Adherence tool for prophylactic haemophilia treatment in adult and adolescent patients: A systematic review and meta-analysis protocol.

PLoS One

Department of Clinical Pharmacy and Pharmacy Practice, Faculty of Pharmacy, University Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

Published: December 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Hemophilia is an x-linked recessive bleeding disorder predominantly affecting males due to a deficiency in clotting factors, with the most common types being Hemophilia A and B.
  • Prophylactic treatment offers significant clinical benefits over on-demand therapy, such as reducing bleeding frequency and preventing joint damage but poses challenges related to regular painful infusions that may lead to non-adherence.
  • This systematic review aims to address the limited research on adherence among adult hemophilia patients by searching various electronic databases and assessing study quality using established guidelines.

Article Abstract

Hemophilia is a congenital bleeding disorder resulting from a low level or deficiency of clotting factors. It is an x-linked recessive disease and happens almost exclusively in males whereas females are the carrier of the affected gene. The most common types of hemophilia are hemophilia A and Hemophilia B. Hemophilia is classified into mild, moderate and severe. Prophylaxis treatment has more advantages clinically compare to on-demand therapy. It may reduce the bleeding frequency, gives protection from joint damage, may lower the number of total bleeding episodes per year, and may reduce annualised spontaneous and trauma related bleeding events. However, prophylaxis treatment needs regular weekly infusions therefore it is painful to administer especially if the vein is difficult to access. It may cause pain at the site of injections and may lead to non-adherence to treatment. Non-adherence to a regimen will result in insufficient clotting factor levels in the body. The efficacy of the medication is reduced and may lead to a high bleeding tendency. Thus far, the study on adult haemophilic patient adherence tool is scarce and limited; and therefore this review is warranted. The study protocol is conducted as per the PRISMA-P guideline. There are 4 concepts in this systematic review which are Haemophilia, adult and adolescence, preventive treatment and adherence. Articles will be sought from electronic databases PUBMED, Ovid EMBASE, CINAHL, and SCOPUS using the MeSH term, synonym free-text word, truncation, and proximity operators as per each database. The proposed keywords within each concept will be joined using the Boolean operator "OR "and the 4 different concepts combined using the Boolean operator "AND". Search will be limited to Human, English language, and publication until 2022. Studies will be included if they meet the study inclusion criteria. The quality of the studies will be appraised using the Newcastle-Ottawa quality assessment scale (NOS) for observation-based studies. This systematic review does not require formal ethical approval as data will be extracted from selected published studies. The results will be disseminated through a peer-reviewed publication and relevant conference presentations.(PROSPERO registration CRD42021273813).

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10720990PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0289815PLOS

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