Background
Hypertension is one of the major causes of death and the leading risk factor for cardiovascular disease and mortality worldwide [
1]. However, achieving and maintaining blood pressure (BP) goals in hypertension has been challenging. About one-third of hypertensive patients are unaware of this condition or, if aware, do not undergo treatment, and target BP values are seldom achieved. This failure to control BP is associated with persistent elevated cardiovascular risk [
2]. Most guidelines are based on evidence from multiple randomized clinical trials (RCTs) and recommend that the clinician should continue to assess BP and adjust the treatment regimen until goal BP is reached. If goal BP is not reached, guidelines recommend increasing the dose of the initial drug or adding a second drug from one of the recommended classes [
2‐
6].
In real-world practice, most clinicians often care for patients with numerous comorbidities or other challenging issues, making BP control more difficult and this may be one of the reasons that clinicians do not follow guideline-based practice (GBP). In addition, almost half of patients discontinue treatment leading to poor BP control [
7]. Poor adherence to medication can lead to cardiovascular morbidity and mortality [
8,
9]. It has been established that medication adherence and BP control to recommended goal lead to a decrease in hypertension-related morbidity and mortality in hypertensive patients resulting in satisfaction with care and improvement in health-related quality of life (QoL) [
10‐
12].
This study aimed to assess treatment patterns and medication adherence and to compare clinical (BP control) and patient-reported outcomes (treatment satisfaction and QoL) by treatment patterns and medication adherence at 6 months among uncontrolled hypertensive patients.
Methods
Patients and study design
A non-interventional, prospective and observational study was conducted at 16 nationwide, tertiary hospitals. Study patients were enrolled during 2015 to 2016 and assessed for the following 6 months. Eligible patients were aged over 20 years with uncontrolled hypertension, determined by 2 to 3 repeated clinic BP measurements (systolic BP ≥140 mm/Hg or diastolic BP ≥90 mmHg) at the time of enrolment. Patients with resistant hypertension, secondary causes of hypertension, or those enrolled in another drug intervention study, were excluded. The total study period for each enrolled patient was 6 months and patients were assessed at their regular visit at 3 months and 6 months after receiving antihypertensive medications.
Data were collected through a review of medical records and face-to-face patient interviews. Demographic data included age, gender, smoking status, alcohol behavior, regular exercise, lipid lowering diet, and education level. BP was measured by the attending physician using a standardized protocol with a validated mercury sphygmomanometer and an appropriate cuff size for the arm circumference. Researchers reviewed electronic medical records for asymptomatic organ damage (albuminuria, left ventricular hypertrophy on electrocardiogram, retinopathy, and arterial stiffening) and hypertension-related underlying disease (renal disease, cerebrovascular disease, diabetes, peripheral arterial disease, heart failure, and coronary artery disease). Physicians prescribed antihypertensive medications at their discretion without the need to follow any regulations or protocols at each patient’s visit. Treatment patterns were used to examine whether physicians followed GBP, which was based on the Joint National Committee 8 guideline [
6] and was defined if one of following criteria was met; (1) maximize the first medication before adding a second or (2) add a second medication before reaching the maximum dose of the first medication to control BP. All subjects gave informed consent and the study was conducted after approval from the institutional review board at each hospital.
Assessment of medication adherence and patient-reported outcomes
Among the various methods of assessing medication adherence, we evaluated adherence using the 8-item Morisky Medication Adherence Scale (MMAS-8) with three levels of adherence (high, medium, low) [
13‐
15]. The Korean version of the MMAS-8 was used for data collection and licensure agreement with the survey provider, Donald E. Morisky (
dmorisky@gmail.com), was obtained. After approval for its use, treatment satisfaction was assessed using the Korean version of the Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire for Medication, version 1.4 (TSQM 1.4), consisting of four domains (effectiveness, side effects, convenience, global satisfaction) [
16]. TSQM 1.4 domain scores range from 0 to 100, with higher scores representing higher satisfaction in three of the domains (effectiveness, side effects, convenience) regarding patients’ antihypertensive medications. The “global satisfaction” domain was used to assess the overall level of satisfaction or dissatisfaction with medications. The Korean version of the EuroQoL-visual analog scale (EQ-VAS, Rotterdam, Netherlands) was used (with permission) to evaluate patient QoL regarding antihypertensive treatment. Patients were asked to indicate how good or bad their health state is and check the point on the scale numbered from 0 (worst) to 100 (best). MMAS-8 was assessed three times, at the recruitment visit and at both follow-up visits; TSQM 1.4 and EQ-VAS were assessed at the recruitment visit and at the end-of-study visit. Patients were categorized as (1) GBP and adherent group, (2) GBP and non-adherent group, and (3) non-GBP according to GBP status and medication adherent by MMAS-8.
