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23-09-2024 | Sarcoidosis | RESEARCH

Factors Associated with Corticosteroid Adherence in Sarcoidosis

Authors: Marc A. Judson, Wende Ouedraogo Ouedraogo, Kenneth M. Fish, Robert DeLuca, Rachel VanCavage, Krishnaveni Sirigaddi, Recai Yucel

Published in: Lung | Issue 6/2024

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Abstract

Purpose

We measured corticosteroid medication adherence (CMA) in sarcoidosis patients and analyzed if demographic and clinical factors, beliefs about medications, corticosteroid side-effects, psychosocial status, and the doctor-patient relationship were associated with corticosteroid adherence.

Methods

Sarcoidosis patients receiving corticosteroids were eligible to participate. CMA was measured using the Medication Adherence Response Scale-10 (MARS-10), a validated patient reported outcome measure (PRO). Data collection included patient demographics and clinical variables to assess their sarcoidosis phenotype. The patients were administered additional PROs concerning their psychosocial status, beliefs about medication use, corticosteroid side-effects and the strength of their doctor-patient relationship.

Results

132 patients were enrolled. Their mean prednisone dose was 9.9 ± 7.5 mg/day. 75% (99/132) were adherent with corticosteroids (MARS-10 ≥ 6) and 25% (33/132) were nonadherent (MARS-10 < 6). All demographic features, education level, and annual family income were not associated with CMA. Most clinical variables including spirometry, use of additional sarcoidosis drugs, number of organs involved with sarcoidosis were not associated with CMA. Almost all PROs including a better attitude toward medication use, less psychological issues, less corticosteroid side-effects, and a stronger doctor-patient relationship were associated with better CMA. A multi-logistic regression found that patient-doctor communication and the patient’s intrinsic beliefs about the use of medications remained associated with CMA.

Conclusion

We found no significant relationship between demographic or socioeconomic factors and CMA. Few clinical factors were associated with CMA. In a univariate analysis, CMA was associated with physician-doctor communication, beliefs about medication use, psychological/emotional issues, and corticosteroid side-effects. Only the first two of these factors remained associated with CMA in a multi-logistic analysis. These data suggest that CMA is heavily influenced by sarcoidosis patient beliefs about medications, and less so by patient demographics.
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Metadata
Title
Factors Associated with Corticosteroid Adherence in Sarcoidosis
Authors
Marc A. Judson
Wende Ouedraogo Ouedraogo
Kenneth M. Fish
Robert DeLuca
Rachel VanCavage
Krishnaveni Sirigaddi
Recai Yucel
Publication date
23-09-2024
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Lung / Issue 6/2024
Print ISSN: 0341-2040
Electronic ISSN: 1432-1750
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00408-024-00746-7

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