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Title: Geriatric Pharmacotherapy: Managing Older Adults on Multiple Medications


1
Geriatric Pharmacotherapy Managing Older Adults
on Multiple Medications
  • Lynne E. Kallenbach, M.D.
  • Asst. Professor of Medicine
  • University of Kansas Medical Center
  • Landon Center on Aging
  • October 5, 2007

2
Overview
  • What is polypharmacy?
  • Relevant pharmacology
  • Medication use issues with multiple Rxs
  • Potentially inappropriate medications
  • Approach to modifying medication profiles
  • Quality prescribing

3
What is polypharmacy?
  • As older patients move through time, often from
    physician to physician, they are at increasing
    risk of accumulating layer upon layer of drug
    therapy, as a reef accumulates layer upon layer
    of coral.
  • Jerry Avorn, MD
  • From Gurwitz J. Arch Intern Med Oct 11, 2004

4
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5
Why Geriatric Pharmacotherapy Is Important
  • 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

6
The Burden of Injuries From Medications
  • ADEs occur in 35 of community-dwelling elderly
    persons
  • Incidence of ADEs 26/1000 hospital beds (2.6)

7
Adverse Drug Events in Older Adults
  • Serious or fatal ADEs occur in 18.5 of adults
    aged 55-64 and in 41.9 of adults aged 85 years.
  • Drug related mortality is the 9th leading cause
    of death for people 65 years of age.
  • It is estimated that 30 of ADEs are preventable.

8
Pharmacologic Changes with Aging
9
Pharmacokinetics
  • Absorption
  • Distribution
  • Metabolism
  • Excretion
  • Altered by changes in body make-up
  • Decreased lean mass, relatively increased fat

10
Aging and Absorption
  • Actual amount absorbed not changed
  • Peak concentrations may be altered

11
Effects of Aging on Volume of Distribution
  • ? body water ? lower VD for hydrophilic drugs
  • ? lean body mass, ? plasma protein (albumin) ?
    higher percentage of drug that is unbound
    (active)
  • ? fat stores ? higher VD for lipophilic drugs

12
Aging and Metabolism
  • Metabolic clearance of a drug by the liver
  • may be reduced because
  • Aging decreases liver blood flow, size, and mass
  • The liver is the most common site of drug
    metabolism
  • Phase II pathways generally preferable for older
    patient

13
The Effects of Aging on the Kidney
  • ? kidney size
  • ? renal blood flow
  • ? number of functioning nephrons
  • ? renal tubular secretion
  • Result Lower glomerular filtration rate

14
Serum Creatinine Does Not ReflectClearance
  • ? lean body mass ? lower creatinine production
  • and
  • ? glomerular filtration rate (GFR)
  • Result In older persons, serum creatinine stays
    in normal range, masking change in creatinine
    clearance (CrCl)

15
Pharmacodynamics
  • Definition Time course and intensity of the
    pharmacologic effect of a drug
  • May change with aging, eg
  • Benzodiazepines may cause more sedation and
    poorer psychomotor performance in older adults.
  • Older patients may experience higher levels of
    morphine with longer pain relief

16
Decreased homeostatic reserve
  • Impacts ability to tolerate medications
  • Postural hypotension
  • Fluid and electrolyte problems
  • Response to hypoglycemia
  • Temperature regulation

17
Medication Use Issues with Multiple
Prescriptions (and OTCsherbalsetc)
18
General types of medication-related problems
  • Unnecessary drug
  • Not prescribing new needed Rx
  • Contraindicated drug
  • Dose too low or too high
  • Adverse drug event/ drug interaction
  • Nonadherence
  • Prescribing cascade
  • From Williams CM, Am Fam Phys Nov 15, 2002

19
Prescribing Cascade
  • Misinterpretation of an adverse drug reaction as
    a symptom of another condition? prescribing of
    another Rx
  • Example
  • Persons receiving a cholinesterase inhibitor had
    50 increase risk for subsequent anticholinergic
    drug for incontinence
  • Gill et al. Arch Intern Med 2005, April 11

20
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21
Adverse Drug Events during Care Transitions
  • Med changes between hosp and NH
  • Mean of Rx changed
  • 3.1 from nursing home to hospital
  • 1.4 from hospital to nursing home
  • Most were discontinuations
  • ADE attributable to medication changes occurred
    in 20 usually occurred after readmission to the
    NH

