1. Effect of Multiple Pharmacy Use on Medication Adherence and Drug-Drug Interactions in Older Adults with Medicare Part D.
- Author
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Marcum, Zachary A., Driessen, Julia, Thorpe, Carolyn T., Gellad, Walid F., and Donohue, Julie M.
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DRUGSTORE statistics , *CHI-squared test , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *DRUG interactions , *DRUGS , *EPIDEMIOLOGY , *MEDICARE , *PATIENT compliance , *RESEARCH funding , *T-test (Statistics) , *DATA analysis , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *OLD age - Abstract
Objectives To assess the association between multiple pharmacy use and medication adherence and potential drug-drug interactions ( DDIs) in older adults. Design Cross-sectional propensity score-weighted analysis. Setting 2009 claims data. Participants A nationally representative sample of 926,956 Medicare Part D beneficiaries aged 65 and older continuously enrolled in fee-for-service Medicare and Part D that year who filled one or more prescriptions at a community retail or mail order pharmacy. Measurements Multiple pharmacy use was defined as concurrent (overlapping time periods) or sequential use (non-overlapping time periods) of ≥2 pharmacies in the year. Medication adherence was calculated using a proportion of days covered of 0.80 or greater for eight therapeutic categories (beta-blockers, renin angiotensin system antagonists, calcium channel blockers, statins, sulfonylureas, biguanides (metformin), thiazolidinediones, and dipeptidyl peptidase- IV inhibitors). Potential DDIs arising from use of certain drugs across a broad set of classes were defined as the concurrent filling of two interacting drugs. Results Overall, 38.1% of the sample used multiple pharmacies. Those using multiple pharmacies (concurrently or sequentially) consistently had higher adjusted odds of nonadherence (ranging from 1.10 to 1.31, P < .001) across all chronic medication classes assessed after controlling for sociodemographic, health status, and access to care factors than single pharmacy users. The adjusted predicted probability of exposure to a DDI was also slightly higher for those using multiple pharmacies concurrently (3.6%) than for single pharmacy users (3.2%, adjusted odds ratio ( AOR) = 1.11, 95% confidence interval ( CI) = 1.08-1.15) but lower in individuals using multiple pharmacies sequentially (2.8%, AOR = 0.85, 95% CI = 0.81-0.91). Conclusions Filling prescriptions at multiple pharmacies was associated with lower medication adherence across multiple chronic medications and a small but statistically significant greater likelihood of DDIs in concurrent pharmacy users. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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