Article Text
Abstract
Medication non-adherence and the clinical implications in difficult-to-control asthma were audited. Prescription issue data from 115 patients identified sub-optimal adherence (<80%) in 65% of patients on inhaled corticosteroids (ICS) or combined ICS/long-acting β2 agonist (LABA). In those using separate ICS and LABA, adherence to LABA (50%) was significantly better than to ICS (14.3%). Patients with sub-optimal ICS adherence had reduced FEV1 and higher sputum eosinophil counts. Adherence ratio was an independent predictor of previous ventilation for acute severe asthma (p=0.008). The majority of patients with difficult-to-control asthma are non-adherent with their asthma medication. Non-adherence is correlated with poor clinical outcomes.
- Asthma
- anti-asthmatic drugs
- adherence
- medication
- compliance
- allergic lung disease
- asthma pharmacology
- COPD mechanisms
- asthma mechanisms
- COPD exacerbations
- cough/mechanisms/pharmacology
- airway epithelium
- cytokine biology
- eosinophil biology
- innate immunity
- asthma guidelines
- clinical epidemiology
- exhaled airway markers
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- Asthma
- anti-asthmatic drugs
- adherence
- medication
- compliance
- allergic lung disease
- asthma pharmacology
- COPD mechanisms
- asthma mechanisms
- COPD exacerbations
- cough/mechanisms/pharmacology
- airway epithelium
- cytokine biology
- eosinophil biology
- innate immunity
- asthma guidelines
- clinical epidemiology
- exhaled airway markers
Footnotes
PB and RHG authors are Co-senior authors.
Competing interests None.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.