22
Characteristics of Older Adults with
Medication-related Problems
  • 85 years and older
  • 6 or more active chronic conditions
  • Estimated creat clearance
  • Low body weight
  • Nine or more medications
  • More than 12 doses of medication daily
  • Previous adverse drug reaction
  • From Williams CM, Am Fam Phys 2002, adapted from
    Fouts, Consult Pharm, 1997

23
Risk Factors for High Risk for ADE in Older
Outpatients from an Expert Consensus Panel
From Hajjar et al. Am J Geriatr Pharmacother
2003, Dec
24
Drug-Drug Interactions
  • May lead to ADEs
  • Likelihood ? as number of medications ?
  • Most common cardiovascular and psychotropic
    drugs

25
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26
Case A
  • 75 year old woman with hypertension, diabetes
    mellitus, dyslipidemia, coronary heart disease,
    congestive heart failure, osteoporosis, arthritis
    and chronic back pain, depression, and seasonal
    allergies

27
Case A 15 meds
28
Case B
  • 85 year old woman with hypertension, dependent
    edema, dizzy spells, chronic back pain, insomnia,
    and constipation

29
Case B 15 meds
30
How many meds is too many?
  • Med count wont distinguish cases A B
  • Med count wont distinguish treatment based on
    disease-management guidelines from
    symptom-management meds
  • Wont distinguish prescriber decision-making from
    patient-generated demand
  • Wont distinguish appropriate from inappropriate
    medication use

31
Manageable Dosing Regimens
  • Manageable number of dosing times/day
  • Once daily formulations if feasible
  • Reduce number of medications that cant be taken
    at same time as any others
  • Use of reminders, medication box set-up
  • Feasible to keep track of and filled
  • Affordable so patient does not skip doses to make
    the supply stretch between refills

32
Potentially Inappropriate Medication Use
33
Inappropriate Medications in Older Adults
Beers List
  • potentially or generally inappropriate
  • suboptimal prescribing
  • Overall risks outweigh potential benefits
  • May be ineffective and/or poorly tolerated
  • May be justified in some circumstances
  • Controversial
  • Expert opinion by pharmacists group
  • Limited evidence-base for many drugs

34
Beers List Two Groups of Drugs
  • Unconditionally inappropriate
  • Generally best avoided regardless of
    circumstances
  • Conditioned upon disease state or dose
  • May only be inappropriate in specific context

35
Beers List
  • 1992many drugs no longer used
  • 1997
  • 2003
  • Now the basis for consultant pharmacy review in
    nursing facilities

36
Beers List Selected Highlights 1997
  • Propoxyphene (but not included in Rx review
    guidelines for NH)
  • Indomethcin, phenylbutazone, pentazocine
  • Trimethobenzamide
  • Muscle relax/antispasmodics, including ditropan
  • Flurazepam
  • Amitriptyline combinations doxepin
  • Meprobamate
  • Particular doses of other sedative hypnotics
  • Chlordiazepoxide, diazepam

37
Selected 1997 drugs, continued
  • Disopyramide
  • Digoxin above 0.125 mg except for atrial arryth
  • Dipyridamole
  • Methyldopa, reserpine
  • Chlorpropamide
  • GI antispasmodics
  • Nonprescription many Rx antihistamines
  • Meperidine
  • Ticlopidine
  • All barbiturates except phenobarbital

38
Updates to Beers List in 2003 (selected
additions since 1997)
39
2003 selected conditionally inappropriate by
disease state
40
Potentially Inappropriate Medications for Older
Persons
  • High Potential for
  • Severe ADEs
  • Amitriptyline
  • Chlorpropamide
  • Digoxin 0.125 mg/day
  • Disopyramide
  • GI antispasmodics
  • Meperidine
  • Methyldopa
  • Pentazocine
  • Ticlopidine
  • High Potential for
  • Less Severe ADEs
  • Antihistamines
  • Diphenhydramine
  • Dipyridamole
  • Ergot mesylates
  • Indomethacin
  • Meperidine, oral
  • Muscle relaxants

41
Prevalence and health consequences of
inappropriate medication use
42
Findings in Kansas Medicaid Data
  • Any unconditional inappropriate medication use
    during study year
  • Community 21
  • HCBS 48
  • Nursing Facility 38
  • Most common propoxyphene, antihistamines,
    amitriptyline, muscle relaxants, and oxybutynin
  • Rigler et al. 2005 Ann PharmacoRx

