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Nonadherence in Hypertension: How to Develop and Implement Chemical Adherence Testing

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journal contribution
posted on 2022-02-10, 10:27 authored by Dan Lane, Alexander Lawson, Angela Burns, Michel Azizi, Michel Burnier, Donald JL Jones, Benjamin Kably, Kamlesh Khunti, Reinhold Kreutz, Prashanth Patel, Alexandre Persu, Wilko Spiering, Stefan W Toennes, Maciej Tomaszewski, Bryan Williams, Pankaj Gupta, Indranil Dasgupta
Nonadherence to antihypertensive medication is common, especially in those with apparent treatment-resistant hypertension (true treatment-resistant hypertension requires exclusion of nonadherence), and its routine detection is supported by clinical guidelines. Chemical adherence testing is a reliable and valid method to detect adherence, yet methods are unstandardized and are not ubiquitous. This article describes the principles of chemical adherence testing for hypertensive patients and provides a set of recommendations for centers wishing to develop the test.

We recommend testing should be done in either of two instances: (1) in those who have resistant hypertension or (2) in those on 2 antihypertensives who have a less than 10 mm Hg drop in systolic blood pressure on addition of the second antihypertensive medication. Furthermore, we recommend that verbal consent is secured before undertaking the test, and the results should be discussed with the patient.

Based on medications prescribed in United Kingdom, European Union, and United States, we list top 20 to 24 drugs that cover >95% of hypertension prescriptions which may be included in the testing panel. Information required to identify these medications on mass spectrometry platforms is likewise provided. We discuss issues related to ethics, sample collection, transport, stability, urine versus blood samples, qualitative versus quantitative testing, pharmacokinetics, instrumentation, validation, quality assurance, and gaps in knowledge. We consider how to best present, interpret, and discuss chemical adherence test results with the patient.

In summary, this guidance should help clinicians and their laboratories in the development of chemical adherence testing of prescribed antihypertensive drugs.

Funding

British Heart Foundation Clinical Study Grant (CS/17/3/32799)

National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Applied Research Collaboration East Midlands (ARC EM)

History

Citation

Hypertension. 2022;79:12–23

Author affiliation

Diabetes Research Centre, College of Life Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Hypertension

Volume

79

Issue

1

Pagination

12-23

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

issn

0194-911X

eissn

1524-4563

Acceptance date

2021-10-02

Copyright date

2021

Available date

2022-02-10

Language

en

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