Abstract

Background: Medication nonadherence presents one of the greatest challenges to hypertension management. Previous studies from our group have shown therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM), biochemical monitoring of drug levels, is more accurate than self-report, detailed questionnaires, or prescription fill rate in detecting nonadherence. Prior studies have also shown a prevalence of nonadherence from 45% to 80% among insured patients with uncontrolled hypertension despite having been prescribed a multi-drug regimen. Previous studies have not assessed adherence to antihypertensive drugs in a safety net population by TDM. Methods: We performed a cross-sectional study in patients with uncontrolled hypertension in the primary care Internal Medicine and Cardiology Clinics at Parkland Health& Hospital System (PHHS). Patients with BP of 130/80 mmHg, prescribed ≥2 antihypertensive medications, and self-reporting medication adherence were enrolled after informed consent. Plasma samples were obtained for measurement of 44 cardiovascular drugs using liquid chromatography mass spectrometry. Results: Among 77 patients with uncontrolled hypertension (57% female, 65% Black, 12% Hispanic), 13 (17%) were nonadherent to at least one anti-hypertensive drug by TDM. There was no difference in baseline characteristics between the two groups. The adherent and nonadherent groups had similar systolic (146±13 vs 148±18, p=0.67) and diastolic (83±9 vs 88±10 mmHg, p=0.13) BP. All patients had either medical insurance or some form of prescription financial assistance. 15 patients had prescription financial assistance, while 62 patients had medical insurance. Nonadherence rates for patients on financial assistance programs did not significantly differ from patients with medical insurance (13% vs 18%, p>0.999). Conclusions: We found a surprisingly low prevalence of anti-hypertensive medication nonadherence in this uncontrolled hypertension population despite many barriers to treatment. Our study suggests a lesser role of medication nonadherence in uncontrolled hypertension in the safety net population.

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