Nonadherence to treatment is a common problem in the clinical management of
hypercholesterolemic patients. This study was carried out with the aim of
monitoring the daily compliance to a g-month course of lipid-lowering thera
py, using a microelectronic device, the Medication Event Monitoring System
(MEMS(TM)), versus pill count. Forty men with primary hypercholesterolemia
were prescribed fluvastatin 1 x 40 mg daily, provided in a MEMS(TM) package
to record the date and time of each opening of the pillbox. Thirty-nine of
40 patients (98%) completed the study. Total cholesterol and LDL cholester
ol levels decreased significantly (18% and 25%, p < 0.001) during the g-mon
th therapy period. A high mean rate of compliance was achieved by MEMS(TM)
using the following three indexes-compliance to total prescribed dose (88.8
% +/- 13.5%), compliance to prescribed days (82.4% +/- 19.5%), and complian
ce to prescribed time of day (81.86% +/- 19.5%)-and by pill count (93.4% +/
- 9.5%). In addition, the MEMS(TM) provided some patterns of nonadherence t
o medication, undetectable by pill count alone, such as a drug holiday in 3
8% of cases, a drug omission for more than 7 consecutive days in 9% of case
s, and, conversely, use of more than the one prescribed daily dose in 47% o
f cases. A significant correlation between the rate of compliance and the d
ecrease in LDL cholesterol was observed only when the compliance was assess
ed by MEMS(TM). The results indicate that MEMS(TM) is a useful tool for mon
itoring compliance in clinical practice and may possibly increase adherence
to long-term lipid-lowering therapy. (C) 1999 the American College of Clin
ical Pharmacology.