Erschienen in:
01.11.2006 | Original Article
Compliance with drug therapy for postmenopausal osteoporosis
verfasst von:
D. Weycker, D. Macarios, J. Edelsberg, G. Oster
Erschienen in:
Osteoporosis International
|
Ausgabe 11/2006
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Abstract
Introduction
Patient compliance with pharmacotherapy for osteoporosis is typically poor in clinical practice; less frequent dosing with bisphosphonates may improve compliance.
Methods
Using data from 49 US health plans, we identified all women aged ≥45 years with osteoporosis who initiated therapy with a bisphosphonate, calcitonin, estrogen, or raloxifene. Compliance was examined alternatively in terms of incidence of adherence failure (medication days <80% of possible) and persistence failure (gap in therapy ≥90 days), and was compared across treatment groups using Kaplan-Meier methods and Cox proportional hazards models.
Results
The study population included 18,822 women, 48% of whom initiated weekly bisphosphonate therapy. Overall risk of adherence failure was 47% at 3 months, 70% at 1 year, and 84% at 3 years. Risk of persistence failure was 47% at 1 year, and 77% at 3 years. In multivariate analyses, risk of adherence failure was higher for calcitonin (hazard ratio=2.7 vs weekly bisphosphonate therapy, p<0.01), but comparable for all other therapies. Relative risks of persistence failure were generally similar.
Conclusions
Approximately three-quarters of women who initiate osteoporosis drug therapy are non-adherent with treatment within 12 months, and almost 50% have discontinued such therapy by this time. Compliance with weekly bisphosphonate therapy is generally no better than that with osteoporosis medications requiring more frequent dosing.