Across several chronic therapy areas, patient non-adherence remains a critical obstacle to long-term treatment success. Traditional patient support programs (PSPs), while valuable, often fail to address the complex mix of cultural, psychological, and behavioral factors that influence whether patients stay on therapy.
A global pharmaceutical organization recognized the need to look beyond surface-level adherence metrics and gain a behaviorally grounded understanding of why patients discontinue treatment, even when therapies are clinically effective. The goal was to generate breakthrough insights to inform a multichannel adherence strategy, tailored both globally and locally.
To meet this goal, the team used an immersive, mixed-method research approach that included:
As the study progressed, the approach was refined based on emerging insights. This included re-engaging physicians, bringing in country specific cultural experts, and shifting to a country-first reporting model followed by a global synthesis.
The research produced a comprehensive behavioral model that reshaped how adherence is understood and supported. Key outcomes included:
The study delivered a behavioral blueprint with stage-specific interventions, aligning global strategy with local execution. It drove innovation in Patient Support Programs, tailored by disease, stage, and market. A rapid response in certain markets enabled immediate corrective action, while PSP investments were reassessed in high-duration therapy markets. Insights also informed 2025–26 brand planning and shaped an HCP engagement strategy by leveraging adherence-driven behaviors to enhance marketing and communication impact.
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Integrated research uncovered nuanced patient journeys and treatment shifts to guide clinical strategy and avoid portfolio cannibalization
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