Title: Prescribing for Older Patients: an evidencebased approach
1Prescribing for Older Patients an evidence-based
approach
- Better Living Through Chemistry?
2Prescribing for Older Adults
Benefits
Risks Burdens
3Stroke incidence can be reduced by treatment
of ISH
Stroke/4.5 yrs
- RRR 36
- ARR 3
- NNT Treat 33 people with ISH for 4.5 years to
prevent 1 stroke
SHEP Cooperative Research Group. JAMA 1991 265
3255-3264
4CHF incidence can be reduced by treatment
of ISH
CHF /4.5 yrs
Kostis JB et al. JAMA 1997278212-216.
5Atrial Fibrillation-associated Stroke can be
reduced with Anticoagulation
Stroke
- A Fib stroke
- fatal
- recurrent
- severe deficits
- RRR 66
- ARR 3
- NNT/1 yr 33
Arch Int Med 1994 1431449-57 Stroke
1996271760-1764.
6Calcium and Vit D can reduce nonvertebral
fractures in elders without osteoporosis
with fractures/3 yrs
- RRR 54
- ARR 7
- NNT/ 3 yrs 14
Dawson-Hughes et al N Engl J Med 1997337670-6
7Effective Therapies are Underutilized in Older
Adults
- Thrombolysis for Acute MI
- Beta-blockers postinfarction
- Coumadin for Atrial Fibrillation
- Anything for osteoporosis
- Opioids for cancer pain
8Thrombolysis and Acute MIOld vs Young
deaths day 0-35
- lt55 years old
- RRR 26
- ARR 1.2
- NNT 83
- 65-74 years old
- RRR 16
- ARR 2.6
- NNT 38
lt55
65-74
FTT Collaborative Group. Lancet 1994 343 311-22
9What are the data for those gt75 yo?
- No RCTs
- Fewer older adults with acute MI will meet
criteria for thrombolysis - present without chest pain
- present gt3 hours after initial symptoms
- Concern about intracranial hemorrhage
- Observational studies
- Prospective Cohort
- Medicare databases
10Do benefits outweigh risks for those gt75 yo?
- Medicare database no angioplasty
- gt75 healthier
- a larger proportion of Killip class I and II MIs
- lower rates of anterior MI.
- 30 day hazard ratio
- gt75 years 1.38 (95 CI 1.12-1.71).
- Exclude transfusions/ strokes 1.31, 95CI
1.04-1.64) - 65-75 years 0.88 (95CI 0.69-1.12)
- same rate of bleeds, strokes
- more severe consequences??
Thiemann DR, Circulation. 2000 101 2239-2246
11Effective Therapies are Underutilized in Older
Adults
- Thrombolysis for Acute MI
- Beta-blockers and ACEIs postinfarction
- Coumadin for Atrial Fibrillation
- Anything for osteoporosis
- Opioids for cancer pain
12Coumadin for Atrial Fibrillation Whats the
evidence trail?
- Efficacy
- Primary prevention
- Secondary prevention
13Anticoagulation in AF Primary Prevention
Control
AC
ARR
NNT/H
Stroke
4.5
1.5
3.0
33
Major Bleed
1.0
1.3
0.3
NS (333)
2 strokes avoided
0 major bleeds
66 patients anticoagulated (?? years)
1 strokes occur
63 - no effect
Arch Int Med 1994 1431449-57
14Anticoagulation in AF Secondary Prevention (CSR)
Control
AC
ARR
NNT/H
Stroke
22.6
8.9
13.7
7
Major Bleed
1.4
5.8
4.4
23
3 strokes avoided
1 major bleed
23 patients anticoagulated (2.3 years)
2 strokes occur
17 - no effect
15Coumadin for Atrial Fibrillation Whats the
evidence trail?
- Minimizing Adverse Effects
- Target INR 4.5 vs 2-3
- Who is at risk of bleeding?
- How to dose to maximize efficacy and minimize
bleeding? - What can interfere with INR?