Statistical analysis
This study compared clinical and patient-reported outcomes between GBP and non-GBP groups, and between adherent and non-adherent groups. For the description of patients’ characteristics, continuous variables were presented with basic statistics (the number of observations, means and standard deviations), whereas frequency and percentage (%) were reported for categorical variables. For two-group comparisons, the generalized estimating equation (GEE) method was performed to compare the rates of GBP and adherence and the BP control rate, at different observation periods. Likewise, the paired t-test was used to estimate differences in treatment satisfaction and QoL between baseline and 6-month follow-up. Three group comparisons were conducted with the chi-square test for BP control and with ANOVA and/or Kruskal-Wallis test for treatment satisfaction and QoL. Only patients who visited at each observational period and completed the survey were included in group comparisons. A multivariable logistic regression analysis was conducted for BP control while multivariable linear regression analyses were applied to treatment satisfaction and QoL. For the multivariable analyses, factors that were found to be present from univariate analysis with a significance level of 10% (P < 0.1), and clinically meaningful, were adjusted. SAS ver. 9.4 (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, USA) was used for all statistical analyses.
Discussion
This multicenter, prospective, observational study demonstrated that physicians’ compliance with GBP and patients’ good adherence to prescribed medications are important to improve BP control, treatment satisfaction, and QoL. Overall, the GBP rate increased during the 6-month study period. Physicians tended to follow GBP throughout the study period and more patients showed better adherence at the end-of-study visit than at baseline (36.7% vs. 49.2%). Both physicians’ and patients’ good compliance to the treatment of hypertension led to an increase in BP control at 6 months in patients with uncontrolled hypertension. The non-GBP group, in which physicians did not follow GBP, showed the lowest BP control rate at 6 months and this was even lower than in the GBP but non-adherent group (70.9% vs. 54.2%). This result highlights the unfavorable effects of physician inertia (i.e., lack of therapeutic action when the patient’s BP is not controlled) in the treatment of hypertension in real-world practice [
2]. In addition to this physician inertia, poor adherence to medication is the most important cause of poor BP control [
17,
18]. After 6 months and 1 year, more than one-third and about one-half of patients, respectively, may stop their initial treatment [
19]. In our non-interventional, observational study, adherence increased from about one-third of patients at baseline up to almost one-half of all patients at 6 months, mainly due to the GBP effect.
Patients’ satisfaction with their treatment is highly associated with compliant medication use, thereby affecting the clinical effectiveness and efficiency of medical care. Treated hypertensive patients with low treatment satisfaction may be more likely to have lower adherence to antihypertensive medications. Low satisfaction with treatment may be an important barrier to achieving high rates of treatment adherence [
11]. There are several ways to assess patients’ satisfaction with their treatment. In the current study, we used TSQM which provides information to compare various medications used to treat a particular illness on the three primary dimensions of treatment satisfaction (effectiveness, side effects, convenience), as well as patients’ overall rating of global satisfaction based on the relative importance of these primary dimensions to patients [
16]. We found that patients who were treated according to GBP and also adherent to their antihypertensive medications (GBP and adherent group) not only had a higher BP control rate, but also higher satisfaction with their treatment and better QoL than the other two groups of patients in the study.
In real life, poor adherence to antihypertensive medication leads to cardiovascular events and mortality [
8,
9,
20]. In other words, poor adherence to antihypertensive therapy correlates with a higher risk of cardiovascular events [
19,
20]. In contrast, it has been shown that good adherence to antihypertensive medications has positive impacts on clinical and patient-reported outcomes including treatment satisfaction and QoL [
10‐
12]. Based on evidence from multiple RCTs, recent hypertension guidelines and meta-analyses recommend more intensive BP control in adult hypertensive patients to reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease and all-cause mortality [
21‐
23]. To improve outcomes for hypertensive patients, physicians are recommended to make every effort to follow GBP and to improve adherence to antihypertensive treatment and BP control. However, the majority of treated hypertensive patients are unlikely to achieve recommended BP targets in real life.
Despite the meaningful findings in real-world healthcare settings, this study has a couple of limitations. First, caution is needed regarding the generalizability of the study results since the study only involved major tertiary hospitals which inevitably excluded patients who usually visit local clinics. Therefore, a study including various types of hospitals needs to be conducted for more clarification. Second, there might have been reporting bias resulting from recall bias of the responders regarding the nature of data collection. Measuring medication adherence was based solely on patients’ self-report which may have mistakenly underestimated or overestimated adherence. Objective methodology for the assessment of medication adherence may more clearly explain actual adherence levels in hypertensive patients.
Conclusions
This study demonstrated the importance of physicians’ compliance with GBP and patients’ adherence to prescribed antihypertensive medications to improve BP control, treatment satisfaction, and QoL. GBP compliance and medication adherence should be taken into account when setting therapeutic strategies in order to lead to better outcomes in patients with hypertension.
Acknowledgments
The MMAS-8 scale, content, name and trademarks are protected by US copyright and trademark laws. Permission for use of the scale and its coding is required. A license agreement is available from Donald E. Morisky, ScD, ScM, MSPH, 294 Lindura Ct., USA; dmorisky@gmail.com. Editorial assistance was provided by David P. Figgitt, PhD, ISMPP CMPP™, Content Ed Net, with funding from Viatris Korea.
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