RESUMO
INTRODUCTION: Suboptimal or partial adherence to antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) is an avoidable cause of seizures and deleterious outcomes in epilepsy. As self-rated adherence may be unreliable, suboptimal adherence may go undetected. This study assessed generalizability of a performance-based measure of medication management to patients with intractable epilepsy. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Participants were 50 adults (ageâ¯=â¯42⯱â¯14â¯years, 60% female, 82% Black, 20% Hispanic/Latino) with ≥2 seizures in the preceding 6â¯months. Antiepileptic drug adherence was electronically monitored for one month via Medication Event Monitoring Systems (MEMS) and self-rated (1â¯=â¯very poor to 6â¯=â¯excellent). The Medication Management Ability Assessment (MMAA) was administered at follow-up and scored by raters blind to adherence results. Spearman correlations and Poisson regressions assessed their associations. RESULTS: On average, participants self-reported good-to-very good adherence. According to MEMS, participants took AEDs as prescribed 73% of the time; most participants (58%) missed ≥3 doses. The MMAA demonstrated strong internal consistency (Kuder-Richardson 20â¯=â¯0.81) and was associated with MEMS: percentage of days doses were taken correctly (rsâ¯=â¯0.29, pâ¯=â¯0.04) and frequency of missed doses (rsâ¯=â¯-0.31, pâ¯=â¯0.03). The MMAA was not associated with self-rated adherence. Poisson regressions showed that self-ratings and MMAA performance accounted for unique variance in frequency of missed AED doses. CONCLUSIONS: These findings provide evidence of the MMAA's criterion validity as a measure of capacity to manage AEDs. It may prove useful in cases where suboptimal adherence is suspected but unreported by patients. Its lack of significant association with self-rated adherence is consistent with prior reports; however, future studies should replicate these findings with larger samples.