- Improved benefit to risk!
16Prescribing for Older Adults
Benefits
Risks Burdens
17Is therapy likely to be effective for this
patient?
YES
- Minimize
- Adverse Events
- Therapeutic Failure
18Adverse Drug Events in older adults
- Common
- May present differently than in younger adults
- May precipitate or mimic common geriatric
disorders
- Underrecognition
- Increased morbidity
- ?Additional prescriptions
19Digoxin Toxicity in the Elderly
- Arrhythmias with normal digoxin levels
- Anorexia, nausea and vomiting
- Lethargy, depression, confusion
- Hazy or muddy vision
- Photopsia innumerable points of light in the
peripheral visual fields - Impaired ADLs
20Adverse Drug Events can mimic or precipitate
geriatric syndromes
- Falls psychotropics
- Urinary incontinence
- Diuretics, caffeine, alcohol
- Anticholinergic agents, including psychotropics
- Sedative/hypnotics
- Narcotic analgesics
- Cardiovascular agents
- Alpha-adrenergic blockers and agonists
- Beta-adrenergic agonists
- Calcium channel blockers
21Dementia due to medications
- Psychotropics
- Benzodiazepines, Antidepressants, Neuroleptics
- Analgesics
- Meperidine, Indomethacin
- Antihypertensives
- Methyldopa, HCTZ, propranolol
- Others
- H2 Blockers, Amantadine, Insulin
Larson et al, Ann Int Med 1987107169-173
22ADES Produce Unneccesary Additional
Prescriptions?
- Pharmaco-epidemiological Evidence
- Excess antidepressants are prescribed to patients
taking beta blockers. - Excess SinemetTM to patients taking
neuroleptics. - Excess antihypertensives to patients taking
NSAIDs.
23Better LivingThrough Chemistry?
Benefits
Risks Burdens
24Individualize Therapy
- All elders are not alike
- Significant heterogeneity
- greater among older individuals than younger
25Individualization of Therapy
- What is the patients potential for
- An adverse drug event?
- An altered dose response?
- A drug interaction?
- drug-drug
- drug-disease
- drug-nutrient
- Treatment non-adherence?
26Adverse Drug Reactions
Dose Related
Idiosyncratic
Predictable
Unpredictable
Stevens-Johnson
- G6PD Deficiency
- ACEI Renal Insufficiency
- ?? Falls
27ADEs Aging or Age-related?
Patients with ADEs
AGE
Hutchinson et al J Chronic Dis 198639533-42
28ADEs Aging or Age-related?
ADEs per individual drug course
AGE
Hutchinson et al J Chronic Dis 198639533-42
29Risk Factors for ADEs in the Elderly
- Polypharmacy
- Multiple medical disorders
- Low therapeutic index medications
- Altered pharmacokinetics
- Altered pharmacodynamics
- History of previous ADEs
- ?Problems with treatment adherence
30Pharmacokinetics Distribution
- Lean body mass decreases.
- Percentage body fat increases
- Males from 18 to 33
- Females from 33 to 45
- Binding proteins not significantly changed.
