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Authors Shafrin J, May SG, Shrestha A, Ruetsch C, Gerlanc N, Forma F, Hatch A, Lakdawalla DN, Lindenmayer JP
Received 2 March 2017
Accepted for publication 1 May 2017
Published 27 June 2017 Volume 2017:11 Pages 1071—1081
DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/PPA.S135957
Checked for plagiarism Yes
Review by Single-blind
Peer reviewers approved by Dr Lucy Goodman
Peer reviewer comments 2
Editor who approved publication: Dr Johnny Chen
Objective: Overestimating patients’ medication adherence diminishes the ability of
psychiatric care providers to prescribe the most effective treatment and to
identify the root causes of treatment resistance in schizophrenia. This study
was conducted to determine how credible patient drug adherence information
(PDAI) might change prescribers’ treatment decisions.
Methods: In an online survey containing 8 clinical case
vignettes describing patients with schizophrenia, health care practitioners who
prescribe antipsychotics to patients with schizophrenia were instructed to
choose a preferred treatment recommendation from a set of predefined
pharmacologic and non-pharmacologic options. The prescribers were randomly
assigned to an experimental or a control group, with only the experimental
group receiving PDAI. The primary outcome was the prescribers’ treatment choice
for each case. Between-group differences were analyzed using multinomial
logistic regression.
Results: A convenience sample (n=219) of prescribers completed
the survey. For 3 nonadherent patient vignettes, respondents in the
experimental group were more likely to choose a long-acting injectable
antipsychotic compared with those in the control group (77.7% experimental vs
25.8% control; P <0.001). For 2 adherent but
poorly controlled patient vignettes, prescribers who received PDAI were more
likely to increase the antipsychotic dose compared with the control group
(49.1% vs 39.1%; P <0.001). For the adherent and
well-controlled patient vignette, respondents in both groups made similar treatment
recommendations across all choices (P =0.099), but
respondents in the experimental arm were more likely to recommend monitoring
clinical stability (87.2% experimental vs 75.5% control, reference group).
Conclusion: The results illustrate how credible PDAI can
facilitate more appropriate clinical decisions for patients with schizophrenia.
Keywords: adherence, case vignettes, long-acting
injectables, schizophrenia, treatment decision