Medication Adherence Aligns With Age and a Behavioral Checklist but Not Symptoms or Quality of Life for Patients With Eosinophilic Esophagitis.

2021 
OBJECTIVE To measure adherence rates to swallowed topical steroids in children with eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE), describe factors related to adherence, and determine the association between adherence, symptoms, perceived disease severity, and quality of life in children with EoE. STUDY DESIGN Subjects in this cross-sectional study of 117 children between 5-18 years old with EoE completed the Pediatric Eosinophilic Esophagitis Symptoms Score V2.0 (PEESS), Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory Eosinophilic Esophagitis Module (PedsQL EoE), a Medication-Taking Checklist (MTC), and a demographics questionnaire. Adherence rate was calculated based on reported number of missed doses/prescribed doses in the last week. Parent-reported measures were used for children aged 5-12 years and self-report was used for children aged 13-18 years. RESULTS Adolescents had lower adherence rates than younger children (76.2 ± 24.5% versus 88.6 ± 16.7%, P=.002). Adherence rates were not associated with disease history, PEESS or PedsQLTM EoE scores, but instead correlated with MTC scores (Pearson r of 0.65, P<.001 for child-report and Pearson r of 0.74, P<.001 for parent-report). Symptomatology was associated with worse quality of life (PEESS Frequency: r=-0.7, P<0.001; PEESS Severity: r=-0.71, P<.001 for children 5-12 years old; PEESS Frequency: r -0.61, P<0.001; PEESS Severity: r=-0.5, P<.001 for adolescents). CONCLUSIONS Unrelated to their clinical history, demographic factors, symptoms, and quality of life, adolescents with EoE have lower medication adherence rates. The MTC may serve as a clinical tool to discuss adherence and provide targeted educational counseling regarding adherence interventions.
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