Antifibrotic drug adherence, the patient, the clinical service and the delivery courier
Antifibrotic drug adherence, the patient, the clinical service and the delivery courier
Aims/background: antifibrotic medication aims to slow disease progression for those with pulmonary fibrosis and is expensive with a known side effect profile. We have reviewed antifibrotic adherence in a real-world patient cohort.
Methods: we selected a random sample of 30 patients prescribed nintedanib for idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, conducted telephone interviews collecting demographic data and evaluated adherence using the Medication Adherence Report Scale (MARS-5) and the Adherence Starts with Knowledge (ASK-20) survey.
Results: 21 (70%) of patients were male and 9 (30%) were female, the median age was 73.8 years. 13 (43%) had no qualifications, 6 (20%) had GCSE/O levels or equivalent, 6 (20%) had AS/A levels or equivalent and 5 (17%) had a higher degree. The median MARS-5 score was 23.5 (range 16–25) suggesting an extremely high level of adherence among this patient group.
Conclusion: this study offers insights into medication adherence in a patient group that has not been extensively reviewed before. In this single centre study, there is good adherence to antifibrotic medication. This is likely related to the extensive clinical support provided, which is responsive, accessible, and individualised. Participants specifically mentioned this support when questioned.
adherence, antifibrotic medication, idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, nintedanib, pulmonary fibrosis
Naftel, Jennifer
df89fbd1-7ef2-4ee7-9e2c-3f1878bc8d85
Kinsella, Emma
30eac61b-7265-4795-8f3e-f7e59d26a875
Wood, Nicola
647ea451-0a77-4f70-89d3-adf85590a4e5
Soe, Wah Wint
727d6ef2-bb1f-42bb-87ba-4b824ac6a339
Fletcher, Sophie Victoria
71599088-9df7-4d4a-8570-aef773ead0fe
23 May 2025
Naftel, Jennifer
df89fbd1-7ef2-4ee7-9e2c-3f1878bc8d85
Kinsella, Emma
30eac61b-7265-4795-8f3e-f7e59d26a875
Wood, Nicola
647ea451-0a77-4f70-89d3-adf85590a4e5
Soe, Wah Wint
727d6ef2-bb1f-42bb-87ba-4b824ac6a339
Fletcher, Sophie Victoria
71599088-9df7-4d4a-8570-aef773ead0fe
Naftel, Jennifer, Kinsella, Emma, Wood, Nicola, Soe, Wah Wint and Fletcher, Sophie Victoria
(2025)
Antifibrotic drug adherence, the patient, the clinical service and the delivery courier.
British Journal of Hospital Medicine, 86 (5).
(doi:10.12968/hmed.2024.0679).
Abstract
Aims/background: antifibrotic medication aims to slow disease progression for those with pulmonary fibrosis and is expensive with a known side effect profile. We have reviewed antifibrotic adherence in a real-world patient cohort.
Methods: we selected a random sample of 30 patients prescribed nintedanib for idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, conducted telephone interviews collecting demographic data and evaluated adherence using the Medication Adherence Report Scale (MARS-5) and the Adherence Starts with Knowledge (ASK-20) survey.
Results: 21 (70%) of patients were male and 9 (30%) were female, the median age was 73.8 years. 13 (43%) had no qualifications, 6 (20%) had GCSE/O levels or equivalent, 6 (20%) had AS/A levels or equivalent and 5 (17%) had a higher degree. The median MARS-5 score was 23.5 (range 16–25) suggesting an extremely high level of adherence among this patient group.
Conclusion: this study offers insights into medication adherence in a patient group that has not been extensively reviewed before. In this single centre study, there is good adherence to antifibrotic medication. This is likely related to the extensive clinical support provided, which is responsive, accessible, and individualised. Participants specifically mentioned this support when questioned.
Text
naftel-et-al-2025-antifibrotic-drug-adherence-the-patient-the-clinical-service-and-the-delivery-courier
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 27 November 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 8 May 2025
Published date: 23 May 2025
Keywords:
adherence, antifibrotic medication, idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, nintedanib, pulmonary fibrosis
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 501317
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/501317
ISSN: 1750-8460
PURE UUID: 03337d5a-a017-4e82-ad46-b4f5b4a72d69
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Date deposited: 28 May 2025 17:17
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:45
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Contributors
Author:
Jennifer Naftel
Author:
Emma Kinsella
Author:
Nicola Wood
Author:
Wah Wint Soe
Author:
Sophie Victoria Fletcher
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