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AB0286 Assessment of treatment adherence in rheumatoid arthritis italian patients using a validated version of the 5-item compliance questionnaire for rheumatology (I-CQR5)

Authors :
L. Friso
Bernd Raffeiner
Danila Azzolina
Costantino Botsios
Dario Gregori
D. Astorri
Marta Favero
Andrea Doria
Francesca Ometto
John Done
Source :
Rheumatoid arthritis – prognosis, predictors and outcome.
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and European League Against Rheumatism, 2018.

Abstract

Background The 5-item Compliance Questionnaire for Rheumatology (CQR5) allows the identification of patients likely to be high adherers (HA) to anti-rheumatic treatment (i.e. taking ≥80% of their medications correctly), or “low” adherers (LA).1 We have previously validated an Italian version of the questionnaire (I-CQR5) following standardised guidelines. Objectives The objective was to investigate what factors are associated with high treatment adherence according to I-CQR5 in RA. Methods RA patients (disease duration >1 year, undergoing treatment with ≥1 self-administered biological or conventional synthetic disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (bDMARDs, csDMARDs), capable of completing the questionnaire unaided) completed I-CQR5 on one occasion. I-CQR5 were anonymous and clinical data were retrieved anonymously from the local database. To investigate what factors were associated with high adherence, we included demographic and social characteristics, clinical and treatment information. Factors achieving a p Results Among 604 RA patients, 328 patients were enrolled, 18 questionnaires were incomplete. Median age of the patients was 57 years,48–67 females were 232 (82%), disease duration was 12 years;7–19 193 (64.3%) patients were treated with bDMARDs and 107 (54.6%) with csDMARD only; 270 (90.3%) were in low disease activity or remission (figure 1). HA were found to be 35.2% (109/310) of the patients.40.2% (79/193) were on bDMARDs and 22.4% (24/107) on csDMARDs. Older age, lower education level, higher prednisone daily dose, use of a csDMARD (particulary hydroxychloroquine and sulfasalazine) and higher patient-VAS were significantly more frequent in LA compared with HA (figure 1). In the multivariate analysis, bDMARD treatment and employment resulted independently associated with high adherence: OR 2.88 (1.36–6.1), p=0.006 and OR 2.36 (1.21–4.62), p=0.012 respectively (table 1). Conclusions Only one third of Italian RA patients were highly adherent to treatment according to I-CQR5. Treatment with bDMARDs and employment status were the major determinants of treatment adherence, increasing by almost 3-fold the likelihood of being highly adherent. Reference [1] Hughes L, et al. A 5 item version of the Compliance Questionnaire for Rheumatology (CQR5) successfully identifies low adherence to DMARDs. BMC Musculoskelet Disord2013;14:286. Disclosure of Interest None declared

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Rheumatoid arthritis – prognosis, predictors and outcome
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........77fbcd25a65b49a5b871d07cd578f52d