/IND/AML single pill (75.3% vs 44.3% of PER/IND + AML combination). Partially adherent and poorly adherent patients were fewer with PER/IND/AML single-pill combination (10.1% and 14.6%, respectively) compared to PER/IND + AML combination (38.0% and 17.7%, respectively). These findings indicate that switching to a simplified therapy in which all three drugs are taken in one pill may offer an opportunity for increasing the number of patients that are adherent to their medication.
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页码:1765 / 1772
页数:7
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