Polypharmacy
Polypharmacy (polypragmasia) is the simultaneous use of multiple medicines by a patient for one condition.[1][2] An excessive number of medications is worrisome, especially for older patients with many chronic health conditions, because this increases the risk of an adverse event in those patients.[3][4] Narrower definitions used in research measuring prevalence and adverse effects of polypharmacy vary, most commonly specifying a lower limit of five simultaneous drugs but ranging from two to 11.[1][5][6]
The prevalence of polypharmacy is estimated to be between 10% and 90% depending on the definition used, the age group studied, and the geographic location.[7] Polypharmacy continues to grow in importance because of aging populations. Many countries are experiencing a fast growth of the older population, 65 years and older.[8][9][10] This growth is a result of the baby-boomer generation getting older and an increased life expectancy as a result of ongoing improvement in health care services worldwide.[11][12] About 21% of adults with intellectual disability are also exposed to polypharmacy.[13] Additionally, studies show that the percentage of patients greater than 65 years-old using more than 5 medications increased from 24% to 39% between 1999 and 2012.[14]
Polypharmacy is not necessarily ill-advised, but in many instances can lead to negative outcomes or poor treatment effectiveness, often being more harmful than helpful or presenting too much risk for too little benefit. Therefore, health professionals consider it a situation that requires monitoring and review to validate whether all of the medications are still necessary. Concerns about polypharmacy include increased adverse drug reactions, drug interactions, prescribing cascade, and higher costs.[15] A prescribing cascade occurs when a patient is prescribed a drug and experiences an adverse drug effect that is misinterpreted as a new medical condition, so the patient is prescribed another drug.[16]
Polypharmacy is often associated with a decreased quality of life, including decreased mobility and cognition.[17] Patient factors that influence the number of medications a patient is prescribed include a high number of chronic conditions requiring a complex drug regimen. Other systemic factors that impact the number of medications a patient is prescribed include a patient having multiple prescribers and multiple pharmacies that may not communicate.
Whether or not the advantages of polypharmacy (over taking single medications or monotherapy) outweigh the disadvantages or risks depends upon the particular combination and diagnosis involved in any given case.[18] The use of multiple drugs, even in fairly straightforward illnesses, is not an indicator of poor treatment and is not necessarily overmedication. Moreover, it is well accepted in pharmacology that it is impossible to accurately predict the side effects or clinical effects of a combination of drugs without studying that particular combination of drugs in test subjects. Knowledge of the pharmacologic profiles of the individual drugs in question does not assure accurate prediction of the side effects of combinations of those drugs; and effects also vary among individuals because of genome-specific pharmacokinetics. Therefore, deciding whether and how to reduce a list of medications (deprescribe) is often not simple and requires the experience and judgment of a practicing physician, as the physician must weigh the pros and cons of keeping the patient on the medication. However, such thoughtful and wise review is an ideal that too often does not happen, owing to problems such as poorly handled care transitions (poor continuity of care, usually because of siloed information), overworked physicians, and interventionism.
Appropriate medical uses
While polypharmacy is typically regarded as undesirable, prescription of multiple medications can be appropriate and therapeutically beneficial in some circumstances.[19] “Appropriate polypharmacy” is described as prescribing for complex or multiple conditions in such a way that necessary medicines are used based on the best available evidence at the time to preserve safety and well-being.[19] Polypharmacy is clinically indicated in some chronic conditions, including diabetes mellitus, but should be discontinued when evidence of benefit from the prescribed drugs no longer outweighs potential for harm (described below in Contraindications).[19]
Often certain medications can interact with others in a positive way specifically intended when prescribed together, to achieve a greater effect than any of the single agents alone. This is particularly prominent in the field of anesthesia and pain management – where atypical agents such as antiepileptics, antidepressants, muscle relaxants, NMDA antagonists, and other medications are combined with more typical analgesics such as opioids, prostaglandin inhibitors, NSAIDS and others. This practice of pain management drug synergy[20] is known as an analgesia sparing effect.
