PMID: 9441437Jan 24, 1998Paper

What happens with patients after participation in a clinical trial?

Tidsskrift for den Norske lægeforening : tidsskrift for praktisk medicin, ny række
A SvilaasL Ose

Abstract

107 patients with primary hypercholesterolaemia participated for five years in a clinical trial with dietary and drug treatment (a statin) at the Lipid Clinic. At the end of the study the patients were referred back to their own physicians, with written advice on diet and drug therapy. At a recall two years later we studied to what extent recommended therapy and follow-up had been implemented. 15% had no follow-up after participating in the study and 18% had not measured their cholesterol for one year or more. The majority of the patients did not follow the recommended diet and level of physical activity satisfactorily, and 20% had stopped their lipid-lowering medication. In general they had been prescribed too low doses of the lipid-lowering agent, and 70% of the patients had not reached the target of the LDL-cholesterol. In conclusion, adequate treatment and a five-year follow-up is not sufficient to keep the patient compliant when the follow-up becomes less intensive. When a clinical trial is terminated, greater efforts should be made to secure better compliance to therapy.

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