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Polypharmacy in the Elderly

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Title: Polypharmacy in the Elderly


1
Polypharmacy in the Elderly
  • Rosemary D. Laird, MD
  • Assistant Professor of Medicine
  • University of Kansas Medical Center
  • Center on Aging

2
Polypharmacy in the Elderly
  • Overview of Polypharmacy
  • The Brown Bag
  • Medications and the Elderly
  • Polypharmacy and Non-adherence
  • The role of the PCP
  • Prescribing Pearls

3
The Brown Bag
  • Verapamil 300mg po qday
  • Lasix 20mg po qday
  • Digoxin 0.25mg po qday
  • KCL 20mEq po bid
  • Proscar 5mg po qday
  • MOM 30 cc po qhs prn constipation
  • Aleve 200mg 2-4 tablets po prn arthritis
  • TUMS extra-strength 0-8 per day prn GERD
  • was there more??

4
Polypharmacy in the Elderly By definition.
  • Polypharmacy means "many drugs.
  • The use of more medication than is clinically
    indicated or warranted.
  • 5 or more drugs
  • 7 or more drugs

5
Polypharmacy in the Elderly WHY?
  • The elderly use more drugs because illness is
    more common in older persons.
  • Cardiovascular disease
  • Arthritis
  • Gastrointestinal disorders
  • Bladder dysfunction

6
Polypharmacy in the Elderly How Bad Can It Be?
  • Elderly 12 of population but
  • 32 of prescriptions
  • Average use for persons ?65
  • 2 to 6 prescription drugs
  • 1 to 3.4 over-the-counter medicine
  • Average American senior spends 670/year for
    pharmaceuticals.

7
Polypharmacy in the Elderly Whats the big deal?
  • Polypharmacy leads to
  • More adverse drug reactions
  • Decreased adherence to drug regimens
  • Patient outcomes
  • Poor quality of life
  • High rate of symptomatology
  • (Unnecessary) drug expense

8
Adverse Drug Reactions
  • The most consistent risk factor for adverse drug
    reactions is
  • number of drugs being taken
  • Risk rises exponentially as the number of drugs
    increases.

9

10
Pharmacokinetics and Aging
  • What the Body Does to the Drug
  • Absorption
  • Distribution
  • Metabolism
  • Excretion

11
Pharmacokinetics and Aging
  • Absorption
  • Age-related gastrointestinal tract and skin
    changes seem to be of minor clinical significance
    for medication usage.

12
Pharmacokinetics and Aging
  • Distribution
  • Important Age-Related Changes
  • Decrease in Lean Body Mass and TBW
  • Increased percentage Body Fat
  • Increase in volume of distribution for lipophilic
    drugs, such as sedatives that penetrate CNS.
  • Protein Binding changes are of modest
    significance for most drugs, especially at
    steady-state.

13
Pharmacokinetics and Aging
  • Metabolism
  • Though liver function tests are unchanged with
    age, there is some overall decline in metabolic
    capacity.
  • Decreased liver mass and hepatic blood flow
  • Highly variable, no good estimation algorithm
  • Minimal clinical manifestations

14
Pharmacokinetics and Aging
  • Renal Excretion
  • Age-related decreased renal blood flow and GFR is
    well-established.
  • Decreased lean body mass leads to decreased
    creatinine production.

15
Pharmacokinetics and Aging
  • Thus, serum creatinine may appear normal even
    when significant renal impairment exists.
  • Cr clearance(140-age)(IBW)/creatinine(72)
  • (multiply by 0.85 for women)
  • Example 70kg 75 year old man
  • Cr Clearance (140-75)(70)/1.0(72)63

16
Pharmacodynamics and Aging
  • What the Drug Does to the Body
  • Generally, lower drug doses are required to
    achieve the same effect with advancing age.
  • Receptor numbers, affinity, or post-receptor
    cellular effects may change.
  • Changes in homeostatic mechanisms can increase or
    decrease drug sensitivity.

