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Adherence of patients with schizophrenia to hypothyroidism treatment

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 December 2023

Shay Gur*
Affiliation:
Geha Mental Health Center, Petah Tikva, Israel Faculty of Medicine, Tel-Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel
Shira Weizman
Affiliation:
Faculty of Medicine, Tel-Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel Abarbanel Mental Health Center, Bat Yam, Israel
Haggai Hermesh
Affiliation:
Geha Mental Health Center, Petah Tikva, Israel Faculty of Medicine, Tel-Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel
Andre Matalon
Affiliation:
Faculty of Medicine, Tel-Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel Dan-Petah Tikva District, Clalit Health Services, Petah Tikva, Israel
Joseph Meyerovitch
Affiliation:
Faculty of Medicine, Tel-Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel The Jesse Z. and Sara Lea Shafer Institute for Endocrinology and Diabetes, National Center for Childhood Diabetes, Schneider Children’s Medical Center of Israel, Petah Tikva, Israel Chief Pediatrician’s Office, Community Division, Clalit Health Services, Tel Aviv, Israel
Amir Krivoy
Affiliation:
Geha Mental Health Center, Petah Tikva, Israel Faculty of Medicine, Tel-Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel
*
Corresponding author: Shay Gur; Email: [email protected]
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Abstract

Adherence to prescription medications is critical for both remission from schizophrenia and control of physical comorbidities. While schizophrenia with comorbid hypothyroidism is common, there is little research on adherence to hypothyroidism treatment in this population. The current study used a retrospective, matched case-control design. The cohort included 1,252 patients diagnosed with schizophrenia according to ICD-10 and 3,756 controls matched for gender, age, socioeconomic status and ethnicity without diagnosis of schizophrenia. All data were retrieved from the electronic medical database of a large health maintenance organization. Retrieved data included demographics, thyroid functionality test results and prescribed medications. Measures of adherence to therapy were used for analyses as were data from follow-ups of patients with hypothyroidism. A diagnosis of hypothyroidism was found in 299 patients, 115 of whom were also diagnosed with schizophrenia. The 184 without schizophrenia constituted the control group. No statistically significant differences were found between the two groups regarding prescriptions for L-thyroxin and TSH levels and number of TSH tests. Adherence of patients with schizophrenia to hypothyroidism treatment was found to be as good as that of individuals without a schizophrenia diagnosis.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press

Impact statement

Our results show that psychiatric patients, unlike their adherence to psychotropic agents, adhere very well to their physical illnesses medication regime in this study. Caretakers should therefore change their stigmatizing attitude toward patients with schizophrenia with regard to adherence to hypothyroidism treatment and offer them the same level of care as is offered to patients with no mental health issues.

Introduction

Schizophrenia is a chronic mental disorder with a worldwide prevalence of about 1% (Rössler et al., Reference Rössler, Salize, van Os and Riecher-Rössler2005). Illness course involves recurrent psychotic exacerbations interrupted by periods of remission with “negative” symptoms, and impairment in functionality increases gradually. Psychotic symptoms usually respond to antipsychotic medications, which are also used for long-term maintenance and prevention (Kane and Correll, Reference Kane and Correll2019). Yet, according to research, due to a multitude of factors, 34–81% of patients discontinue their antipsychotic medications with many studies putting the rate around 50% (Yang et al., Reference Yang, Ko, Paik, Lee, Han, Joe, Jung, Jung and Kim2012; El-Mallakh and Findlay, Reference El-Mallakh and Findlay2015; García et al., Reference García, Martínez-Cengotitabengoa, López-Zurbano, Zorrilla, López, Vieta and González-Pinto2016; Lafeuille et al., Reference Lafeuille, Frois, Cloutier, Duh, Lefebvre, Pesa, Clancy, Fastenau and Durkin2016; Bright, Reference Bright2017; De Las Cuevas et al., Reference De Las Cuevas, de Leon, Peñate and Betancort2017; Velligan et al., Reference Velligan, Sajatovic, Hatch, Kramata and Docherty2017).

