OBJECTIVES: Medication nonadherence is associated with worsening of health outcomes and increasing healthcare costs among patients with both oncological and non-oncological chronic conditions. A targeted literature review was undertaken to describe interventions for improving long-term adherence to oral medication and to summarize their effectiveness.
METHODS: Medline and Embase were searched for publications reported in English from 8 August 2014 to 8 August 2024. Additional articles were identified from bibliographies of relevant systematic and comprehensive literature reviews. Included studies comprised interventions to improve long-term (≥3 months) adherence or persistence for patients with cancer or other chronic illnesses who were prescribed daily or frequently administered oral medications.
RESULTS: Of 51 studies included, 37 were in oncology populations and 14 were in non-oncology populations. There were 32 randomized controlled trials and 19 cohort studies. The interventions were categorized as pharmacist-/physician-led (oncology [n=11]; non-oncology [n=4]), nurse-/other healthcare professional (HCP)-led (oncology [n=14]; non-oncology [n=5]), digital app/device/voice response system (oncology [n=8]; non-oncology [n=6]), or education only (oncology [n=4]; non-oncology [n=0]). Nearly three-quarters (73%; 11/15) of the pharmacist-/physician-led intervention studies showed a statistically significant improvement in adherence or persistence either when compared with pre-intervention levels or usual care, and 67% of these studies were nonrandomized comparative studies. Adherence/persistence improved in half (50%; 9/18) of nurse-/HCP-led and less than half (40%; 6/15) of digital/device/voice response interventions. Notably, none of the education-only interventions resulted in improved adherence. Studies with large (≥10% increase) and statistically significant improvements in adherence or persistence included multidimensional interventions addressing patient knowledge, side-effect/symptom barriers, forgetfulness, and communication with an HCP.
CONCLUSIONS: More pharmacist-/physician-led interventions showed significantly improved adherence/persistence compared with nurse/HCP-led, digital/device/voice response, or education-only interventions. Future adherence/persistence interventions should consider including contact with pharmacists, side-effect or symptom management, daily or weekly reminders, and patient education as part of the intervention package.
Liang Y, Salomonsen R, Colosia A, Nelsen SH, Khan S, Sandelin M. Interventions to improve adherence and persistence to oral medication: a targeted literature review. Poster presented at the ISPOR 2025; May 14, 2025. Montréal, Canada.
Related Therapeutic Areas