31Distribution Clinical Correlates
- Decrease loading dose of
- water soluble drugs
- drugs distributed to skeletal muscles
- Do not increase loading dose of fat soluble
drugs! - Weight-adjust dose for small adults
32Non-Opioid Analgesic Doses weight adjusted
AHCPR Cancer pain guidelines
33Hepatic Metabolism Inter-individual Variability
- Age
- Genotypes
- slow vs fast acetylation rapid vs poor oxidizers
- Lifestyle habits
- smoking drinking grapefruit juice
- Cardiac output
- Disease and drug interactions
- Gender
34Metabolism Hepatic Biotransformation
- No age-related change
- Acetylation
- Conjugation
- Age-related decline
- Oxidation the Cytochrome P-450s
- Reduction in liver mass (and metabolizing
capacity) - warfarin, diazepam, naproxen, phenytoin
- Reduction in liver blood flow
- propranolol, morphine, verapamil, desipramine
35Cytochrome P-450s
- Several isozymes
- Different inducers
- Different inhibitors
- Some drugs metabolized by gt1 isozyme
36Cytochrome P450 CYP3A
- Metabolizes
- Fentanyl, methadone,
- Acetaminophen
- Erythro, Clarithromycin
- Itra- and ketoconazole,
- Amiodarone, lidocaine, quinidine,
- Calcium channel blockers
- Cisapride
- Sertraline, nefazadone
- Alprazolam, zolpidem, triazolam
- Astemizole, loratadine, terfenadine
- Cyclosporine
- Sex hormones, cortisol
- Carbamazepine
- Induced by
- Barbiturates
- Carbamazepine
- Glucocorticoids
- Phenytoin
- Inhibited by
- Cimetidine
- Erythro, clarithromycin
- Diltiazem, nicardipine, verapamil
- Itra-, ketoconozole
- Fluoxetine, methylphenidate
37Cytochrome P-450 Inducers
- Barbiturates
- Glucocorticoids
- Carbamazepine
- Chronic EtOH
- Cigarette smoke
- Rifampin
- Phenytoin
38Cytochrome P-450 Inhibitors
- Flu-, itra-, ketoconozole
- Cimetidine
- Erythro, clarithromycin
- Propoxyphene
- Quinidine, propafenone
- Thioridazine, perphenazine
- Fluoxetine, paroxetine
- Chloroquine
- Diltiazem, verapamil, nicardipine
- Methylphenidate
39Renal Excretion
- GFR decreases in 2/3 of adults
- No formula accurate for community-dwelling
elderly - Most common underestimate ClCr
- Cockcroft-Gault -12.1 ml/min sd 26.2
- ClCr (140 - age) Wt (kg)
- 72 Serum Creatinine
40Normal Serum Creatinine Normal GFR
Serum Creatinine
Creatinine
Creatinine
produced
excreted
41Adjust Dose GFR lt 50 ml/min
- Antimicrobials
- Acyclovir
- Amantidine
- Aminoglycosides
- Amphotericin
- Aztreonam
- Cephalosporins (many)
- Imipenem
- Penicillins (most)
- Quinolones (most)
- Sulbactans
- Sulfonamides
- Tetracycline
- Vancomycin
- Cardiovascular
- Methyldopa
- Most ACE Inhibitors
- Atenolol, Nadolol, Sotalol
- Digoxin
- Procainamide
- Others
- Lithium
- Meperidine
- Acetaminophen
- H2 Blockers (most)
- Albuterol
- Glyburide
- Insulin
42PK changes So What?
- Decreased clearance
- Cl organ Organ Blood Flow x Extraction Ratio
- Drug clearance is additive
- Total clearance Cl renal Cl hepatic Cl
other - Increased steady-state concentration
- Need to decrease dose
43So What? continued
Prolonged half life (T1/2) is common T1/2
0.693 x Vd Cl
- Longer dosing interval
- Longer
- to steady state
- until body is drug-free
44Pharmacodynamic Changes
- Receptors or post-receptor events
- Tissue or end-organ changes
- Compensatory or homeostatic mechanisms
45Fentanyl Response and Age
Fentanyl dose to produce EEG delta waves
AGE
Scott and Stanski J Pharm Exp Ther 1987240159-66
46Major Toxicity after Chronic Theophylline
Intoxication
plt0.05
Probability
plt0.05
AGE
Shannon M. Ann Intern Med 19931191161-1167
47For some drugs, may be able to get same effect in
older adults with lower dose
- Historical examples Captopril, HCTZ?
- Lower doses but same blood levels
- Beta-blockers (Rochon study)
- ATLAS Lisinopril
- lower dose same effect on mortality
- higher dose fewer hospitalizations for any
reason as well as for CHF
48Individualization of Therapy
- What is the patients potential for
- An adverse drug event?
- An altered dose response?
- A drug interaction?
