Abstract: |
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to determine the association of low antihypertensive medication adherence with decline in health-related quality of life (HRQOL) over 1 year. METHODS: We used data from older men and women with hypertension (n?=?1525) enrolled in the Cohort Study of Medication Adherence among Older Adults. Adherence was measured using the validated self-report four-item Krousel-Wood Medication Adherence Scale (K-Wood-MAS-4) (low adherence?=?score =1) and prescription refill-based proportion of days covered (PDC) (low adherence?=?PDC?0.80). We defined decline in HRQOL as a decrease in Mental Component Summary (MCS) or Physical Component Summary (PCS) score (from the RAND 36-Item Health Survey 1.0 administered at two time points - at the time of adherence assessment and 1 year later) equivalent to the minimal important difference (MID) for each respective summary score, calculated as the average of MID estimates derived from distribution and anchor-based approaches. RESULTS: The prevalence of low adherence was 38.6% using the K-Wood-MAS-4 and 23.9% using PDC. On the basis of mean MID estimates of 4.40 for MCS and 5.16 for PCS, 21.8 and 25.2% of participants experienced a decline in MCS and PCS, respectively, over 1 year. Low adherence was associated with a decline in MCS for K-Wood-MAS-4 [prevalence ratio?=?1.32, 95% confidence interval (95% CI) 1.08-1.62, P?=?0.008], but not PDC (prevalence ratio ?=?1.17, 95% CI 0.94-1.47, P?=?0.168). Low adherence was not associated with decline in PCS (K-Wood-MAS-4: prevalence ratio ?=?0.95, 95% CI 0.79-1.16; PDC: prevalence ratio ?=?1.10, 95% CI 0.90-1.35). CONCLUSION: Low self-report medication adherence is associated with decline in mental HRQOL over 1 year in older adults with hypertension. |