In the general population, non-adherence to prescribed medications is a common obstacle to effective treatment of many chronic physical disorders, with rates of non-adherence reported to be 43–78% (Osterberg and Blaschke, Reference Osterberg and Blaschke2005). Reasons for non-adherence like economic difficulties, lack of awareness of the importance of treatment for the illness, cognitive deficits and poor provider–patient relationship are even more common in patients with schizophrenia (Osterberg and Blaschke, Reference Osterberg and Blaschke2005). Stigma-motivated underestimation of patients’ ability to cooperate is often involved and may lead physicians to assume that deterioration of a chronic physical disorder in a patient with schizophrenia is due to non-adherence to treatment, thus causing the physicians to refrain from searching for non-mental health-related sources of the deterioration.

Some early studies on patients with schizophrenia pointed to a trend toward lower adherence rates to prescribed medications, relative to the general population. These findings, however, were later attributed to the fact that the methods used for estimating adherence were incorrect (Cramer and Rosenheck, Reference Cramer and Rosenheck1998). More recent research has shown that patients with schizophrenia have equal or better adherence rates to antidiabetics (Dolder et al., Reference Dolder, Lacro and Jeste2003; Simard et al., Reference Simard, Presse, Roy, Dorais, White-Guay, Räkel and Perreault2015; Gorczynski et al., Reference Gorczynski, Firth, Stubbs, Rosenbaum and Vancampfort2017), antihypertensives (Dolder et al., Reference Dolder, Lacro and Jeste2003; Dolder et al., Reference Dolder, Furtek, Lacro and Jeste2005; Siegel et al., Reference Siegel, Lopez and Meier2007) and antihyperlipidemics (Dolder et al., Reference Dolder, Lacro and Jeste2003; Owen-Smith et al., Reference Owen-Smith, Stewart, Green, Ahmedani, Waitzfelder, Rossom, Copeland and Simon2016). Additionally, while mental illness, including schizophrenia, has been found to correlate with diagnostic and primary treatment delays in patients with breast cancer, most patients who initiate endocrine therapies adhere to the treatment no less than the general population (Iglay et al., Reference Iglay, Santorelli, Hirshfield, Williams, Rhoads, Lin and Demissie2017).

Some studies have found a correlation between adherence to antipsychotic medications and adherence to medications prescribed for physical disorders (Hansen et al., Reference Hansen, Maciejewski, Yu-Isenberg and Farley2012; Shafrin et al., Reference Shafrin, Silverstein, MacEwan, Lakdawalla, Hatch and Forma2019). Thus, one may assume that a patient adhering to antipsychotics will also adhere to other medications.

Previous research has shown that there is an increased rate of hypothyroidism in patients with schizophrenia (Melamed et al., Reference Melamed, Farfel, Gur, Krivoy, Weizman, Matalon, Feldhamer, Hermesh, Weizman and Meyerovitch2020). Some studies suggest an association between disorders of the thyroid hormone and mental disorders (Bono et al., Reference Bono, Fancellu, Blandini, Santoro and Mauri2004; Davis and Tremont, Reference Davis and Tremont2007; Radhakrishnan et al., Reference Radhakrishnan, Calvin, Singh, Thomas and Srinivasan2013; Remaud et al., Reference Remaud, Gothié, Morvan-Dubois and Demeneix2014; Samuels, Reference Samuels2014). A South Korean study has found that the prevalence of hypothyroidism among schizophrenia patients is 4.9% (Park et al., Reference Park, Kim and Kim2021). A large US study has found that schizophrenia is associated with hypothyroidism (OR 1.88, 95% CI 1.51–2.32) as well as other substantial chronic medical burdens (Carney et al., Reference Carney, Jones and Woolson2006).

