Adherence and persistence to direct oral anticoagulants in atrial fibrillation: a population-based study

Amitava Banerjee, Valerio Benedetto, Phillip Gichuru, Jane Burnell, Sotiris Antoniou, Richard Schilling, W. David Strain, Ronan Ryan, Caroline Watkins, Tom Marshall, Christopher Sutton

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background: Despite simpler regimes than vitamin K antagonists(VKA) for stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation(AF), adherence(taking drugs as prescribed) and persistence(continuation of drugs) to direct oral anticoagulants(DOACs) are suboptimal, yet understudied in electronic health records(EHR).

Objective: We investigated: (i)time trends at individual and system levels; (ii)risk factors for and associations between adherence and persistence.

Methods: In UK primary care EHR(The Health Information Network; 2011-2016), we investigated adherence and persistence at 1-year for OACs in adults with incident AF. Baseline characteristics were analysed by OAC and adherence/persistence status. Risk factors for non-adherence and non-persistence were assessed using Cox and logistic regression. Patterns of adherence and persistence were analysed.

Results: Among 36652 individuals with incident AF, cardiovascular comorbidities(median CHA2DS2VASc 3) and polypharmacy(median number of drugs 6) were common. Adherence was 55.2%(95 CI 54.6-55.7), 51.2%(50.6-51.8), 66.5%(63.7-69.2), 63.1%(61.8-64.4) and 64.7(63.2-66.1) for all OACs, VKA, dabigatran, rivaroxaban and apixaban. One-year persistence was 65.9%(65.4-66.5), 63.4%(62.8-64.0), 61.4%(58.3-64.2), 72.3%(70.9-73.7) and 78.7%(77.1-80.1) for all OACs, VKA, dabigatran, rivaroxaban and apixaban. Risk of non-adherence and non-persistence increased over time at individual and system levels. Increasing comorbidity was associated with reduced risk of non-adherence and non-persistence, across all OACs. Overall rates of “primary non-adherence”(stopping after first prescription), “non-adherent non-persistence” and “persistent adherence” were 3.5%, 26.5% and 40.2%, differing across OACs.

Conclusions: Adherence and persistence to OACs are low at one year with heterogeneity across drugs and over time, at individual and system levels. Better understanding of contributory factors will inform interventions to improve adherence and persistence across OACs in individuals and populations.
Original languageEnglish
JournalHeart
Early online date10 Oct 2019
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 10 Oct 2019

Keywords

  • atrial fibrillation
  • anticoagulant
  • adherence
  • persistence
  • stroke

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