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Nonadherence Is Common in Patients With Apparent Resistant Hypertension: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis

Gabrielle Bourque, Julius Vladimir Ilin, Marcel Ruzicka, Gregory L. Hundemer, Risa Shorr, Swapnil Hiremath

2023American Journal of Hypertension36 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The prevalence of medication nonadherence in the setting of resistant hypertension (RH) varies from 5% to 80% in the published literature. The aim of this systematic review was to establish the overall prevalence of nonadherence and evaluate the effect of the method of assessment on this estimate. METHODS: MEDLINE, EMBASE, Cochrane, CINAHL, and Web of Science (database inception to November 2020) were searched for relevant articles. We included studies including adults with a diagnosis of RH, with some measure of adherence. Details about the method of adherence assessment were independently extracted by 2 reviewers. Pooled analysis was performed using the random effects model and heterogeneity was explored with metaregression and subgroup analyses. The main outcome measured was the pooled prevalence of nonadherence and the prevalence using direct and indirect methods of assessment. RESULTS: Forty-two studies comprising 71,353 patients were included. The pooled prevalence of nonadherence was 37% (95% confidence interval [CI] 27%-47%) and lower for indirect methods (20%, 95% CI 11%-35%), than for direct methods (46%, 95% CI 40%-52%). The study-level metaregression suggested younger age and recent publication year as potential factors contributing to the heterogeneity. CONCLUSIONS: Indirect methods (pill counts or questionnaires) are insufficient for diagnosis of nonadherence, and report less than half the rates as direct methods (direct observed therapy or urine assays). The overall prevalence of nonadherence in apparent treatment RH is extremely high and necessitates a thorough evaluation of nonadherence in this setting.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineMeta-analysisMEDLINECINAHLConfidence intervalInternal medicineRandom effects modelSubgroup analysisPillPooled varianceSystematic reviewPsychological interventionPsychiatryPolitical scienceLawPharmacologyMedication Adherence and ComplianceBlood Pressure and Hypertension StudiesHeart Failure Treatment and Management
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