A large-scale Israeli study has found a higher proportion of patients with hypothyroidism among schizophrenia patients than in a control group (2.01% vs. 1.25%, respectively, p < 0.0001), after adjusting for age, gender and smoking status. They, furthermore, found a robust independent association between schizophrenia and hypothyroidism (OR 1.62, p ≤ 0.001) when performing a multivariate logistic regression analysis (Sharif et al., Reference Sharif, Tiosano, Watad, Comaneshter, Cohen, Shoenfeld and Amital2018).

Three studies have found that the rate of hypothyroidism seems to rise significantly following a diagnosis of schizophrenia (Telo et al., Reference Telo, Bilgic and Karabulut2016; Melamed et al., Reference Melamed, Farfel, Gur, Krivoy, Weizman, Matalon, Feldhamer, Hermesh, Weizman and Meyerovitch2020; Launders et al., Reference Launders, Kirsh, Osborn and Hayes2022). These observations indicate that chronic antipsychotic treatment may suppress thyroid functioning (Melamed et al., Reference Melamed, Farfel, Gur, Krivoy, Weizman, Matalon, Feldhamer, Hermesh, Weizman and Meyerovitch2020).

Non-adherence is a known problem in the management of hypothyroidism, with rates of non-adherence reaching 52% (Hepp et al., Reference Hepp, Wyne, Manthena, Wang and Gossain2018), but to the best of our knowledge, our current study is the first to compare adherence to treatment and management of hypothyroidism in patients with schizophrenia to that of the general population suffering from this common endocrine disorder.

Methods

We examined the medical files of 1,252 adult patients with schizophrenia receiving treatment in the regional clinics of a large HMO in Israel, during the years 2005–2013, and of 3,756 control subjects without any mental disorder – matched for age, gender and socioeconomic status – being treated for physical health issues during the same period. These parameters were included in the model as they may affect the dependent variables. Only those under long-term (at least 5 years) care of a healthcare provider, above 18 years of age and residing in the same urban area in central Israel were included. The predefined ratio of patients to controls was 1:3. The relevant data were collected from the electronic medical database and transferred anonymously to a file, which constituted the data source for the current study. Diagnosis of schizophrenia had been done by senior psychiatrists according to ICD-10 criteria.

Exclusion criteria consisted of treatment with clozapine, which represents treatment-resistant schizophrenia, malignancy and organic brain syndrome. The records of individuals with these medical conditions were not retrieved.

Among the retrieved records, 121 patients were identified with schizophrenia and comorbid hypothyroidism and 190 controls without schizophrenia but with a registered diagnosis of hypothyroidism. Those were included in our study.

Adherence to hypothyroidism treatment was assessed by the following measures:

  • Average annual number of prescriptions of L-thyroxine (a replacement therapy for hormone deficiency in hypothyroid state).

  • Average annual number of serum thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) level tests, which is a commonly used test for hypothyroidism.

  • Each participant’s average TSH level, which is a measure of treatment success.

Due to the retrospective nature of the study, the need for informed consent was waved by the institutional review board of the Geha Mental Health Center in Petah Tikva, Israel. The approval number is 095/2012.

Statistical analysis

Since all the variables are continuous, we used Student’s t-test to calculate the differences between groups.

Results

In our sample, 299 patients had a diagnosis of hypothyroidism corroborated by at least one result of serum TSH levels. One hundred and fifteen had a diagnosis of schizophrenia as well. The 184 with no schizophrenia constituted the control group.

The measures of adherence defined in this study (average annual number of prescriptions of L-thyroxin, average annual number of TSH level tests and average TSH level) are shown in Table 1. No statistically significant differences between the two groups were found in any of the measures.

Table 1. Treatment adherence

Note: Normal range of TSH is 0.4–4.0 mIU/L.

