Abstract

Statin non-adherence is a common problem in the management of cardiovascular disease (CVD), increasing patient morbidity and mortality. Mobile health (mHealth) interventions may be a scalable way to improve medication adherence. The objectives of this review were to assess the literature testing mHealth interventions for statin adherence and to identify the Behaviour-Change Techniques (BCTs) employed by effective and ineffective interventions. A systematic search was conducted of randomised controlled trials (RCTs) measuring the effectiveness of mHealth interventions to improve statin adherence against standard of care in those who had been prescribed statins for the primary or secondary prevention of CVD, published in English (1 January 2000–17 July 2020). For included studies, relevant data were extracted, the BCTs used in the trial arms were coded, and a quality assessment made using the Risk of Bias 2 (RoB2) questionnaire. The search identified 17 relevant studies. Twelve studies demonstrated a significant improvement in adherence in the mHealth intervention trial arm, and five reported no impact on adherence. Automated phone messages were the mHealth delivery method most frequently used in effective interventions. Studies including more BCTs were more effective. The BCTs most frequently associated with effective interventions were “Goal setting (behaviour)”, “Instruction on how to perform a behaviour”, and “Credible source”. Other effective techniques were “Information about health consequences”, “Feedback on behaviour”, and “Social support (unspecified)”. This review found moderate, positive evidence of the effect of mHealth interventions on statin adherence. There are four primary recommendations for practitioners using mHealth interventions to improve statin adherence: use multifaceted interventions using multiple BCTs, consider automated messages as a digital delivery method from a credible source, provide instructions on taking statins, and set adherence goals with patients. Further research should assess the optimal frequency of intervention delivery and investigate the generalisability of these interventions across settings and demographics.

Highlights

  • The objectives of this review are to review the effectiveness of mobile health (mHealth) interventions on statin adherence, as evaluated by Randomised Controlled Trials (RCTs), and to identify

  • The evidence on effectiveness from this review builds on the consensus from the literature that mHealth interventions improve statin adherence [30,31,34,39,63,64], though the inconsistency of results accords with the mixed evidence identified by other authors [33]

  • This review found that interventions that included more Behaviour-Change Techniques (BCT) were more frequently associated with effective interventions, though other reviews that investigated cardiovascular disease (CVD) medication adherence and mHealth interventions found no evidence for this relationship [36,64]

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Summary

Introduction

The global burden of cardiovascular disease (CVD) is rising, accounting for approximately 31% of global deaths [1]. Statins are the most commonly prescribed drug for those at risk of developing CVD (primary prevention) or those with CVD (secondary prevention) and are estimated to be taken by 200 million people [2,3,4,5]. Increased adherence to statins correlates with a reduced risk of CVD events, CVD-related mortality, and all-cause mortality [6,7,8]. In addition to the negative health impact of low adherence, non-adherence results in significant healthcare costs, with one review estimating the annual per-patient cost of non-adherence to CVD medications (due to additional medical costs, unnecessary hospitalisations, and primary care visits) to range from $3347 to $19,472 [9]

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