Author: Svendsen, Mathias Tiedemann; Andersen, Flemming; Hansen, Jakob; Johannessen, Helle; Andersen, Klaus Ejner
Title: Medical adherence to topical corticosteroid preparations prescribed for psoriasis: A systematic review. Cord-id: kjv6sd11 Document date: 2017_1_1
ID: kjv6sd11
Snippet: OBJECTIVE Topical corticosteroids and corticosteroid combinations are the principal treatments in psoriasis. The aim of this study was to investigate published literature dealing with medical adherence to topical corticosteroid or corticosteroid combinations in patients with psoriasis. MATERIALS AND METHODS Systematic electronic searches in English language literature were done until September 2015 without publication date restriction. RESULTS We identified 11 studies consisting of five surveys,
Document: OBJECTIVE Topical corticosteroids and corticosteroid combinations are the principal treatments in psoriasis. The aim of this study was to investigate published literature dealing with medical adherence to topical corticosteroid or corticosteroid combinations in patients with psoriasis. MATERIALS AND METHODS Systematic electronic searches in English language literature were done until September 2015 without publication date restriction. RESULTS We identified 11 studies consisting of five surveys, two prospective studies, one qualitative study, one mixed-method study, one register study, and one interventional study. Observation periods varied and rates of nonadherence ranged from 8% to 88.3%. The rates were reported by patients on eight nonvalidated scales and one validated scale, measured by medication weight in two studies, and in two studies rates of nonadherence were measured using prescription registers. Thirty-four multifactorial determinants of nonadherence were found. One designed intervention consisted of a disease management program, which improved adherence in the study period. Overall, the studies included were heterogeneous in design and had a high risk of bias. CONCLUSION To improve health outcome in topical treatment of psoriasis, further studies should be conducted addressing determinants of nonadherence and test interventions to improve adherence. Validated measurements of medical nonadherence, prescription registers, or medication-weight are needed.
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