17
(Potentially)Inappropriate Medications for Older
Adults
  • Propoxephene
  • Diphenhydramine
  • Amitryptiline
  • Alprazolam
  • Diazepam
  • Beers, MH et al. Arch Intern Med 1511825,1991.

18
(Potentially)Inappropriate Medications for Older
Adults
  • Diphenhydramine
  • should generally be avoided in older adults
  • Dry mouth, confusion, urinary retention,
    constipation
  • source of in-hospital morbidity/delirium
  • is in many OTC products for sleep/URI/allergy
  • Digoxin
  • can cause anorexia, confusion even at therapeutic
    drug levels
  • Renal excretion can change over time as
    age-related renal function declines.
  • 0.125mg/day most often adequate

19
(Potentially)Inappropriate Medications for Older
Adults
20
(Potentially)Inappropriate Medications for Older
Adults
21
Polypharmacy in the Elderly
  • Overview
  • The Brown Bag
  • Medications and the Elderly
  • Polypharmacy and Non-adherence
  • The Role of the PCP
  • Prescribing Pearls

22
Polypharmacy and Non-adherence
  • Non-adherence
  • Is a two-way street!
  • Physician factors
  • Patient factors

23
Polypharmacy and Non-adherence
  • Factors contributing to Polypharmacy
  • Underreporting symptoms
  • Use of multiple providers
  • Use of others medications
  • Limited time for discussion, diagnostics
  • Limited knowledge of geriatric pharmacology
  • The power of inertia

24
Polypharmacy and Non-adherence
  • Strongest predictor is number of medications
  • Rates estimated at 25-50
  • Intentional about 75 of the time
  • Changes in regimen made by patients to increase
    convenience, reduce adverse effects, or decrease
    refill expense

25
Factors contributing to Non-adherence
  • Large number of medications
  • Expensive medications
  • Complex or frequently changing schedule
  • Adverse reactions
  • Confusion about brand name/trade name
  • Difficult-to-open containers
  • Rectal, vaginal, SQ modes of administration
  • Limited patient understanding

26
Polypharmacy in the Elderly
  • Overview of Polypharmacy
  • The Brown Bag
  • Medications and the Elderly
  • Polypharmacy and Non-adherence
  • The Role of the PCP
  • Prescribing Pearls

27
Polypharmacy and the Primary Care Provider
  • Annual Brown Bag
  • At least yearly, and more often if indicated, ask
    elderly patients to bring in all medications they
    have at home.
  • Prescription
  • Over-the-counter
  • Vitamins supplements
  • Herbal preparations

28
Vitamin and Herbal Use in Older Adults
  • Highly prevalent among older adults
  • 77 in Johnson and Wyandotte county community
    dwelling elderly
  • Generally not reported to the physician
  • Some serious drug interactions possible
  • Warfarin, gingko biloba, vitamin E

29
What to do with the Brown Bag full of bottles?
  • Document and determine indication
  • Prioritize
  • Vital vs. optional
  • Cure vs. relieve symptom
  • Discuss with patient, caregiver
  • Plan for medication reduction
  • Vital vs. optional
  • Cure vs. relieve symptom

30
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31
Polypharmacy in the making.Why are you taking
this?
  • I dont knowthe doctor told me to
  • Digoxin
  • Allopurinol
  • Antidepressants
  • Anticonvulsants
  • Anxiolytics

32
Polypharmacy in the making
  • Discontinuing unnecessary medications is one of
    the most important aspects of decreasing
    polypharmacy
  • Drugs without indications should be stopped!

