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The association of ethnicity with electronically measured adherence to inhaled corticosteroids in children
Authors:Erwin?Vasbinder  Nordin?Dahhan  Bart?Wolf  Jan?Zoer  Ellen?Blankman  Diederik?Bosman  Liset?van?Dijk  Email author" target="_blank">Patricia?van den?BemtEmail author
Institution:1.Department of Hospital Pharmacy,Erasmus Medical Center,Rotterdam,The Netherlands;2.Groene Hart Hospital,Gouda,The Netherlands;3.St. Lucas Andreas Hospital,Amsterdam,The Netherlands;4.Academic Medical Center/Emma Children’s Hospital,Amsterdam,The Netherlands;5.BovenIJ Hospital,Amsterdam,The Netherlands;6.Nivel,Utrecht,The Netherlands;7.Department of Pharmacoepidemiology & Clinical Pharmacology, Utrecht Institute for Pharmaceutical Sciences, Faculty of Science,Utrecht University,Utrecht,The Netherlands
Abstract:

Purpose

To investigate the association of ethnicity with objectively, electronically measured adherence to inhaled corticosteroids (ICS) in a multicultural population of children with asthma in the city of Amsterdam.

Methods

The study was designed as a prospective, observational multicenter study in which adherence to ICS and potential risk factors for adherence to ICS were measured in a cohort of Moroccan and native Dutch children with asthma. Electronic adherence measurements were performed for 3 months per patient using a Real Time Medication Monitoring (RTMM) system. Ethnicity and other potential risk factors, such as socio-economic status, asthma control and parental medication beliefs, were extracted from medical records or parent interviews. The association between adherence and ethnicity was analysed using multivariate linear regression analysis.

Results

A total of 90 children (aged 1–11 years) were included in the study and data of 87 children were used for analysis. Average adherence to ICS was 49.3 %. Native Dutch children showed higher adherence to ICS than Moroccan children (55.9 vs. 42.5 %, respectively; p?=?0.044, univariate analysis). After correction for confounders (>3 annual visits to the paediatric outpatient clinic, regular use of a spacer during inhalation), the final regression model showed that ethnicity was independently associated with adherence (p?=?0.028).

Conclusions

In our Western European population of inner city children with asthma, poor adherence to ICS was a serious problem, and even somewhat more so in ethnic minorities. Paediatricians involved in asthma treatment should be aware of these cultural differences in medication-taking behaviour, but further studies are needed to elucidate the causal mechanism.
Keywords:
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