Discussion

Several measures used in our study indicated that in patients diagnosed with comorbid schizophrenia and hypothyroidism, the adherence rate to hypothyroidism medications was as good as that of patients with hypothyroidism and no mental disorder. This is in line with previous research on the adherence of patients with schizophrenia and comorbid physical disorders (Dolder et al., Reference Dolder, Lacro and Jeste2003; Dolder et al., Reference Dolder, Furtek, Lacro and Jeste2005; Siegel et al., Reference Siegel, Lopez and Meier2007; Simard et al., Reference Simard, Presse, Roy, Dorais, White-Guay, Räkel and Perreault2015; Owen-Smith et al., Reference Owen-Smith, Stewart, Green, Ahmedani, Waitzfelder, Rossom, Copeland and Simon2016; Gorczynski et al., Reference Gorczynski, Firth, Stubbs, Rosenbaum and Vancampfort2017; Iglay et al., Reference Iglay, Santorelli, Hirshfield, Williams, Rhoads, Lin and Demissie2017).

Studies consistently demonstrated that patients with schizophrenia have higher rates of physical disorders and a shortened lifespan (Dieset et al., Reference Dieset, Andreassen and Haukvik2016; Hjorthøj et al., Reference Hjorthøj, Stürup, McGrath and Nordentoft2017). This morbidity and mortality gap has been attributed to a variety of factors, including common biological underpinnings (Crawford et al., Reference Crawford, Jayakumar, Lemmey, Zalewska, Patel, Cooper and Shiers2014), medication effects (Pillinger et al., Reference Pillinger, McCutcheon, Vano, Mizuno, Arumuham, Hindley, Beck, Natesan, Efthimiou, Cipriani and Howes2020), suicidality (Hor and Taylor, Reference Hor and Taylor2010) and non-adherence (Crawford et al., Reference Crawford, Jayakumar, Lemmey, Zalewska, Patel, Cooper and Shiers2014). As mentioned before, the results of our study indicate that non-adherence is not a significant factor in this context. This finding has implications in two main areas. One is the education of clinicians. Such information could help reduce the stigmatic view that patients with schizophrenia cannot be reliable partners in establishing and implementing a treatment plan (Chaudhry et al., Reference Chaudhry, Jordan, Cousin, Cavallaro and Mostaza2010; Briskman et al., Reference Briskman, Bar, Boaz and Shargorodsky2012; Firth et al., Reference Firth, Rosenbaum, Stubbs, Gorczynski, Yung and Vancampfort2016). The second area is resource investment. Economic resources intended to help close the morbidity–mortality gap should be directed to other factors mentioned above rather than to treatment adherence of patients with schizophrenia.

The findings of the current study clearly show that schizophrenic patients adhere to hypothyroid (and probably other) treatments no less than patients without schizophrenia. All patients, regardless of whether diagnosed with schizophrenia or not, should receive the same attention and same treatment from healthcare practitioners. Reducing such stigmatization can and should encourage more equitable and effective healthcare practices for individuals with schizophrenia, both in terms of the attitude from practitioners and the resource investment needed to provide the best available care.

In the case of hypothyroidism specifically, recent research points to the antipsychotic medications playing an important role in the etiology of the disorder (Melamed et al., Reference Melamed, Farfel, Gur, Krivoy, Weizman, Matalon, Feldhamer, Hermesh, Weizman and Meyerovitch2020).

Limitations

This study has all the limitations inherent to a retrospective study design. In addition, the study group is of relatively small size.

Some studies have found that thyroid function can be affected by early-life psychosocial factors such as childhood trauma. Early life is known to constitute a sensitive period for the long-term effects on the endocrine system, related to the functioning of the hypothalamic–pituitary–thyroid axis (Varese et al., Reference Varese, Smeets, Drukker, Lieverse, Lataster, Viechtbauer, Read, van Os and Bentall2012; Machado et al., Reference Machado, Salum, Bosa, Goldani, Meaney, Agranonik, Manfro and Silveira2015). However, neither Śmierciak et al. (Reference Śmierciak, Szwajca, Popiela, Bryll, Karcz, Donicz, Turek, Krzyściak and Pilecki2022) nor our study could find any reports explaining the dependencies or mechanisms of this relationship.

