Home
» Daily
News
Jan.
2 - Preventing Adverse Drug Events in Older Adults
Adverse drug events are more common in older adults because
they are prescribed more drugs and are effected differently
by these drugs than their younger counterparts. A review article
written by Tufts University School of Medicine clinicians,
published in American Family Physician,
summarizes steps that physicians and other healthcare providers
can take to avoid overuse, misuse, and underuse of medication
in older adults.
“About one in three older persons taking at least five
medications will experience an adverse drug event each year,
and about two-thirds of these patients will require medical
attention. Approximately 95% of these reactions are
predictable, and about 28% are preventable,”
cite the authors, Cung Pham, MD, fellow in the Tufts University
Family Medicine Residency at Cambridge Health Alliance’s
Malden Family Medicine Center, and Robert Dickman, MD, Jaharis
Family Chair of Family Medicine at Tufts University School
of Medicine.
Pham and Dickman summarize interventions for reducing inappropriate
prescriptions as follows, while noting that there is limited
research to support clear interventions.
--Avoiding misuse of medications
If a drug is listed on the Beers Criteria, a widely-adopted
list of drugs that labels medications as “potentially
inappropriate” for older persons or for older persons
with specific medical conditions, the authors report that
physicians can avoid those drugs apt to cause a severe adverse
drug event simply by selecting alternatives. If there is no
alternative, the best choice for a necessary drug is to start
at the lowest effective dose and, when possible, discontinue
the drug.
--Avoiding overuse of medications: polypharmacy and overdosing
Polymedicine describes the use of an increasing number of
drugs related to an increasing number of medical problems,
while polypharmacy is defined as inappropriate use of multiple
drugs. While there is no standard marker for when a patient’s
polymedicine list becomes polypharmacy, “increasing
the number of medications increases the risk of drug-drug
interactions and adverse drug events,” says Pham, “and
reviews of medications should be routine.”
The “brown-bag” method, where patients bring
all of their medications in a brown bag to the physician’s
office, can lead to dropping at least one medicine in 20%
of patients and a change in medication in 29% of patients.
Pham and Dickman highlight other methods, from systematic
reviews, found to be effective in reducing inappropriate prescriptions.
These include using a team approach involving pharmacists
and nurses to evaluate drug regimens and suggest changes;
exploring nonpharmacologic treatment options, such as exercise
or cognitive therapy; and using advances in technology, including
personal digital assistants and computerized alerts with health
records, to reduce adverse events.
--Avoiding underuse of medication: underprescribing and nonadherence
“Despite concerns about overprescribing, many conditions
remain underdiagnosed or undertreated,” write the authors.
“Ascribing all symptoms to degenerative disease or old
age will potentially miss treatable conditions,” including
heart disease, depression, osteoporosis and pain.
“Nonadherence (or noncompliance) is a complex phenomenon
determined by a variety of issues, including physician-patient
communication, cognitive decline, and the cost of medication,”
write the authors. Most interventions focus on education or
on cognitive aids, but the combination is more promising.
In some cases, cost is a factor that will not be mentioned
unless the physician inquires. “Simply asking whether
a patient plans to use his or her prescription may open a
dialogue about the costs of a patient’s prescriptions,”
say Dickman, senior author. “Sometimes there are alternatives,
including prescriptions for generic substitutes or identifying
a combination drug that may be less expensive than two individual
drugs.”
“Much drug therapy in older adults is to prevent illnesses
by decreasing risks that will never affect them,” writes
Allen Shaughnessy, PharmD, associate director of the Tufts
University Family Medicine Residency, in an accompanying editorial.
Physicians will benefit by finding “the balance between
the potentially lifesaving benefits of medication and the
life-threatening complications of these drugs.”
Source: Tufts University
(View
the Daily News Archive)
|