Fanny Leenhardt, Pauline Ares, Alma Nicolai, Cécile Corbinais, Marie Viala, Véronique d'Hondt, François Jouvet, Frédéric Pinguet
{"title":"[早期口服抗癌药物不依从性:临床药学作为肿瘤学的关键问题]。","authors":"Fanny Leenhardt, Pauline Ares, Alma Nicolai, Cécile Corbinais, Marie Viala, Véronique d'Hondt, François Jouvet, Frédéric Pinguet","doi":"10.1016/j.therap.2025.06.001","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><strong>Introduction: </strong>The assessment of adherence is necessary to ensure therapeutic compliance, particularly with oral anti-cancer drugs (OACs). Already easily implemented, the nationally validated GIRERD questionnaire seems incomplete for assessing adherence. We set out to study and characterize adherence in a cohort of patients treated with OACs, using 2 questionnaires.</p><p><strong>Material and methods: </strong>The evaluation was carried out in patients treated with OAC using the GIRERD questionnaire, composed of 6 items, and an institutional questionnaire consisting of 7 items; with a common gradation based on that of the GIRERD score. These questionnaires were submitted within the first 3 months of ribociclib (OAC) initiation, in women with metastatic hormone-dependent breast cancer.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>Of the 50 evaluable patients, around 60% had a score above 0 (poorly observant [PO]+unobservant [UO]) according to the 2 questionnaires during this study. UO patients represent 6% according to the GIRERD score and 16% according to the institutional score. The main causes of non-adherence were late dosing (21/50) and forgetting to take the ACO when travelling (13/50). Fifty-four percent of patients who had an aid to help them take their ACO (pillbox, etc.) proved to be unobservant.</p><p><strong>Discussion: </strong>More than half of patients had at least one non-adherence event in the first 3 months of OAC, indicating a need to secure the initiation of these treatments. Compliance must be assessed using appropriate tools. Finally, the institutional score intercepts more outright non-compliance, whereas the GIRERD score would underestimate non-compliance in our cohort.</p><p><strong>Conclusion: </strong>More than half the patients in our cohort appear to be poorly compliant at an early stage, whatever the assessment score. This assessment of compliance constitutes a feasibility study for the use of our questionnaire in routine clinical monitoring of patients receiving an OAC.</p>","PeriodicalId":23147,"journal":{"name":"Therapie","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":2.2000,"publicationDate":"2025-06-09","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"[Early non-compliance with oral anticancer drugs, a clinical pharmacy as key issue in onco-senology].\",\"authors\":\"Fanny Leenhardt, Pauline Ares, Alma Nicolai, Cécile Corbinais, Marie Viala, Véronique d'Hondt, François Jouvet, Frédéric Pinguet\",\"doi\":\"10.1016/j.therap.2025.06.001\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><strong>Introduction: </strong>The assessment of adherence is necessary to ensure therapeutic compliance, particularly with oral anti-cancer drugs (OACs). Already easily implemented, the nationally validated GIRERD questionnaire seems incomplete for assessing adherence. We set out to study and characterize adherence in a cohort of patients treated with OACs, using 2 questionnaires.</p><p><strong>Material and methods: </strong>The evaluation was carried out in patients treated with OAC using the GIRERD questionnaire, composed of 6 items, and an institutional questionnaire consisting of 7 items; with a common gradation based on that of the GIRERD score. These questionnaires were submitted within the first 3 months of ribociclib (OAC) initiation, in women with metastatic hormone-dependent breast cancer.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>Of the 50 evaluable patients, around 60% had a score above 0 (poorly observant [PO]+unobservant [UO]) according to the 2 questionnaires during this study. UO patients represent 6% according to the GIRERD score and 16% according to the institutional score. The main causes of non-adherence were late dosing (21/50) and forgetting to take the ACO when travelling (13/50). Fifty-four percent of patients who had an aid to help them take their ACO (pillbox, etc.) proved to be unobservant.</p><p><strong>Discussion: </strong>More than half of patients had at least one non-adherence event in the first 3 months of OAC, indicating a need to secure the initiation of these treatments. Compliance must be assessed using appropriate tools. Finally, the institutional score intercepts more outright non-compliance, whereas the GIRERD score would underestimate non-compliance in our cohort.</p><p><strong>Conclusion: </strong>More than half the patients in our cohort appear to be poorly compliant at an early stage, whatever the assessment score. 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[Early non-compliance with oral anticancer drugs, a clinical pharmacy as key issue in onco-senology].
Introduction: The assessment of adherence is necessary to ensure therapeutic compliance, particularly with oral anti-cancer drugs (OACs). Already easily implemented, the nationally validated GIRERD questionnaire seems incomplete for assessing adherence. We set out to study and characterize adherence in a cohort of patients treated with OACs, using 2 questionnaires.
Material and methods: The evaluation was carried out in patients treated with OAC using the GIRERD questionnaire, composed of 6 items, and an institutional questionnaire consisting of 7 items; with a common gradation based on that of the GIRERD score. These questionnaires were submitted within the first 3 months of ribociclib (OAC) initiation, in women with metastatic hormone-dependent breast cancer.
Results: Of the 50 evaluable patients, around 60% had a score above 0 (poorly observant [PO]+unobservant [UO]) according to the 2 questionnaires during this study. UO patients represent 6% according to the GIRERD score and 16% according to the institutional score. The main causes of non-adherence were late dosing (21/50) and forgetting to take the ACO when travelling (13/50). Fifty-four percent of patients who had an aid to help them take their ACO (pillbox, etc.) proved to be unobservant.
Discussion: More than half of patients had at least one non-adherence event in the first 3 months of OAC, indicating a need to secure the initiation of these treatments. Compliance must be assessed using appropriate tools. Finally, the institutional score intercepts more outright non-compliance, whereas the GIRERD score would underestimate non-compliance in our cohort.
Conclusion: More than half the patients in our cohort appear to be poorly compliant at an early stage, whatever the assessment score. This assessment of compliance constitutes a feasibility study for the use of our questionnaire in routine clinical monitoring of patients receiving an OAC.
期刊介绍:
Thérapie is a peer-reviewed journal devoted to Clinical Pharmacology, Therapeutics, Pharmacokinetics, Pharmacovigilance, Addictovigilance, Social Pharmacology, Pharmacoepidemiology, Pharmacoeconomics and Evidence-Based-Medicine. Thérapie publishes in French or in English original articles, general reviews, letters to the editor reporting original findings, correspondence relating to articles or letters published in the Journal, short articles, editorials on up-to-date topics, Pharmacovigilance or Addictovigilance reports that follow the French "guidelines" concerning good practice in pharmacovigilance publications. The journal also publishes thematic issues on topical subject.
The journal is indexed in the main international data bases and notably in: Biosis Previews/Biological Abstracts, Embase/Excerpta Medica, Medline/Index Medicus, Science Citation Index.