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Association of Potentially Inappropriate Prescribing in Older People in Primary Care With Hospital Admission
abstract
This abstract is available on the publisher's site.
Access this abstract nowOBJECTIVE
To determine whether hospital admission is associated with potentially inappropriate prescribing among older primary care patients (aged ≥65 years) and whether such prescribing was more likely after hospital admission than before.
DESIGN
Longitudinal study of retrospectively extracted data from general practice records.
SETTING
44 general practices in Ireland in 2012-15.
PARTICIPANTS
Adults aged 65 years or over attending participating practices.
EXPOSURE
Admission to hospital (any hospital admission versus none, and post-admission versus pre-admission).
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES
Prevalence of potentially inappropriate prescribing assessed using 45 criteria from the Screening Tool for Older Persons' Prescription (STOPP) version 2, analysed both as rate of distinct potentially inappropriate prescribing criteria met (stratified Cox regression) and binary presence of potentially inappropriate prescribing (logistic regression) and adjusted for patients' characteristics. A sensitivity analysis used matching with propensity scores based on patients' characteristics and diagnoses.
RESULTS
Overall 38 229 patients were included, and during 2012 the mean age was 76.8 (SD 8.2) years and 43% (13 212) were male. Each year, 10.4-15.0% (3015/29 077 in 2015 to 4537/30 231 in 2014) of patients had at least one hospital admission. The overall prevalence of potentially inappropriate prescribing ranged from 45.3% (13 940/30 789) of patients in 2012 to 51.0% (14 823/29 077) in 2015. Independently of age, sex, number of prescription items, comorbidity, and health cover, hospital admission was associated with a higher rate of distinct potentially inappropriate prescribing criteria met; the adjusted hazard ratio for hospital admission was 1.24 (95% confidence interval 1.20 to 1.28). Among participants who were admitted to hospital, the likelihood of potentially inappropriate prescribing after admission was higher than before admission, independent of patients' characteristics; the adjusted odds ratio for after hospital admission was 1.72 (1.63 to 1.84). Analysis of propensity score matched pairs showed a slight reduction in the hazard ratio for hospital admission to 1.22 (1.18 to 1.25).
CONCLUSION
Hospital admission was independently associated with potentially inappropriate prescribing. It is important to determine how hospital admission may affect appropriateness of prescribing for older people and how potential adverse consequences of admission can be minimised.
Additional Info
Prevalence of Potentially Inappropriate Prescribing in Older People in Primary Care and Its Association With Hospital Admission: Longitudinal Study
BMJ 2018 Nov 14;363(xx)k4524, T Pérez, F Moriarty, E Wallace, R McDowell, P Redmond, T FaheyFrom MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.
This study used 45 of the 80 STOPP criteria, some were not applicable to the hospital setting. The STOPP criteria are the European equivalent of the US Beers criteria and were first described in 2008 and revised in 2015. This is a worrying continued trend from an unrelated Irish study showing an increase of PPI use from 0.8% in 1997 to 23.6% in 2012, despite of the increasing evidence of their adverse effects.
In my community, hospital admission order sets still include PPIs and must be unchecked to not be given. And most are not stopped at discharge, as I see patients admitted to the nursing home with these medications. Similarly, benzodiazepines or z-drugs may be started to provide sleep in the noisy hospital environment, but then are not stopped upon discharge.
The authors suggest including indication for medications in the discharge summary, bringing to the fore that the reason may no longer exist after discharge. This would also make it easier for busy outpatient clinicians to judge the need for a given medication. We have good quality evidence that these medications should not be used in older adults for the duration they are given, and 92% of older adults want to stop medications when asked. Two of last year’s top stories addressed these medications and suggested alternatives for the use of PPIs and benzodiazepines.