Title: Prescribing for the elderly
1Prescribing for the elderly
2Drug Use in the Elderly Common
- 70 of pts over 65 taking medication regularly
- CVS 32
- Musculoskeletal 10
- GIT 8
- Respiratory 7
- Compliance high (75)
3But often poor in quality
- 36 of hypnotics at greater than recommended
doses - Potentially harmful interactions in 28
- Duplication 4
- Appropriateness of many of the other drugs?
- Mostly (80) repeat prescribing ( little review)
4Prescribing Rates increasingno of prescription
per head per year
5Why increasing rates?
- Less therapeutic nihilism about elderly e.g.
hypertension - Better evidence of effect in the elderly
- Increase in numbers of elderly and very elderly
- Increasing patient demand perhaps?
- Defensive behaviour by doctors?
6Problems with Prescribing for the elderly
- 10 of hospital admissions of elderly due to
Adverse drug reactions - Inappropriate prescribing accounts for about 50
of these. - Large numbers of less severe adverse drug
reactions, prompting GP visits, or poor
compliance with therapy
7Reasons for poor prescribing in elderly
- Excessive response to symptoms
- Demand (real or perceived)
- Inappropriate response to nonmedical problems
- Unrealistic expectations on part of patient or
doctor - Prescribing by rule and not individualising
- Inadequate review failure to discontinue drugs
(hospital v primary care)
8Incremental prescribing Example
Dyspepsia Rx ranitidine
BP? Rx nifedipine
More dyspepsia and so on
Ankle swelling Rx diuretic
Ankles still swollen, low K Increase does of
diuretic, add Ksupplements
Gout Rx diclofenac, allopurinol
9Clinical Pharmacology in the elderly
- Pharmacokinetic differences
- Drug absorption unchanged
- Decreased renal clearance of many drugs (Li,
gentamicin, digoxin) - Hepatic clearance decreased (sufficient reserve
for this to only be a problem rarely, except
perhaps decreased first pass metabolism of many
drugs) - Different water/fat ratios - higher plasma
concentrations of some (water soluble) drugs (eg
digoxin)
10Clinical Pharmacology in the elderly
- Pharmacodynamic differences
- Increased susceptibility to some drug effects
despite similar plasma concentrations eg
benzodiazepines, antihypertensives - ?Alterations in receptor density in some cases
- Decreased homeostatic reserves e.g. postural
hypotension
11Clinical Pharmacology in the elderly
- Comorbidities
- Other drug therapies and interactions more likely
- Adverse drug reactions more common in elderly
than in younger patients
12Studying Drugs in the Eldelry
- In the past it was not necessary to test a drug
in elderly even though they were likely to be
major users - eg benoxaprofen withdrawn NSAID caused
hepatotoxicity and photosensitivity in elderly
but not in younger trial subjects - Importance of reporting adverse drug reactions
13Compliance/Adherence/Concordance
- Will the patient take the tablets?
- Many elderly deterred by
- Adverse effects
- Complex regimens with multiple drugs
- Poor information (written better than verbal)
- Confusion between hospital and primary care
- Intelligent non-compliance
14Residential and Nursing Home Patients
- Very high levels of drug use
- For whose benefit? Patient or staff?
- eg hypnotics, psychotropics
- Drugs continues when original indication long
passed inadequate review
15Key Principles for Prescribing in the Elderly (or
anyone else)
- Careful clinical assessment
- Of all the patients problems, not symptom by
symptom - If in doubt, dont prescribe
- Start with low doses
- Increase in small increments
- Keep regimens simple
- Avoid polypharmacy as much as possible