2020
DOI: 10.1002/cpt.1929
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Subtherapeutic Acetazolamide Doses as a Noninvasive Method for Assessing Medication Adherence

Abstract: Adherence monitoring is a vital component of clinical efficacy trials, as the regularity of medication consumption affects both efficacy and adverse effect profiles. Pill‐counts do not confirm consumption, and invasive plasma assessments can only assist post hoc assessments. We previously reported on the pharmacokinetics of a potential adherence marker to noninvasively monitor dosage consumption during a trial without breaking a blind. We reported that consumption cessation of subtherapeutic 15 mg acetazolamid… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…To overcome this, others have recently investigated using sub-therapeutic levels of acetazolamide as an 'adherence marker excipient' to assess medication adherence non-invasively through urinary measurements. 15 This type of approach would also be advantageous for assessing nonadherence in all experimental groups of a clinical trial, that is treated and control groups, without the need to unblind the personnel involved. Therefore, objective measures of adherence that are not drug dosage form-specific and easy to measure are still needed and invaluable for assessing adherence to HIV prevention products.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…To overcome this, others have recently investigated using sub-therapeutic levels of acetazolamide as an 'adherence marker excipient' to assess medication adherence non-invasively through urinary measurements. 15 This type of approach would also be advantageous for assessing nonadherence in all experimental groups of a clinical trial, that is treated and control groups, without the need to unblind the personnel involved. Therefore, objective measures of adherence that are not drug dosage form-specific and easy to measure are still needed and invaluable for assessing adherence to HIV prevention products.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, measuring plasma drug concentrations are costly, invasive and cannot be done in real time because the analysis requires time and specialised laboratories. To overcome this, others have recently investigated using sub‐therapeutic levels of acetazolamide as an ‘adherence marker excipient’ to assess medication adherence non‐invasively through urinary measurements 15 . This type of approach would also be advantageous for assessing non‐adherence in all experimental groups of a clinical trial, that is treated and control groups, without the need to unblind the personnel involved.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%