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Adherence to Subcutaneous Biological Therapies in Patients with Inflammatory Rheumatic Diseases and Inflammatory Bowel Disease: A Systematic Review

Juan J. Nieto, C Aràjol, Loreto Carmona, Carlos Marras, Luis Cea‐Calvo

2021Immunotherapy14 citationsDOI

Abstract

Aim: To assess adherence to subcutaneous biologicals in adults with inflammatory rheumatic diseases or inflammatory bowel disease and evaluate factors possibly associated with adherence. Materials & methods: Systematic searches were conducted of main databases from January 2000 to June 2019. Results: 41 articles (32 full papers and nine abstracts) were included in the review. Among studies which used a medication possession ratio threshold of ≥80% as the end point, adherence varied from 28.8 to 89.4%. Possible predictors of adherence were older age, professional or family member support, belief in medication necessity, lower concerns about medication and monthly versus weekly administration. Conclusion: Considerable variability in adherence rates across published studies reflects study heterogeneity and the absence of a ‘gold standard’ to measure adherence.

Topics & Concepts

Inflammatory bowel diseaseMedicineImmunologyInflammatory Bowel DiseasesDiseaseCrohn's diseaseInternal medicinePharmaceutical studies and practicesAdolescent and Pediatric HealthcareMedication Adherence and Compliance
Adherence to Subcutaneous Biological Therapies in Patients with Inflammatory Rheumatic Diseases and Inflammatory Bowel Disease: A Systematic Review | Litcius