- drug-drug
- drug-disease
- drug-nutrient
- Treatment non-adherence?
49Drug-Disease Interactions
- CHF NSAIDs
- Claudication Beta blockers
- Stress incontinence Alpha1blockers
- Constipation
- CCB, anticholinergics, Betablockers, narcotics
- BPH
- Decongestants, anticholinergics, calcium channel
blockers - Parkinsons or Dementia Anticholinergic delirium
50Drug-Nutrient Interactions
- Protein-bound B12 omeprazole
- Folate and Vit D diphenylhydantoin
- Thiamine furosemide
- Coumadin effect Vitamin K
- Calcium channel blocker bioavailability
grapefruit juice
51Unproven Medical Therapies
- 1984 report
- 60 of those who try these therapies are gt65
- 10 billion estimate
- Eisenberg (1993)
- More than 70 who use these therapies never
mention them to their MDs.
52Unproven Inert
- Vitamin toxicities (even water-soluble)
- C oxalate kidney stones
- B6 neurotoxicity
- Gingko increases bleeding with warfarin or
aspirin - Ginseng decreases warfarin effect may increase
BP - Garlic increases bleeding with warfarin or
aspirin
53Drugs to Avoid in Older Adults
- Analgesics
- Narcotics Propoxyphene (DarvonTM), Meperidine
(DemerolTM), pentazocine (Talwin TM), - NSAIDs Indomethacin, Phenylbutazone
- Muscle Relaxants
- RobaxinTM, SomaTM, DitropanTM, ParaflexTM,
SkelaxinTM, FlexerilTM - GI Antispasmodics
- BentylTM, LevsinTM, Pro-BanthineTM, DonnatolTM,
LibraxTM
Beers M Arch Intern Med 19971571531-1536
54Drugs to Avoid in Older Adults
- TiganTM
- Psychotropics
- Antidepressants Amitriptyline, doxepin
- Sedatives Meprobamate, chlordiazepoxide,
diazepam, flurazepam, barbiturates - H1 Blockers (lipid soluble)
- Chlorpheniramine, diphenhydramine, hydroxyzine,
cyproheptadine, promethazine, dexchlorpheniramine,
tripelennamine
Beers M Arch Intern Med 19971571531-1536
55Drugs to Avoid in Older Adults
- Cardio- or Cerebrovascular Drugs
- Disopyramide (NorpaceTM)
- Dipyridamole (PersantineTM)
- Methyldopa, Reserpine
- Ticlopidine (??)
- Hydergine, cyclospasmol
- Chlorpropamide (DiabenaseTM)
Beers M Arch Intern Med 19971571531-1536
56Suggested Maximum Daily Dosages for Older Adults
- Benzodiazepines/ Hypnotics
- Lorazepam, 3 mg --Temazepam, 15 mg
- Oxazepam, 60 mg -- Zolpidem, 5 mg
- Alprazolam, 2 mg -- Triazolam, 0.25 mg
- Iron Supplements, 325 mg
- Digoxin, 0.125 mg
Beers M Arch Intern Med 19971571531-1536
57BUT Remember---
- Prescribing is dynamic, not static.
- Patients are dynamic, not static.
58Were you ever taught
- High systolic blood pressures are normal aging
and should not be treated? - For treatment of hypertension
- Captopril 50-75 mg tid
- HCTZ 50-100 mg qd
- Digoxin
- slows the ventricular rate for PAF?
- is a life-long medication?
59Drug Prescribing for Older Adults
INDIVIDUALIZE THERAPY!
Benefits
Risks Burdens
60(No Transcript)
61Appropriate Prescribing for Older Adults
- Whats the patients medication history?
- Allergies, ADEs, tobacco, alcohol, caffeine,
recreational drugs, diet, weight - What drugs is your patient taking?
