학술논문

Interpersonal communication-, education- and counselling-based interventions to support adherence to oral anticancer therapy: a systematic review.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Oncology Pharmacy Practice. Mar2023, Vol. 29 Issue 2, p358-369. 12p.
Subject
*Therapeutic use of antineoplastic agents
*Online information services
*Psychology information storage & retrieval systems
*CINAHL database
*Counseling
*Social support
*Medical information storage & retrieval systems
*Oral drug administration
*Physician-patient relations
*Cancer chemotherapy
*Systematic reviews
*Time
*Chronic myeloid leukemia
*Cancer patients
*Treatment effectiveness
*Interpersonal relations
*Research funding
*Descriptive statistics
*Patient compliance
*Patient education
*MEDLINE
*Educational outcomes
Language
ISSN
1078-1552
Abstract
Background. Many factors contribute to oral anti-cancer therapy adherence, including counselling and educational support. Objective. We systematically review the literature evaluating the effectiveness of interpersonal communication-, counselling- and education-based interventions on patient adherence to oral anticancer therapy. Methods. Using search terms pertaining to medication adherence, oral anticancer therapy, and communication, education, and counselling, we conducted a systematic search for full-text, original research articles prior to 3/13/20. Two reviewers independently reviewed each paper for inclusion and charted study information. Results. Twenty-four articles were included. All considered the use of oral anticancer therapy between two defined time points. Four studies also considered the length of time a patient persisted on therapy. Half (n = 12) of the studies reported a statistically significant relationship between the intervention and medication adherence, with no consistent pattern among intervention structure/content and effectiveness. Programmes offering in-person counselling and those targeting patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), tended to report positive findings. Most studies faced substantial risk of bias, and only two reported using a behavioural theory to guide interventional content. Conclusions. Findings highlight the infancy of evidence base and need for rigorous and large-scale studies grounded in established behavioural theories to advance patient-targeted educational and counselling practices supporting adherence to oral anti-cancer therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]