Additionally, the present study showed no evidence of a relationship between sociodemographic and cultural factors and adherence to treatment, since both the study and the control group were matched for socioeconomic status and cultural background. A future study should investigate the impact of social and cultural backgrounds, healthcare systems and their policies on treatment adherence in patients with schizophrenia. Longitudinal cohort studies are needed to clarify long-term health outcomes associated with treatment adherence or non-adherence in patients with comorbid schizophrenia and how they vary on an international scale. Such studies should also identify the effective strategies to improve adherence in psychiatric patients.

Conclusion

To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to address the subject of adherence to hypothyroidism treatment in patients with schizophrenia. Our results boost those of previous studies of adherence in patients with schizophrenia and should help destigmatize the perception of non-adherence as a trait of schizophrenia and the unjustified blaming of these patients as being responsible for the under-treatment they receive.

Open peer review

To view the open peer review materials for this article, please visit http://doi.org/10.1017/gmh.2023.86.

Data availability statement

Due to the confidential nature of the data, it is only available on reasonable request from the corresponding author.

Author contribution

Conceptualization: S.G., S.W., A.K.; Data curation: S.G., S.W.; Formal analysis: A.K.; Funding acquisition: S.G.; Investigation: S.W., H.H., A.M., J.M.; Methodology: S.G., S.W., A.K.; Project administration: S.G.; Resources: S.G.; Supervision: A.K., J.M.; Writing – original draft: S.G., S.W.; Writing – review and editing: all authors.

Financial support

This study was supported by a specific grant to SG from the Clalit Health Services, Israel.

Competing interest

The authors declare no competing interests exist.

Ethics standard

This study was approved by the Institutional Ethics Review Board of the Geha Mental Health Center, Petah Tikva, Israel. The approval number is 095/2012. Due to the retrospective nature of the study, the need for informed consent was waved.

Footnotes

#

Equal contribution.

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Velligan, DI, Sajatovic, M, Hatch, A, Kramata, P and Docherty, JP (2017) Why do psychiatric patients stop antipsychotic medication? A systematic review of reasons for nonadherence to medication in patients with serious mental illness. Patient Preference and Adherence 11, 449468. https://doi.org/10.2147/ppa.S124658.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Yang, J, Ko, YH, Paik, JW, Lee, MS, Han, C, Joe, SH, Jung, IK, Jung, HG and Kim, SH (2012) Symptom severity and attitudes toward medication: Impacts on adherence in outpatients with schizophrenia. Schizophrenia Research 134(2–3), 226231. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.schres.2011.11.008.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Figure 0

Table 1. Treatment adherence

Author comment: Adherence of patients with schizophrenia to hypothyroidism treatment — R0/PR1

Comments

To

Prof. Gary Belkin

Editor-In-Chief

Cambridge Prisms: Global Mental Health

Dear Prof. Belkin,

We hereby re-submit our manuscript entitled: “Adherence of patients with schizophrenia to hypothyroidism treatment” for publication in your journal. This is an original study that used an electronic medical database to compare adherence to hypothyroidism treatment of patients with schizophrenia to the adherence to such treatment of patients without schizophrenia.

The results indicate that, contrary to often held opinions, patients with schizophrenia adhere to hypothyroidism treatment no less than patients without schizophrenia.

All the authors of this article had access to all study data, are responsible for all contents of the article, and had authority over manuscript preparation and the decision to submit the manuscript for publication. All listed authors gave their approval to the submission of the manuscript to this journal. The authors know of no other published, submitted or proposed papers reporting the same or overlapping data.

None of the authors reports any financial or other conflict of interest with regard to this study.

We hope that you will find this article suitable for publication in your journal.