- Other prescribers
- Over the counter drugs
- Dietary supplements, Alternative or complementary
meds - Generics
- Bring all medications to appointments
- Ask if other health care providers seen
- since last appointment
62Appropriate Prescribing for Older Adults
- Match the patients pharmacology, psychology, and
pathophysiology to your prescription. - Individualize
- Agent
- Dose and Regimen
- Formulation
- Monitoring criteria
- Therapeutic effect
- Adverse effects
63Appropriate Prescribingfor Older Adults
- Re-evaluate indications for continued medication
use. - Consider drug taper if current benefit unclear
- Old drugs can cause new ADEs
- Cognitive decline
- Functional decline
- Re-evaluate dosage regimens for long-term
medications. - Consider closely monitored drug taper.
64Minimize dose andtotal number of drugs
- Use no drug before its time
- Treat adequately do not withhold therapy for
treatable disease. - Start low, go slow.
- initiation of therapy
- restarting therapy
- withdrawing therapy
- Use blood levels wisely to detect
- decreased clearance
- drug or disease interactions
65Appropriate Prescribing for Older Adults
- Recognize that any new symptom may be an ADE.
- Know the drugs you and your patients use.
- Use new agents with caution.
- Encourage treatment adherence.
66Individualize Therapy
- What is the patients potential for
- An adverse drug event?
- An altered dose response?
- A drug interaction?
- drug-drug
- drug-disease
- drug-nutrient
- Treatment non-adherence?
67Appropriate Prescribing for Older Adults
- Know your patients medications and medication
history. - Individualize therapy.
- Reevaluate indications for continued drug use.
- Minimize dose and total number of drugs
- Start low, go slow. Use blood levels
judiciously. - Treat adequately. Do not withhold therapy for
treatable diseases. - Consider the possibility that any new symptom is
an ADE. - Know the drugs you and your patients use.
- Use new agents with caution.
- Encourage treatment adherence.
68Therapeutic Drug Monitoring
- Detect clinically significant PK differences
- drugs with low therapeutic index
- drugs with large variability in dose response
- there is no direct measure of desired effect
- patient at high risk of ADE or ineffective Rx
69Drug Binding Proteins
- Albumin
- acidic drugs
- eg, phenytoin, warfarin, naproxen
- decreases in
- malnutrition
- cirrosis
- burns
- nephrotic syndrome
- end-stage renal disease
- Alpha-1-acid glycoprotein
- basic drugs
- eg, tcas, quinidine, lidocaine
- increases in
- trauma
- surgery
- acute MI
- infections
- inflammatory diseases
- cancer
70Therapeutic Drug Monitoring
Drug Measured Free Drug Bound Drug
71Phenytoin levels hypoalbuminemia
- C calcn C obs
- (K) ALB 1
- Hospitalized patients1, K 0.2
- Nursing home patients2, K 0.25
Albumin
Target Range
4.0 g/dl
10 - 20 ug/ml
2.5 g/dl
Hosp 6.7 - 13.4 ug/ml NH pt 6.1 - 12.3 ug/ml
1Dager et al. Ann Pharmacother 199529667-70 2An
derson et al. Ann Pharmacother 199731279-84.
72Homeostenosis
- Critical narrowing of homeostatic reserve in
elders - Decreased ability to offset drug effects
73Early Acute MI mortalitycan be reduced with
thrombolysis ages 65-74
deaths day 0-35
- ARR 2.6
- RRR 16
- NNT Treat 38 people post MI to prevent 1 death
(35 days)
FTT Collaborative Group. Lancet 1994 343 311-22
74Better Living Through Chemistry?
- People are living longer.
- Living longer living better
- Independent
- Functional
- Contributing
- Mortality is not the most important endpoint.
