How the EMERGE guideline on medication adherence can improve the quality of clinical trials.

Lina Eliasson ORCID logo; Sarah Clifford ORCID logo; Amy Mulick ORCID logo; Christina Jackson ORCID logo; Bernard Vrijens ORCID logo; (2020) How the EMERGE guideline on medication adherence can improve the quality of clinical trials. BRITISH JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY, 86 (4). pp. 687-697. ISSN 0306-5251 DOI: 10.1111/bcp.14240
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Medication adherence in drug trials is suboptimal, affecting the quality of these studies and adding significant costs. Nonadherence in this setting can lead to null findings, unduly large sample sizes and the need for dose modification after a drug has been approved. Despite these drawbacks, adherence behaviours are not consistently measured, analysed or reported appropriately in trial settings. The ESPACOMP Medication Adherence Reporting Guideline (EMERGE) offers a solution by facilitating a sound protocol design that takes this crucial factor into account. This article summarises key evidence on traditional and newer measurements of adherence, discusses implementation in clinical trial settings and makes recommendations about the analysis and interpretation of adherence data. Given the potential benefits of this approach, the authors call on regulators and the pharmaceutical industry to endorse the EMERGE guideline.


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