Estimating Medication Adherence from Electronic Health Records Using Rolling Averages of Single Refill-based Estimates

Annu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc. 2022 Jul:2022:3554-3557. doi: 10.1109/EMBC48229.2022.9871486.

Abstract

Medication adherence is usually defined as the manner in which a patient takes their medication, in relation to the regimen agreed to with their healthcare provider. Electronic Health Records (EHRs) can be used to estimate adherence in a cost-effective and non-invasive manner across large-scale populations, although there is no universally agreed optimal approach to doing so. We sought to explore patterns of asthma ICS prescription refills in a large EHR dataset, and to evaluate the use of rolling-average based measures towards short-term adherence estimation. Over 1.6 million asthma controllers were prescribed for our cohort of 91,332 individuals, between January 2009 and March 2017. The Continuous Single interval measures of medication Availability (CSA) and Gaps (CSG) were calculated for individual prescriptions, as well as rolling-average adherence measures of the CSA over 3, 5, or 10 past prescription intervals. 16.7% of the study population had only a single prescription during their follow-up (a median duration of 7.1 years). 51% of prescriptions were refilled before (or on the day that) supply was exhausted, and for 19% of prescription refills, the amount of medication dispensed should have lasted at least twice as long as the duration before the next refill was filled. The rolling average measures had statistically strong associations (Spearman |R|>0.7) with the estimate for the subsequent prescription refill. Rolling averages of multiple individual refill-level adherence estimates provide a novel and simple way to crudely smoothen estimates from individual prescription refills, which are strongly influenced by common (and adherent) real-world behaviors, for more meaningful and effective trend detection. Clinical Relevance- This demonstrates a novel methodology for estimating medication adherence which can detect recent changes in trends.

MeSH terms

  • Asthma*
  • Cohort Studies
  • Electronic Health Records*
  • Humans
  • Medication Adherence