Adherence to oral anticancer treatment: focus on quality of execution during continuous schema of treatment

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_BC56F568E871
Type
Inproceedings: an article in a conference proceedings.
Publication sub-type
Abstract (Abstract): shot summary in a article that contain essentials elements presented during a scientific conference, lecture or from a poster.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Adherence to oral anticancer treatment: focus on quality of execution during continuous schema of treatment
Title of the conference
ESCP-GSASA 38th symposium on clinical pharmacy 30 years of clinical pharmacy, a bright future ahead
Author(s)
Hefti Emmanuele Guignard, Jeanneret Leila Achtari, Lange Anne-Catherine, Vrijens Bernard, Luethi Francois, Bugnon Olivier, Schneider Marie P.
Address
Geneva, Switzerland, November 3-6, 2009
ISBN
0928-1231
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2010
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
32
Series
Pharmacy World and Science
Pages
239
Language
english
Notes
Meeting Abstract
Abstract
Background and objective: Oral anti-cancer treatments have expanded rapidly over the last years. While taking oral tablets at home ensures a better quality of life, it also exposes patients to the risk of sub-optimal adherence. The objective of this study is to assess how well ambulatory cancer patients execute their prescribed dosing regimen while they are engaged with continuous anti-cancer treatments.
Design: This is an on-going longitudinal study. Consecutive patients starting an oral treatment are proposed to enter the study by the oncologist. Then they are referred to the pharmacy, where their oral anticancer treatment is dispensed in a Medication Event Monitoring System (MEMSTM), which records date and time of each opening of the drug container. Electronically compiled dosing history data from the MEMS are summarized and used as feedback during semistructured interviews with the pharmacist, which are dedicated to prevention and management of side effects. Interviews are scheduled before each medical visit. Report of the interview is available to the oncologist via an on-line secured portal.
Setting: Seamless care approach between a Multidisciplinary Oncology Center and the Pharmacy of an Ambulatory Care and Community Medicine Department.
Main outcome measures: For each patient, the comparison between the electronically compiled dosing history and the prescribed regimen was summarized using a daily binary indicator indicating whether yes or no the patient has taken the medication as prescribed.
Results: Study started in March 2008. Among 22 eligible patients, 19 were included (11 men, median age 63 years old) and 3 (14%) refused to participate. 15 patients were prescribed a QD regimen, 3 patients a BID and 1 patient switched from QD to BID during follow-up. Median follow up was 182 days (IQR 72-252). Early discontinuation happened in four patients: side effects (n = 1), psychiatric reasons (n = 1), cancer progression (n = 1) and death (n = 1). On average, the daily number of medications was taken as prescribed in 99% of the follow-up days.
Conclusions: Execution of the prescribed dosing regimens was almost perfect during the first 6 months. Maintaining this high degree of regimen execution and persistence over time might however be challenging in this population and need therefore to be confirmed in larger and longer follow-up cohort studies.
Keywords
Oncology, Medication Adherence, Seamless Care, Oral Treatment
Web of science
Create date
23/06/2010 11:17
Last modification date
20/08/2019 16:30
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