British Journal of Dermatology, volume 176, issue 3, pages 759-764

Long-term adherence to topical psoriasis treatment can be abysmal: a 1-year randomized intervention study using objective electronic adherence monitoring

H Alinia 1
S Moradi Tuchayi 1
J A Smith 1
I M Richardson 1
N. Bahrami 1, 2, 3
S C Jaros 1
L F Sandoval 1
M E Farhangian 1
K. L. Anderson 1
K E Huang 1
S R Feldman 1, 4, 5
Show full list: 11 authors
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2016-11-29
scimago Q1
SJR2.759
CiteScore16.3
Impact factor11
ISSN00070963, 13652133
PubMed ID:  27664969
Dermatology
Abstract
Most people with psoriasis have limited disease that could be treated with topicals, but topical efficacy is limited by low short-term adherence. Psoriasis is a chronic disease, and long-term adherence is an even bigger problem.To determine how well medication is used in the long-term topical treatment of psoriasis and to assess the potential of an internet-based reporting intervention to improve treatment adherence and outcomes.An investigator-blinded, prospective study evaluated topical fluocinonide adherence in 40 patients with mild-to-moderate psoriasis over 12 months. Subjects were randomized in a 1 : 1 ratio to standard-of-care or internet-based reporting group. Adherence was objectively monitored with Medication Event Monitoring System® caps.Fifty per cent of subjects discontinued the treatment. Greater adherence was seen in the intervention group compared with the standard-of-care group (50% vs. 35%, P = 0·08). Psoriasis Area and Severity Index improved more in the intervention group at month 1 (1·61 vs. -0·12, P = 0·003), month 3 (2·50 vs. 0·79, P = 0·025) and month 12 (3·32 vs. 0·34, P = 0·038) than in the standard-of-care group.This study likely underestimates the challenge of long-term adherence, as adherence tends to be better in research studies than in clinical practice. This study also did not fully account for primary nonadherence. Adherence to topical treatment is low in the short term and decreased further in the long term, a considerable challenge for dermatologists to address. A reporting intervention may be one of the ways we can improve our patients' treatment outcomes.
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