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Polypharmacy: Adverse Drug Effects in the Elderly Centre on Aging Spring Symposium May 4, 2009 Acknowledgements • Dr. Pat Montgomery • American Geriatrics Society • Disclaimer – I have no financial conflict of interest related to the topic, and I buy my own lunch. Outline • • • • • Definitions Prevalence and Harm Causes and contributing factors Measuring Interventions Definitions • Polypharmacy - many drugs – How many is too many? 3? 6? 9? Depends what drugs? • Adverse Drug Effects - any unintended drug effect causing harm – To a degree unavoidable: nothing ventured, nothing gained – Avoidable ADEs ~ inappropriate prescribing Definitions • Inappropriate prescribing - any Rx where potential harms outweigh potential benefits – Underprescribing and overprescribing – Beers, IPET criteria Dave’s Drug Dichotomies Useful Useless Harmless Good, but rare Snake Oil Harmful Most Rx Bad, too common THE BURDEN OF INJURIES FROM MEDICATIONS ADEs are responsible for 5% to 28% of acute geriatric hospital admissions THE BURDEN OF INJURIES FROM MEDICATIONS Incidence of ADEs: 26/1000 hospital beds (2.6%) ADEs occur in 35% of communitydwelling elderly persons THE BURDEN OF INJURIES FROM MEDICATIONS 1.4 1.2 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 In nursing homes, $1.33 is spent on ADEs for every $1.00 spent on medications Burden of ADEs • Polypharmacy is a risk factor and/or cause of most ‘geriatric syndromes’: – Falls – Cognitive impairment – Incontinence – Functional impairment Causes of ADEs in the Elderly • High prevalence of Rx – Drug-drug interactions • Multiple chronic illnesses – Drug-disease interactions – Prescribing cascade • Frailty, decreased ‘homeostasis’ • Altered pharmacokinetics Ballantine. CCNQ 2008; 31(1):40-45 Prevalence of Rx in US People 65+ People <65 65+ share of prescriptions <65 share of presciptions 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Present 2040 Now, people age 65+ are 13% of US population, buy 33% of prescription drugs By 2040, will be 25% of population, will buy 50% of prescription drugs Guidelines and polypharmacy • Boyd et al JAMA 2004 • Hypothetical 78 y.o. woman with COPD, DM2, OA, hypertension, osteoporosis • Reviewed relevant Clinical practise Guidelines (CPGs) on each problem (from national clearinghouse) Poly-Guidelinism • If followed, would result in a complex 12-med regime with 19 doses at 5 times, potential interactions, $406/month, 14 non-medication recommendations, complex monitoring and medical follow-up Boyd et al • Also rated 9 CPGs on common illnesses • 7 of 9 discussed age and/or comorbidities but only 4 considered age with comorbidity • Only 1 (diabetes) considered life expectancy vs the time needed to achieve treatment benefit Guidelines • Few discussed quality of life, burden of treatments on patients and family, or financial impact • “CPGs provide little guidance for clinicians about caring for older patients with multiple chronic diseases” • Concern about ‘Pay-for-Performance’ forcing blind compliance to guidelines Prescribing Cascade • Prescription of successive medications to treat side effects or drug-disease interactions or other prescriptions – Increased use of urinary anticholinergics after donepezil started – NSAIDs and ‘gastro-protection’ but also antihypertensives and diuretics Frailty and Homeostasis • Frail elderly have decreased ‘physiologic reserve’ to tolerate drug effects • Increased heterogeneity in old vs young, so response to medication less predictable Markers of Frailty • nutrition: low BMI, low albumin/cholesterol • cardiovascular: CHF, postural hypotension • cognitive impairment, immobility, incontinence, multiple co-morbidity • functional dependence, ADL/IADL • social isolation, need for home care • institutionalization Pharmacologic Effects of Frailty • few studies, not synonymous with aging • altered renal clearance, serum creatinine underestimates kidney function • reduced hepatic volume & drug clearance • exaggerated drug effect due to impaired homeostasis Therapeutic Consequences of Frailty • subjects are not included in clinical trials, beneficial effects of treatment not studied • multiple pathology and polypharmacy • limited life expectancy, loss of association with traditional outcome predictors eg BP • quality of life as primary end-point for therapy, ?? value of preventive treatments PHARMACOKINETICS Absorption Distribution Metabolism Elimination Assessing Polypharmacy • Various number cut-offs, arbitrary and not useful with individual patients • Inappropriate prescribing: – Beers criteria, successive updates – Medication Appropriateness Index – Inappropriate Prescribing in the Elderly Tool The Medication Appropriateness Index Holmes et al Arch Intern Med. 2006;166:605-609 Assessing Polypharmacy • All rely on judgement of experts, therefore depend on credibility of the judge • Problems with generalisibility over time, other countries Approaches to Reducing ADEs in the Elderly • Primary prevention/Point-of-prescribing – Start low, go slow – Academic detailing – Consideration of frail elderly in guidelines – Computerised drug interaction software – Regulatory/formulary restriction Approaches • Secondary/tertiary prevention – Medication review – Pharmacist structured review “pharmacologic debridement” – Beers criteria – Academic Detailing Approaches • Some studies with evidence of benefit in reducing numbers of drugs • Effects tend to wear off, tachyphylaxis develops • Little evidence of actual changes in patient outcomes to date Stopping Drugs in Elderly Patients “Starting Rules” • Vast majority of medical education and CME is directed at “starting rules” • most studies concerned with initiating drugs, rarely deal with when/why to stop • drug company pressure • poly-pathology, proliferation of interventions in chronic disease Barriers to Stopping Drugs • limited evidence base in literature • possible liability; errors of commission versus omission • need for careful balancing of risks versus benefits; under-recognition of frailty • lack of clear guidelines when to stop Therapeutic Humility • The awareness that many (most?) available treatments are unproven for our patients • Benefits and risks are uncertain • Competing and interacting morbidity and mortality Therapeutic Humility • There is no good evidence for most interventions in the frail elderly • One should be less confident that any given treatment will do what one expects for your patient • …especially when you consider or encounter adverse effects, polypharmacy, costs