Clinical and Translational Allergy (Feb 2023)

Measuring adherence to inhaled control medication in patients with asthma: Comparison among an asthma app, patient self‐report and physician assessment

  • Afonso Cachim,
  • Ana Margarida Pereira,
  • Rute Almeida,
  • Rita Amaral,
  • Magna Alves‐Correia,
  • Pedro Vieira‐Marques,
  • Claudia Chaves‐Loureiro,
  • Carmelita Ribeiro,
  • Francisca Cardia,
  • Joana Gomes,
  • Carmen Vidal,
  • Eurico Silva,
  • Sara Rocha,
  • Diana Rocha,
  • Maria Luís Marques,
  • Rosália Páscoa,
  • Daniela Morais,
  • Ana Margarida Cruz,
  • Marta Santalha,
  • José Augusto Simões,
  • Sofia daSilva,
  • Diana Silva,
  • Rita Gerardo,
  • Filipa Todo Bom,
  • Ana Morete,
  • Inês Vieira,
  • Pedro Vieira,
  • Rosário Monteiro,
  • Maria Rosário Raimundo,
  • Luís Monteiro,
  • Ângela Neves,
  • Carlos Santos,
  • Ana Margarida Penas,
  • Rita Regadas,
  • José Varanda Marques,
  • Inês Rosendo,
  • Margarida Abreu Aguiar,
  • Sara Fernandes,
  • Carlos Seiça Cardoso,
  • Filipa Pimenta,
  • Patrícia Meireles,
  • Mariana Gonçalves,
  • João Almeida Fonseca,
  • Cristina Jácome

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/clt2.12210
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 2
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Background Previous studies have demonstrated the feasibility of using an asthma app to support medication management and adherence but failed to compare with other measures currently used in clinical practice. However, in a clinical setting, any additional adherence measurement must be evaluated in the context of both the patient and physician perspectives so that it can also help improve the process of shared decision making. Thus, we aimed to compare different measures of adherence to asthma control inhalers in clinical practice, namely through an app, patient self‐report and physician assessment. Methods This study is a secondary analysis of three prospective multicentre observational studies with patients (≥13 years old) with persistent asthma recruited from 61 primary and secondary care centres in Portugal. Patients were invited to use the InspirerMundi app and register their inhaled medication. Adherence was measured by the app as the number of doses taken divided by the number of doses scheduled each day and two time points were considered for analysis: 1‐week and 1‐month. At baseline, patients and physicians independently assessed adherence to asthma control inhalers during the previous week using a Visual Analogue Scale (VAS 0–100). Results A total of 193 patients (72% female; median [P25–P75] age 28 [19–41] years old) were included in the analysis. Adherence measured by the app was lower (1 week: 31 [0–71]%; 1 month: 18 [0–48]%) than patient self‐report (80 [60–95]) and physician assessment (82 [51–94]) (p 0.05). There was a moderate correlation between patient self‐report and physician assessment (ρ = 0.596, p < 0.001). Conclusions Adherence measured by the app was lower than that reported by the patient or the physician. This was expected as objective measurements are commonly lower than subjective evaluations, which tend to overestimate adherence. Nevertheless, the low adherence measured by the app may also be influenced by the use of the app itself and this needs to be considered in future studies.

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