Authors |
Granger
BB, Swedberg K, Ekman I, Granger CB, Olofsson B, McMurray JJ, Yusuf S,
Michelson EL, Pfeffer MA; CHARM investigators
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Abstract |
BACKGROUND:
Chronic heart failure (CHF) is an important cause of hospital admission
and death. Poor adherence to medication is common in some chronic illnesses
and might reduce the population effectiveness of proven treatments. Because
little is known about adherence in patients with CHF and about the consequences
of non-adherence, we assessed the association between adherence and clinical
outcome in the CHARM (Candesartan in Heart failure: Assessment of Reduction
in Mortality and morbidity) programme.
METHODS: CHARM was a double-blind, randomised, controlled clinical trial,
comparing the effects of the angiotensin receptor blocker candesartan
with placebo in 7599 patients with CHF. Median follow-up was 38 months.
The proportion of time patients took more than 80% of their study medication
was defined as good adherence and 80% or less as poor adherence. We used
a Cox proportional hazards regression model, with adherence as a time-dependent
covariate in the model, to examine the association between adherence and
mortality in the candesartan and placebo groups.
FINDINGS: We excluded 187 patients because of missing information on adherence.
In the time-dependent Cox regression model, after adjustment for predictive
factors (demographics, physiological and severity-of-illness variables,
smoking history, and number of concomitant medications), good adherence
was associated with lower all-cause mortality in all patients (hazard
ratio [HR] 0.65, 95% CI 0.57-0.75, p<0.0001). The adjusted HR for good
adherence was similar in the candesartan (0.66, 0.55-0.81, p<0.0001)
and placebo (0.64, 0.53-0.78, p<0.0001) groups.
INTERPRETATION: Good adherence to medication is associated with a lower
risk of death than poor adherence in patients with CHF, irrespective of
assigned treatment. This finding suggests that adherence is a marker for
adherence to effective treatments other than study medications, or to
other adherence behaviours that affect outcome. Understanding these factors
could provide an opportunity for new interventions, including those aimed
at improving adherence.
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