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All non-adherence is equal, but is some more equal than others? TB in the digital era

Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/20437
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1183/23120541.00315-2020
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Date
2020-11-02
Type
Journal article
Tidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed

Author
Stagg, Helen; Flook, Mary; Martinecz, Antal; Kielmann, Karina; Abel zur Wiesch, Pia; Karat, Aaron; Lipman, Marc; Sloan, Derek; Walker, Elizabeth; Fielding, Katherine L
Abstract
Adherence to treatment for tuberculosis (TB) has been a concern for many decades, resulting in the World Health Organization's recommendation of the direct observation of treatment in the 1990s. Recent advances in digital adherence technologies (DATs) have renewed discussion on how to best address nonadherence, as well as offering important information on dose-by-dose adherence patterns and their variability between countries and settings. Previous studies have largely focussed on percentage thresholds to delineate sufficient adherence, but this is misleading and limited, given the complex and dynamic nature of adherence over the treatment course. Instead, we apply a standardised taxonomy – as adopted by the international adherence community – to dose-by-dose medication-taking data, which divides missed doses into 1) late/noninitiation (starting treatment later than expected/not starting), 2) discontinuation (ending treatment early), and 3) suboptimal implementation (intermittent missed doses). Using this taxonomy, we can consider the implications of different forms of nonadherence for intervention and regimen design. For example, can treatment regimens be adapted to increase the “forgiveness” of common patterns of suboptimal implementation to protect against treatment failure and the development of drug resistance? Is it reasonable to treat all missed doses of treatment as equally problematic and equally common when deploying DATs? Can DAT data be used to indicate the patients that need enhanced levels of support during their treatment course? Critically, we pinpoint key areas where knowledge regarding treatment adherence is sparse and impeding scientific progress.
Publisher
European Respiratory Society
Citation
Stagg, Flook, Martinecz A, Kielmann, Abel zur Wiesch P, Karat, Lipman, Sloan, Walker, Fielding. All non-adherence is equal, but is some more equal than others? TB in the digital era.. European Respiratory Journal Open Research (ERJ Open Research). 2020
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