Abstract
Objective This study described the prospective relationship between pharmacological and behavioral measures of 6-mercaptopurine (6MP)medication adherence in amultisite cohort of pediatric patients diagnosed with cancer (N=139). Methods Pharmacological measures (i.e., metabolite concentrations) assessed 6MP intake. Behavioral measures (e.g., electronic monitoring) described adherence patterns over time. Results Three metabolite profiles were identified across 15 months: one group demonstrated low levels of both metabolites (40.8%) consistent with nonadherence and/or suboptimal therapy; two other groups demonstrated metabolite clusters indicative of adequate adherence (59.2%). Those patients whose metabolite profile demonstrated low levels of both metabolites had consistently lower behavioral adherence rates. Conclusions To our knowledge, thiswas the first study to prospectively validate a pharmacological measure of medication adherence with a behavioral adherence measure in a relatively large sample of pediatric patients with cancer. Using multiple methods of adherencemeasurement could informclinical care and target patients in need of intervention.
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Rohan, J. M., Fukuda, T., Alderfer, M. A., Donewar, C. W., Ewing, L., Katz, E. R., … Drotar, D. (2017). Measuring medication adherence in pediatric cancer: An approach to validation. Journal of Pediatric Psychology, 42(2), 232–244. https://doi.org/10.1093/jpepsy/jsw039
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