Medication Adherence and Stroke Prevention: What Real World Data Tells Us.

Medication Adherence and Stroke Prevention: What Real World Data Tells Us. Acta Neurol Taiwan. 2019 Dec 15;28(4):86-87 Authors: Hsieh CY Abstract Medication adherence, by definition,(2) is "the extent to which a patient acts in accordance with the prescribed interval and dose of a dosing regimen." Poor medication adherence can interfere with the ability to treat many diseases, leading to greater complications and a lower quality of life.(3) In this issue of Acta Neurologica Taiwanica, Chen et al.(4) presented the inverse association between adherence of antithrombotic agents and poor outcomes after a first-ever ischemic stroke. The findings were consistent with Sung, et al.(5) that medication nonadherence are prevalent in young adults with a firstever stroke. The results by Chen, et al.(4) highlighted the importance of developing strategies to improve antithrombotic adherence. Besides, the risk-benefit profile of medication treatment must be considered and monitored for optimizing prescription in secondary stroke prevention. For those purposes, real-world data (RWD) derived from administrative claims database is becoming an efficient source of information.(6) The US Food and Drug Administration has also recognized the use of RWD to monitor post-marketing safety and adverse events and to make regulatory decisions of medicinal products.(7) Nonetheless, deriving RWD from administrative claims database should be held to an even higher sc...
Source: Acta Neurologica Taiwanica - Category: Neurology Tags: Acta Neurol Taiwan Source Type: research