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Introduction: Diabetes mellitus is a major global public health problem and lack of adherence to medication causes
suboptimal glycemic control increasing complication rates, costs and mortality. The objective of this study was to
validate the Diabetes Medication Adherence Scale (DMAS-7) developed to evaluate the adherence to oral antidiabetics
in Lebanon, determine its’ concordance with another validated scales and to assess adherence rates and
factors.
Methods: A descriptive cross-sectional study was conducted on a sample of Lebanese diabetic patients selected from
private and hospital clinics located mainly in Beirut, Lebanon. Data was collected from adults aged above 18 years,
diagnosed by type 2 diabetes and taking an oral anti- diabetic for at least 6 months using a questionnaire. The level
of adherence was measured using the DMAS-7 and the Lebanese Medication Adherence Scale (LMAS-14). Bivariate
and multivariate analyses were conducted, and the scale was validated in terms of reliability, predictive ability, and
construct validity using SPSS version 19.
Results: Out of 300 eligible patients, the rate of adherence was only 33.7% using DMAS-7. This suboptimal adherence
level was significantly associated to many factors including monthly medication cost, diet follow-up, HbA1c,
postponing doctors’ visits, feeling of treatment burden and inefficacy, number of medications per day, etc. Other
measures of validity showed good reliability shown by Cronbach alpha= 0.627, good predictive value measured by
the area under the ROC curve= 0.675 (p-value <0.001), good construct validity with LMAS-14 scale (Spearman’s
rho = 0.846; Cohen’s kappa = 0.711). DMAS-7 and LMAS-14 were correlated (ICC average measure = 0.675; p-value
<0.001) which shows a good concordance and increases the validity of the DMAS-7. Logistic regression revealed that
having an optimal glycated hemoglobin Hb1Ac percentage (OR= 0.779; 95% CI= 0.671-0.903; p=0.001), performing
regular physical activity (OR 2.328; 95% CI= 1.347- 4.02; p= 0.002) and following diet program (OR 3.294; 95%
CI 1.483- 7.319; p= 0.003) significantly increased medication adherence. However, postponing doctors’ visit (OR
0.453; 95% CI 0.209-0.985) was significantly associated with poor adherence. The DMAS score was found to be
a significant predictor of HbA1c control (p-value< 0.05) where an increase of patients’ adherence to his oral antidiabetics
calculated by DMAS results in a 2 fold higher probability that the HbA1c becomes controlled (OR= 2.006).
Conclusion: The DMAS-7 is a reliable and valid instrument for assessing adherence to medications that can be used
in order to assess adherence and help achieve better glycemic outcomes..
Biography
Amal Al-Hajje has her expertise in research and teaching in Lebanese University since 2005. She has many publications after years of experience in clinical pharmacy and therapeutics, pharmaco-epidemiology, and hospital pharmacy. She is a member of the Pharmacy Lebanese Colloquium Comity since 2006 , a member of the Lebanese Order of Pharmacists since 1999, a member of the Clinical Pharmacy department team- Lebanese University since 2006, and a member of Clinical Research and Pharmaco-epidemiology team- Lebanese University – Faculty of pharmacy.