Sincerely,

Dr. Shay Gur MD

On behalf of the authors

Review: Adherence of patients with schizophrenia to hypothyroidism treatment — R0/PR2

Conflict of interest statement

Reviewer declares none.

Comments

This is an important and unbiased retrospective study that interrogated a large health system database to identify two groups of patients with hypothyroidism: those with and without a comorbid diagnosis of schizophrenia. The data show that the patients with schizophrenia did not differ from those without schizophrenia in terms of adherence to treatment and treatment monitoring. The data have important public health implications for the management of schizophrenia, encouraging physicians to address this frequent comorbid condition. I am certain the investigators will explore possible psychiatric implications of poor adherence to maintenance of a euthyroid state in what may be a minority of schizophrenia patients with a comorbid diagnosis of hypothyroidism.

The authors may wish to address the discrepancy between the 121 patients with schizophrenia and coexisting hypothyroidism and the 190 patients with a diagnosis of hypothyroidism presented in the Methods, which conflicts with the number of patients presented in the Abstract and analyzed in the Results.

Review: Adherence of patients with schizophrenia to hypothyroidism treatment — R0/PR3

Conflict of interest statement

Reviewer declares none.

Comments

Dear all,

Thank you for the opportunity to review this manuscript.

This is a relevant paper examining adherence to hypothyroidism treatment in patients with comorbid schizophrenia, comparing them to a control group without schizophrenia. The study shows strengths when addressing and acknowledging the important topic of the stigma associated with clinicians in the field regarding patients with schizophrenia and their adherence to treatment. Another strength of the paper is the objective measures it employs providing a comprehensive view of treatment adherence. The study makes a clear and important conclusion that adherence to medication of patients with schizophrenia was “found to be as good as that of individuals without a schizophrenia diagnosis.” The study’s results are direct and useful for healthcare providers.

However, I believe the study can greatly benefit by further showing how the study’s results specifically fit within the context of global research and how they can inform healthcare practices. The manuscript could include the following elements:

Provide a more extensive review of the literature on treatment adherence in patients with comorbid schizophrenia and hypothyroidism, clearly including and depicting an array of literature around the world. Discussing findings from multiple countries to establish the global context. Further development of this point, the study could include statistics on the global prevalence of schizophrenia and hypothyroidism, and compare these rates across countries to underline any potential variations in morbidity and treatment adherence. Additionally, the study can include sociodemographic and cultural factors, and pinpoint how these factors might vary. To make the study fit the global health context the study can investigate the impact of different healthcare systems and their policies to treatment adherence in patients with schizophrenia. Compare and contrast various countries in the context of effective strategies to improve adherence in psychiatric patients. I also believe the study would benefit significantly from discussing the long-term health outcomes associated with treatment adherence or non-adherence in patients with comorbid schizophrenia, and how they vary on an international scale.

As mentioned above, the study shows strengths when giving light to the important topic of the stigma associated with clinicians in the field regarding patients with schizophrenia and their adherence to treatment. This stigma can influence the way clinicians interact with and treat these patients. Using the evidence provided, the study should clearly depict how reducing such stigmatization can and should encourage more equitable and effective healthcare practices for individuals with schizophrenia.

On a different point, the study provides a simple overview of how the participants were included but lacks specific details about how the inclusion criteria was confirmed, and the process of selecting participants. Specifically, there is little clarity as to how the control group was selected. The study mentions that the control group was matched to the schizophrenia group within the factors of age, gender, and socioeconomic status, but it is unclear how this process was conducted. Furthermore, the study does not mention whether or not there was an exclusion criteria used, if so it should be noted.

Lastly, pertaining to the statistical analysis and results, I think data validation is critical, and the study should mention the steps taken to validate the accuracy of the diagnoses, medication records for all participants, as well as Student’s t-test used to calculate the differences between the groups.

Overall, I believe that the authors did a good job with the paper, talking about an important topic within the world of schizophrenia.