33
Polypharmacy in the Making
  • Drug reactions in the elderly often produce
    effects that simulate the conventional image of
    growing old
  • unsteadiness drowsiness
  • dizziness falls
  • confusion depression
  • nervousness incontinence
  • fatigue malaise
  • insomnia

34
Polypharmacy in the Making
  • Avoid treating adverse reactions/side effects of
    drug with more drugs!
  • Example
  • Dizziness from anti-hypertensive treated with
    meclizine
  • Edema from a calcium-channel blocker treated with
    furosemide and KCL

35
Polypharmacy in the Making
  • Drugs most frequently associated with adverse
    reactions in the elderly
  • psychotropic drugs-benzodiazepines
  • anti-hypertensive agents
  • diuretics
  • digoxin
  • NSAIDS
  • corticosteroids
  • warfarin
  • theophylline

36
Polypharmacy in the Elderly
  • Overview of Polypharmacy
  • The Brown Bag
  • Medications and the Elderly
  • Polypharmacy and Non-adherence
  • The Role of the PCP
  • Prescribing Pearls

37
Prescribing Pearls
  • Use single daily dose regimens
  • Limit the use of PRN medications
  • Consider all new medicines as a therapeutic trial
  • Discontinue a drug if it is ineffective or
    intolerable adverse effects occur
  • Provide legible written instructions
  • Instruct caregivers as needed

38
Prescribing Pearls
  • Attempt to prescribe a drug that will treat more
    than one existing problem
  • Examples
  • calcium channel blocker or beta blocker to treat
    both hypertension and angina pectoris
  • ACE-inhibitor to treat both hypertension, heart
    failure, and or for renal protection in diabetes
  • Alpha-blocker to treat both hypertension and
    prostatism

39
Patient Education
  • Use one pharmacist/pharmacy
  • Use your PCP as intendedavoid seeing multiple
    physicians
  • Do not use medications from others
  • Report symptoms
  • All medicines, even over-the-counter, have
    adverse effects
  • Report all products used

40
Avoiding Polypharmacy
  • Simple
  • Use least frequent dosing needed
  • Tie to scheduled daily activities, meals,
    sleep/wake
  • Support
  • Educate
  • Medication Flowsheet
  • Encourage use of one pharmacist
  • Enlist family, friends as needed
  • Medication organization equipment
  • Survey
  • Periodic review

41
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42
Ways to Decrease Drug Costs
  • Generics ok
  • Change dosing regimen, e.g. one-a-day may be more
    expensive
  • Older drugs, e.g. beta blockers, diuretics,
    acetaminophen
  • Double duty drugs, e.g. beta and alpha blockers,
    ACE-inhibitors
  • Avoid non-regulated products

43
The Brown Bag
  • HTN, MI 15 yrs ago, arthritis, GERD, BPH with
    nocturia
  • Verapamil 300mg po qday
  • Lasix 20mg po qday
  • Digoxin 0.25mg po qday
  • KCL 20mEq po bid
  • Proscar 5mg po qday
  • MOM 30 cc po qhs prn constipation
  • Aleve 200mg 2-4 tablets po prn arthritis
  • TUMS extra-strength 0-8 per day prn GERD
  • was there more??

44
The Brown Bag
  • HTN, MI 15 yrs ago, arthritis, GERD, BPH with
    nocturia
  • Verapamil 300mg po qday
  • Can change to beta blocker or alpha blocker(?)
  • Lasix 20mg po qday
  • Digoxin 0.25mg po qday
  • KCL 20mEq po bid
  • D/C
  • Proscar 5mg po qday
  • D/C

45
The Brown Bag
  • HTN, MI 15 yrs ago, arthritis, GERD, BPH with
    nocturia
  • MOM 30 cc po qhs prn constipation
  • May not need
  • Aleve 200mg 2-4 tablets po prn arthritis
  • Tylenol 1gram qid or Arthritis formula BID
  • TUMS extra-strength 0-8 per day prn GERD
  • May not need after d/c NSAID
  • was there more??

46
The New Brown Bag
  • Beta-blocker qday
  • Atenolol 25-100 mg
  • ?Alpha-blocker
  • titrate to nocturia, BP
  • Tylenol Arthritis 2 tabs bid

47
References
  • Geriatrics at your Fingertips
  • http//www.americangeriatrics.org/products/gayf2.s
    html
  • Essentials of Clinical Geriatrics, 4th Edition.
    Kane, Ouslander, Abrass, Eds. McGraw-Hill.
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