- 40 rated a hypothetical major stroke to be a
worse outcome than death
75Drug level monitoring Caveats
- Cant rule out toxicity
- Within therapeutic range nontoxic
- pharmacodynamics
- toxic effect not considered when range set
- Interpret in light of binding protein levels
76Cytochrome P450 CYP2D6
- Metabolizes
- Codeine,
- Hydro- and oxy-codone
- Tramadol,
- most oxidized psychotropic drugs (TCAs, SSRIs,
neuroleptics), - Metoprolol, propranolol, timolol
- Propafenone
- NOT INDUCIBLE
- Inhibited by
- Cimetidine
- Fluoxetine, paroxetine,
- Propoxyphene,
- Quinidine,
- Perphenazine, thioridazine, methylphenidate,
- Chloroquine,
- Propafenone
77Pharmacokinetics Bioavailability
- Usually unchanged in aging.
- Increases with
- Labetolol
- Levodopa
- Nifedipine
- Omeprazole
- Ondansetron
78CHF incidence can be reduced by treatment
of ISH
CHF /4.5 yrs
Kostis JB et al. JAMA 1997278212-216.
79Atrial Fibrillation-associated Stroke can be
reduced with Anticoagulation
Stroke
- A Fib stroke
- fatal
- recurrent
- severe deficits
- NNT/1 yr 33
Arch Int Med 1994 1431449-57 Stroke
1996271760-1764.
80Clinical fractures can bereduced in women with
existing vertebral fractures
with fractures/3 yrs
Black et al. Lancet 19963481535-41
81Calcium and Vit D can reduce nonvertebral
fractures in elders without osteoporosis
with fractures/3 yrs
Dawson-Hughes et al N Engl J Med 1997337670-6
82Is it Aging or Age-Related?
Disease
Aging
Lifestyle
83Drug-induced Orthostatic Hypotension
- Volume loss
- Diuretics, lithium DI
- Vasodilitation
- Centrally acting sympatholytics
- methyldopa, clonidine
- Nifedipine
- Alpha-1-adrenergic antagonists
- TCAs, neuroleptics, prazosin-like drugs
84Drug-induced Orthostatic Hypotension
- Inability to compensate for hypovolemia
- Impaired thirst response
- Impaired ADH secretion
- Impaired renal concentrating ability
- Impaired heart rate response
- Other risk factors for falls
85Antihypertensive treatmentNNT for 5 years to
prevent 1 event
Older Younger Mortality
(gt 60 y.o.) Total 72 167
Cardiovascular 58 205 Cerebrovascular 193
365 Coronary Heart Disease
88 NS Morbidity and Mortality
Cerebrovascular 46 168 Coronary Heart
Disease 68 184 Cardiovascular 21 -----
Ref Mulrow, et al. JAMA 19942721932-1938.
86Pop Quiz
Cost of one months supply
- Digoxin, 0.125 mg qd
- Paroxetine, 20 mg qd
- Enalapril, 5.0 mg qd
- L-thyroxine, 0.1 mg qd
- Pravastatin, 40 mg qd
- Furosemide, 40 mg qd
- Alendronate, 10 mg qd
87Cost of 1 month supply
- Digoxin 0.125 mg qd 12.95 3.00
- Paroxetine 20 mg qd 74.95 58.50
- Enalapril 5.0 mg qd 39.95 28.55
- L-thyroxine 0.1 mg qd 15.95 3.60
- Pravastatin 40 mg qd 112.95 89.00
- Furosemide 40 mg qd 9.95 3.30
- Alendronate 10 mg qd 59.95 50.10
88Medication Expenditures
- Cost of previous list
- Monthly 233 - 327
- Yearly 2797 - 3920
- Median income about 11,000.
- Who pays for medications?
- For people gt65 taking prescription meds
- Out-of-pocket drug costs 3.1 house-hold income
89Drug Therapy Risks and Burdens
- Financial
- Psychological
- Patient accentuate infirmities
- directly reason for treatment
- indirectly difficulty obtaining, remembering,
administering - Care partner potential area of conflict
- Adverse Drug Events
- Any injury resulting from medical intervention
related to a drug
90Clinical fractures can bereduced in women with
existing vertebral fractures
with fractures/3 yrs
- RRR 25
- ARR 4.6
- NNT/ 3 yrs 22
Black et al. Lancet 19963481535-41