Recommendation: Adherence of patients with schizophrenia to hypothyroidism treatment — R0/PR4

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Decision: Adherence of patients with schizophrenia to hypothyroidism treatment — R0/PR5

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Author comment: Adherence of patients with schizophrenia to hypothyroidism treatment — R1/PR6

Comments

Nov. 5, 23

To

Dr Franco Mascayano

Handling Editor

Cambridge Prisms: Global Mental Health

Dear Dr Mascayano,

We hereby submit our revised manuscript entitled: “Adherence of patients with schizophrenia to hypothyroidism treatment”. The manuscript has been revised according to all your and the reviewers’ comments.

Our detailed responses follow below.

We hope that you will now find the manuscript suitable for publication.

Sincerely,

Dr. Shay Gur MD

On behalf of the authors

Authors’ Detailed Responses

Handling Editor: Mascayano, Franco

Please also ensure your manuscript complies with the following formatting points (a copy of our author guidelines is included for reference):

Comments

- Please include the abstract in the main text document.

Response: Done

- Please include an Impact Statement below the abstract (max. 300 words). This must not be a repetition of the abstract but a plain worded summary of the wider impact of the article.

Response: Done

- Submission of graphical abstracts is encouraged for all articles to help promote their impact online. A Graphical Abstract is a single image that summarises the main findings of a paper, allowing readers to quickly gain an overview and understanding of your work. Ideally, the graphical abstract should be created independently of the figures already in the paper, but it could include a (simplified version of) an existing figure or a combination thereof. Graphical abstracts should not be too text-heavy in order to be easily viewable at thumbnail size. If you do not wish to include a graphical abstract please let me know.

Response: This is a case-control study which will not benefit from a graphical abstract.

- Please ensure references are correctly formatted. In text citations should follow the author and year style. When an article cited has three or more authors the style ‘Smith et al. 2013’ should be used on all occasions. At the end of the article, references should first be listed alphabetically, with a full title of each article, and the first and last pages. Journal titles should be given in full.

Response: Done

- Statements of the following are required in the main text document at the end of all articles: ‘Author Contribution Statement’, ‘Financial Support’, ‘Conflict of Interest Statement’, ‘Ethics statement’ (if appropriate), ‘Data Availability Statement’. Please see the author guidelines for further information.

Response: Done

- Please submit figures as separate files and please ensure all files are submitted in an editable electronic format.

Response: There are no figures in this manuscript.

Reviewer(s)' Comments to Author:

Reviewer: 1

Comments to the Author

This is an important and unbiased retrospective study that interrogated a large health system database to identify two groups of patients with hypothyroidism: those with and without a comorbid diagnosis of schizophrenia. The data show that the patients with schizophrenia did not differ from those without schizophrenia in terms of adherence to treatment and treatment monitoring. The data have important public health implications for the management of schizophrenia, encouraging physicians to address this frequent comorbid condition. I am certain the investigators will explore possible psychiatric implications of poor adherence to maintenance of a euthyroid state in what may be a minority of schizophrenia patients with a comorbid diagnosis of hypothyroidism.

Response: We thank the reviewer for his or her positive comments.

The authors may wish to address the discrepancy between the 121 patients with schizophrenia and coexisting hypothyroidism and the 190 patients with a diagnosis of hypothyroidism presented in the Methods, which conflicts with the number of patients presented in the Abstract and analyzed in the Results.

Response: We thank the reviewer for his or her attention. The discrepancy has now been corrected.

Reviewer: 2

Comments to the Author

Dear all,

Thank you for the opportunity to review this manuscript.

This is a relevant paper examining adherence to hypothyroidism treatment in patients with comorbid schizophrenia, comparing them to a control group without schizophrenia. The study shows strengths when addressing and acknowledging the important topic of the stigma associated with clinicians in the field regarding patients with schizophrenia and their adherence to treatment. Another strength of the paper is the objective measures it employs providing a comprehensive view of treatment adherence. The study makes a clear and important conclusion that adherence to medication of patients with schizophrenia was “found to be as good as that of individuals without a schizophrenia diagnosis.” The study’s results are direct and useful for healthcare providers.