43
Inappropriate Medication in Frail Elderly
Inpatients
  • 11 VAMCs
  • 92 had at least one problem
  • Expense (70)
  • Impractical directions (55)
  • Incorrect dosages (51)
  • Most common drug types
  • GI, CV, CNS
  • Higher risk with fair/poor self-rated health

44
Hospitalization and Death
  • MEPS 1996, nursing home component
  • Persons 65 in NH for 3 months or more
  • Persons receiving inappropriate Rx
  • OR 1.27 for hospitalization in following month
  • OR 1.80 for hosp if Rx received for 2 months
  • OR 1.28 for death
  • Analyses adjusted for other key risk factors
  • Lau et al. Arch Intern Med Jan 10, 2005

45
Approach to the Older Patient with Multiple
Medications
46
Approach to Multiple Medications
  • Brown bag med review at each visit
  • Including herbals and OTCs
  • Determine clinical indication for each
  • Motto One disease, one drug, once daily
  • Avoid the prescribing cascade
  • Eliminate drugs without benefit or indication
  • Substitute less toxic drugs where able
  • From Carlon JE, Geriatrics, 1996 5126-30

47
NO TEARS Approach for Medication Review
  • From Lewis T, BMJ Aug 21, 2004
  • Need and indication
  • Open questions
  • Tests and monitoring
  • Evidence and guidelines
  • Adverse events
  • Risk reduction or prevention
  • Simplification and switches

48
Interdisciplinary Medication Review
  • Ambulatory older adults
  • Intervention versus control groups
  • Regimen changes? Function? Cost?
  • Results reduced mean Rx by 1.5
  • No impact on functioning
  • Savings 27 per month per person
  • Williams et al. JAGS Jan 2004

49
Regulatory Scrutiny
  • Mandated drug review already in LTC
  • Medicare drug benefit
  • Provider profiling increasingly common
  • Pay for performance models
  • Patient satisfaction monitoring
  • Increasing use of electronic records
  • Can expect increased scrutiny of the medication
    profiles of your patients

50
The Obvious Dos and Donts
  • Use effective medications to treat disease
  • Use effective therapies to prevent disease
  • Do not use unsafe medications
  • Do not use ineffective medications

51
If only it were this simple
52
Quality Prescribing
  • Outcomes
  • Adverse Drug Events
  • Drug-Drug Interactions
  • Unrecognized symptoms
  • Decreased quality of life
  • Non-adherence
  • Cost
  • Adding beneficial medications

53
Quality of Life Outcomes related to Beers
criteria medications
  • Two phase study of 2305 older patients
  • Patients reported their medications in Round 1
  • Patients reported their health status in Round
    2
  • Patients who were on medications on the Beers
    list in Round 1 reported significantly worse
    health status in Round 2 (P
  • Fu, JAGS, 2004

54
Quality Prescribing
  • Preventing excess morbidity and mortality by
    reducing harmful medications
  • Reduce total number of medications
  • Reduce complexity of regimen
  • Eliminate poorly tolerated medications
  • Eliminate drugs inappropriate for older adults
  • Avoid drug interactions

55
And now, for the rest of the story.
  • Under-utilization of effective therapies in older
    adults is widespread

56
Polypharmacy A New Paradigm for Quality Drug
Therapy in the Elderly
  • Under-use of beneficial Rx in older adults
  • ACEI in CHF
  • Anticoagulants in Afib
  • Antiresorptive Rx in osteoporosis
  • Disease management guidelines often favor more
    than one Rx for a condition
  • Gurwitz J. Arch Intern Med 2004, Oct 11

57
Average Life Expectancies
  • 65 year old woman 19 years
  • 75 year old woman 12 years
  • 85 year old woman 6 years
  • 65 year old man 16 years
  • 75 year old man 10 years
  • 85 year old man 5 years

58
Underuse of medication
  • Failure to recommend or provide a recommended
    therapy either intentionally or unintentionally
  • Error of omission medical error resulting in
    increased risk of adverse event resulting from
    too little treatment e.g. subtherapeutic drug
    dosing

