Artigo Revisado por pares

Nonadherence with ACE Inhibitors Is Common and Can Be Detected in Clinical Practice by Routine Serum ACE Activity

2001; Wiley; Volume: 7; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1111/j.1527-5299.2001.990867.x

ISSN

1751-7133

Autores

Allan D. Struthers, Gillian Anderson, Robert J. MacFadyen, Callum G. Fraser, Thomas M. MacDonald,

Tópico(s)

Potassium and Related Disorders

Resumo

Our objective was to assess whether serum angiotensin‐converting enzyme (ACE) activity during routine clinical practice accurately reflects patient adherence to ACE inhibitor treatment in chronic heart failure (CHF). During 1994–95, ACE was measured in 73 CHF patients who were routinely attending the heart failure clinic at Ninewells Hospital. At the same time, the Medicines Monitoring Unit collected data on whether and when prescriptions for ACE inhibitors were redeemed at community pharmacies, which enabled each patient's adherence over a prolonged period to be assessed. We then correlated whether an elevation in serum ACE was associated with poor adherence with ACE inhibitor treatment. In total, 18% of CHF patients appeared to exhibit <70% adherence with their ACE inhibitor treatment, with 34% exhibiting <85% adherence and 58% exhibiting <100% adherence. A serum ACE activity of >12 U/L gave 91 % positive predictive accuracy that the patient was <100% adherent with his or her ACE inhibitor treatment. At the other extreme, a serum ACE <6.5 U/L gave 81% positive predictive accuracy that the patient was >85% adherent with ACE inhibitor treatment. Nonadherence with ACE inhibitor treatment, therefore, was found to be common in patients with CHF. The simple, inexpensive test of serum ACE activity can be used in CHF patients to identify many, although not all, nonadherent patients so that adherence‐enhancing strategies can be targeted toward them. Further work is clearly required to explore the precise clinical utility of this promising test.

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