Response: We thank the reviewer for the positive and encouraging comments.

However, I believe the study can greatly benefit by further showing how the study’s results specifically fit within the context of global research and how they can inform healthcare practices. The manuscript could include the following elements:

Provide a more extensive review of the literature on treatment adherence in patients with comorbid schizophrenia and hypothyroidism, clearly including and depicting an array of literature around the world.

Response: Unfortunately, there is no literature on treatment adherence in patients with comorbid schizophrenia and hypothyroidism. As indicated in the manuscript, our study seems to be the first one investigating this aspect.

Discussing findings from multiple countries to establish the global context. Further development of this point, the study could include statistics on the global prevalence of schizophrenia and hypothyroidism and compare these rates across countries to underline any potential variations in morbidity and treatment adherence.

Response: The manuscript now includes descriptions of findings world-wide on the various aspects of the association between schizophrenia and hypothyroidism. They were added just before the closing paragraph of the Introduction.

Additionally, the study can include sociodemographic and cultural factors, and pinpoint how these factors might vary. To make the study fit the global health context the study can investigate the impact of different healthcare systems and their policies to treatment adherence in patients with schizophrenia. Compare and contrast various countries in the context of effective strategies to improve adherence in psychiatric patients.

Response: A section on these topics was added to the Limitations section of the Discussion.

I also believe the study would benefit significantly from discussing the long-term health outcomes associated with treatment adherence or non-adherence in patients with comorbid schizophrenia, and how they vary on an international scale.

Response: This too was added to the Limitations section of the Discussion.

As mentioned above, the study shows strengths when giving light to the important topic of the stigma associated with clinicians in the field regarding patients with schizophrenia and their adherence to treatment. This stigma can influence the way clinicians interact with and treat these patients. Using the evidence provided, the study should clearly depict how reducing such stigmatization can and should encourage more equitable and effective healthcare practices for individuals with schizophrenia.

Response: The reviewer’s suggestion has been incorporated into the manuscript at the end of the one before last paragraph of the Discussion section.

On a different point, the study provides a simple overview of how the participants were included but lacks specific details about how the inclusion criteria was confirmed, and the process of selecting participants. Specifically, there is little clarity as to how the control group was selected. The study mentions that the control group was matched to the schizophrenia group within the factors of age, gender, and socioeconomic status, but it is unclear how this process was conducted. Furthermore, the study does not mention whether or not there was an exclusion criteria used, if so it should be noted.

Response: In the Methods section there is now a more detailed description of the selection of both, the study group and the controls, as well as exclusion criteria.

Lastly, pertaining to the statistical analysis and results, I think data validation is critical, and the study should mention the steps taken to validate the accuracy of the diagnoses, medication records for all participants, as well as Student’s t-test used to calculate the differences between the groups.

Response: Since the number of participants in this study was relatively small, data accuracy was validated by examining the data recorded in the medical files for each participant’s last visit.

Regarding the differences between the groups, Student’s t-test was performed following accuracy validation.

Overall, I believe that the authors did a good job with the paper, talking about an important topic within the world of schizophrenia.

Response: Thank you.

Review: Adherence of patients with schizophrenia to hypothyroidism treatment — R1/PR7

Conflict of interest statement

Reviewer declares none.

Comments

The authors have thoughtfully considered the critiques of the Reviewers in the preparation of their revision. The revised manuscript is acceptable for publication.

Recommendation: Adherence of patients with schizophrenia to hypothyroidism treatment — R1/PR8

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Decision: Adherence of patients with schizophrenia to hypothyroidism treatment — R1/PR9

Comments

No accompanying comment.