Hayward et al, JGIM 2005 20686-691
59
Treatment benefits in older adults
  • NNT may be smaller in older adults because of
    higher disease prevalence
  • More bang for your buck
  • Treat older adults because that is where many
    diseases are most prevalent

(Rob the bank because that is where the money is)
60
Darned if you do, darned if you dont?
  • Specialist heart failure care
  • More appropriate pharmacotherapy for CHF by
    guidelines, but..
  • Increased polypharmacy, drug interaction
    potential, drug-kidney, drug-liver interactions
  • Ledwidge et al. Eur J Heart Fail March 2004
  • And an ARB makes nine polypharmacy in patients
    with heart failure
  • Clev Clinic J Med Aug 2004

61
What is being done to address prescribing quality
for older adults?
  • New initiatives
  • Implications for Pay-for-Performance

Mike Steinman, MD University of California, San
Francisco
62
Quality Indicators
  • Assessing Care of Vulnerable Elders (ACOVE) from
    RAND Health/collaborators
  • 236 if/then indicators in 4 domains
  • 43 indicators re pharmacologic care

63
Higashi, T. et. al. Ann Intern Med
2004140714-720
Medication Quality Indicators, Number of Eligible
Patients, and Pass Rates
64
A few ACOVE indicators involving medication use
  • ACE-I use in HF or proteinuria
  • Beta-blocker for patient with MI
  • Osteoporosis treatment
  • Ca/vit D for patients on long term steroids
  • Outpatient ophthalmology Rx continued when
    hospitalized
  • Others

65
Pass Rates from 2 managed care organizations
(Higashi et al, Ann Intern Med 2004)
  • Prescribing indicated medications
  • 50
  • Avoiding inappropriate medications
  • 97
  • Education, continuity, documentation
  • 81
  • Medication monitoring
  • 64

66
Quality Improvement and Performance Measurement
  • Quality improvement for medication Rx driven by
    performance measurement
  • weak financial incentives to excel
  • strong financial, regulatory incentives not to
    fail
  • Focus on items easily measurable in large
    populations
  • Substantial implications for quality measurement
    in elders

67
Quality Improvement and Performance Measurement
  • CMS Physician Quality Reporting Initiative
  • Voluntary quality reporting program
  • Bonus of up to 1.5
  • 74 measures providers select relevant ones to
    report
  • Disease-specific e.g., LDL
  • Medication reconciliation
  • Plan of care for urinary incontinence in ? age
    65

68
Quality Improvement and Performance Measurement
  • JCAHO
  • Medication reconciliation
  • Long-term care
  • minimize use of antipsychotic medications

69
Quality Improvement and Performance Measurement
  • HEDIS measures
  • Effectiveness of care measures
  • 16 primarily related to medication use
  • Annual monitoring for patients on persistent meds
  • Drugs-to-avoid in elderly
  • Potentially harmful drug-drug interactions in
    elderly

70
CASES
71
Case 1
  • A new patient arrives in clinic for consultation.
    He is an 80 yo man with a PMH of early stage
    Alzheimers disease, HTN, osteoarthritis, BPH s/p
    TURP years ago, and hearing loss.
  • Medication list includes
  • Donepezil clonidine (oral)
    amlodipine
  • propxyphene/ APAP lansoprazole
  • naproxen oxybutynin furosemide
  • meclizine

72
Case 2
  • An 89 yo female arrives in clinic to establish a
    new PCP. She has recently been discharged from
    the hospital after suffering a GI bleed due to
    AVMs. While hospitalized, she suffered an
    occipital lobe stroke, and it was also discovered
    that she had severe CAD for which she declined
    aggressive intervention. Her other PMH includes
    macular degeneration.
  • Her major symptoms are fatigue and a sense of
    unsteadiness.

73
Case 2, contd
  • Medication list includes
  • Stelazine 5 mg bid
  • Dalmane 30 mg qhs
  • ASA 81 mg QD
  • Propanolol 10 mg qd
  • Fish oil capsules
  • Imipramine 150 mg QD
  • Percocet TID prn
  • Metoclopramide 10 mg qac and hs

74
Recommended Reading/ References
  • Williams CM. Using Medications Appropriately in
    Older Adults. American Family Physician 2002
    66(10)1917-24
  • GRS Review Syllabus
  • Rigler, S. SGIM Workshop on Quality
    Pharmacotherapy in Older Adults, 2007
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