Longitudinal Trajectory Modeling to Assess Adherence to Sacubitril/Valsartan among Patients with Heart Failure

Author:

Mucherino Sara1ORCID,Dima Alexandra Lelia2ORCID,Coscioni Enrico3,Vassallo Maria Giovanna3,Orlando Valentina1ORCID,Menditto Enrica1

Affiliation:

1. CIRFF, Center of Pharmacoeconomics and Drug Utilization Research, Department of Pharmacy, University of Naples Federico II, 80131 Naples, Italy

2. Health Technology Assessment in Primary Care and Mental Health (PRISMA), Institut de Recerca Sant Joan de Déu, Santa Rosa 39-57, 08950 Esplugues de Llobregat, Spain

3. Division of Cardiac Surgery, Azienda Ospedaliera Universitaria San Giovanni di Dio e Ruggi d’Aragona, 84131 Salerno, Italy

Abstract

Medication adherence in chronic conditions is a long-term process. Modeling longitudinal trajectories using routinely collected prescription data is a promising method for describing adherence patterns and identifying at-risk groups. The study aimed to characterize distinct long-term sacubitril/valsartan adherence trajectories and factors associated with them in patients with heart failure (HF). Subjects with incident HF starting sac/val in 2017–2018 were identified from the Campania Regional Database for Medication Consumption. We estimated patients’ continuous medication availability (CMA9; R package AdhereR) during a 12-month period. We selected groups with similar CMA9 trajectories (Calinski-Harabasz criterion; R package kml). We performed multinomial regression analysis, assessing the relationship between demographic and clinical factors and adherence trajectory groups. The cohort included 4455 subjects, 70% male. Group-based trajectory modeling identified four distinct adherence trajectories: high adherence (42.6% of subjects; CMA mean 0.91 ± 0.08), partial drop-off (19.6%; CMA 0.63 ± 0.13), moderate adherence (19.3%; CMA 0.54 ± 0.11), and low adherence (18.4%; CMA 0.17 ± 0.12). Polypharmacy was associated with partial drop-off adherence (OR 1.194, 95%CI 1.175–1.214), while the occurrence of ≥1 HF hospitalization (OR 1.165, 95%CI 1.151–1.179) or other hospitalizations (OR 1.481, 95%CI 1.459–1.503) were associated with low adherence. This study found that tailoring patient education, providing support, and ongoing monitoring can boost adherence within different groups, potentially improving health outcomes.

Funder

European Union—NextGenerationEU

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Pharmaceutical Science

Reference46 articles.

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