This site is intended for health professionals only


25% of patients non-adherent to antihypertensive treatment

25% of patients being treated with antihypertensives are non-adherent to treatment, shows a recent UK study.

A total of 208 hypertensive patients – 125 of which were new referrals from primary care – underwent screening of antihypertensive drug intake at a blood pressure centre in Leicester, using high performance liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry urine analysis at the time of their first appointment. Evaluation included screening for 40 of the most commonly prescribed antihypertensive medications, including ramipril and lisinopril.

Article continues below this sponsored advert
Advertisement

Overall, 25% of patients were either totally or partially non-adherent to antihypertensive treatment (total non-adherence 10.1%, partial non-adherence 14.9%). Of those referred from primary care, 18.4% were found to have any of the two non-adherence criteria, with an average number of screened medications lower than the average number prescribed.

The researchers noted that their results highlighted that a ‘significant proportion of patients in a specialist centre show at least some degree of treatment non-adherence and that their blood pressure levels correlate well with the degree of non-adherence’.

Read more here