Medication treatment complexity and adherence in children with CKD

Tom D Blydt-Hansen, Christopher B Pierce, Yi Cai, Dmitri Samsonov, Susan Massengill, Marva Moxey-Mims, Bradley A Warady, Susan L Furth, Tom D Blydt-Hansen, Christopher B Pierce, Yi Cai, Dmitri Samsonov, Susan Massengill, Marva Moxey-Mims, Bradley A Warady, Susan L Furth

Abstract

Background and objectives: The complexity of CKD management in children is increased by the number of comorbid conditions. This study assessed the prevalence of comorbidities in pediatric CKD and the frequency with which multiple comorbidities present together by assessing prevalent medication use by CKD stage and diagnosis and their association with clinical or sociodemographic factors. The association between number and frequency of dosing of medications prescribed and self-report of nonadherence was also assessed.

Design, setting, participants, & measurements: In this cross-sectional analysis of the Chronic Kidney Disease in Children study, medication use at study entry grouped by indication was examined by CKD stage, diagnosis, age, race, ethnicity, income, and CKD duration. Multivariate adjusted predictors of medication use and clustering were examined. Nonadherence was assessed by self-report of missed medications in the past 7 days.

Results: The 558 eligible participants had a median age of 11 years and median GFR of 44 ml/min per 1.73 m(2); 62% of participants were male and 78% had nonglomerular kidney disease. The number of medications for treatment of CKD comorbidities increased with advanced CKD stage (2.5-fold for stages IV versus II; P<0.001) and glomerular disease (1.4-fold versus nonglomerular; P<0.001). Three distinct medication clusters were identified that corresponded to treatment of glomerular disease, advanced renal tubular dysfunction, and proteinuric complications, respectively. Nonadherence was associated with increased medication dosing frequency (administration >2 times/d; P<0.001) but not the number of medications.

Conclusions: Medical therapy for children with CKD is complex and is affected by glomerular diagnosis, CKD stage, and medication frequency. The need for CKD-related medication treatment cannot be easily predicted by CKD staging alone. Poorer adherence was associated with increased medication frequency, but not with the number of medical problems needing treatment. Consolidating medical treatment and reducing medication frequency may improve adherence rates in children with CKD.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Distribution of number of CKD-related medication groups by CKD stage and CKD diagnosis (N=558). G, glomerular diagnosis; NG, nonglomerular diagnosis.
Figure 2.
Figure 2.
Cluster plots showing primary pair-wise associations and subsequently ranked associations between medication groups, restricted to 19 groups of medications for management of CKD-specific complications, treatment of underlying kidney disease, and symptom control. The odds ratio (OR) for strength of association for each initial and subsequent pairing is reported, along with the total number of patients in each pairing that are members of one or both groups. ESA, erythrocyte stimulating agent; PO4, phosphate; Rx, treatment.

Source: PubMed

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