Examples
- A legitimate treatment regimen in the first year after a myocardial infarction may include: a statin, an ACE inhibitor, a beta-blocker, aspirin, paracetamol and an antidepressant.[21]
- In anesthesia (particularly IV anesthesia and general anesthesia) multiple agents are almost always required – including hypnotics or analgesic inducing/maintenance agents such as midazolam or propofol, usually an opioid analgesic such as morphine or fentanyl, a paralytic such as vecuronium, and in inhaled general anesthesia generally a halogenated ether anesthetic such as sevoflurane or desflurane.[22]
Special populations
People who are at greatest risk for negative polypharmacy consequences include elderly people, people with psychiatric conditions, patients with intellectual or developmental disabilities,[23] people taking five or more drugs at the same time, those with multiple physicians and pharmacies, people who have been recently hospitalized, people who have concurrent comorbidities,[24] people who live in rural communities, people with inadequate access to education,[25] and those with impaired vision or dexterity. Marginalized populations may have a greater degrees of polypharmacy, which can occur more frequently in younger age groups.[26]
It is not uncommon for people who are dependent or addicted to substances to enter or remain in a state of polypharmacy misuse.[27] About 84% of prescription drug misusers reported using multiple drugs.[27] Note, however, that the term polypharmacy and its variants generally refer to legal drug use as-prescribed, even when used in a negative or critical context.
Measures can be taken to limit polypharmacy to its truly legitimate and appropriate needs. This is an emerging area of research, frequently called deprescribing.[28] This reduction in medications has been shown to reduce the number of medications and is safe as it does not significantly alter health outcomes.[29] Clinical pharmacists can perform drug therapy reviews and teach physicians and their patients about drug safety and polypharmacy, as well as collaborating with physicians and patients to correct polypharmacy problems. Similar programs are likely to reduce the potentially deleterious consequences of polypharmacy such as adverse drug events, non-adherence, hospital admissions, drug-drug interactions, geriatric syndromes, and mortality.[30] Such programs hinge upon patients and doctors informing pharmacists of other medications being prescribed, as well as herbal, over-the-counter substances and supplements that occasionally interfere with prescription-only medication. Staff at residential aged care facilities have a range of views and attitudes towards polypharmacy that, in some cases, may contribute to an increase in medication use.[31]
Risks of polypharmacy
The risk of polypharmacy increases with age, although there is some evidence that it may decrease slightly after age 90 years.[2] Poorer health is a strong predictor of polypharmacy at any age, although it is unclear whether the polypharmacy causes the poorer health or if polypharmacy is used because of the poorer health.[2] It appears possible that the risk factors for polypharmacy may be different for younger and middle-aged people compared to older people.[2]
The use of polypharmacy is correlated to the use of potentially inappropriate medications. Potentially inappropriate medications are generally taken to mean those that have been agreed upon by expert consensus, such as by the Beers Criteria. These medications are generally inappropriate for older adults because the risks outweigh the benefits. Examples of these include urinary anticholinergics, which can prevent up to one episode of incontinence every 48 hours on average. However, they can also cause constipation, dry eyes, dry mouth, impaired cognition, and increase the risk of falls.
Polypharmacy is associated with an increased risk of falls in elderly people.[32][33] Certain medications are well known to be associated with the risk of falls, including cardiovascular and psychoactive medications.[34][35] There is some evidence that the risk of falls increases cumulatively with the number of medications.[36][37] Although often not practical to achieve, withdrawing all medicines associated with falls risk can halve an individual's risk of future falls.
Every medication has potential adverse side-effects. With every drug added, there is an additive risk of side-effects. Also, some medications have interactions with other substances, including foods, other medications, and herbal supplements.[38] 15% of older adults are potentially at risk for a major drug-drug interaction.[39] Older adults are at a higher risk for a drug-drug interaction due to the increased number of medications prescribed and metabolic changes that occur with aging.[40] When a new drug is prescribed, the risk of interactions increases exponentially. Doctors and pharmacists aim to avoid prescribing medications that interact; often, adjustments in the dose of medications need to be made to avoid interactions. For example, warfarin interacts with many medications and supplements that can cause it to lose its effect.[40][41]
Pill burden
Pill burden is the number of pills (tablets or capsules, the most common dosage forms) that a person takes on a regular basis, along with all associated efforts that increase with that number - like storing, organizing, consuming, and understanding the various medications in one's regimen. The use of individual medications is growing faster than pill burden.[42]
Poor medical adherence is a common challenge among individuals who have increased pill burden and are subject to polypharmacy.[43] It also increases the possibility of adverse medication reactions (side effects) and drug-drug interactions. High pill burden has also been associated with an increased risk of hospitalization, medication errors, and increased costs for both the pharmaceuticals themselves and for the treatment of adverse events. Finally, pill burden is a source of dissatisfaction for many patients.
High pill burden was commonly associated with antiretroviral drug regimens to control HIV,[44] and is also seen in other patient populations.[43] For instance, adults with multiple common chronic conditions such as diabetes, hypertension, lymphedema, hypercholesterolemia, osteoporosis, constipation, inflammatory bowel disease, and clinical depression can often be prescribed more than a dozen different medications daily.[45] The combination of multiple drugs has been associated with an increased risk of adverse drug events.[46]
Reducing pill burden is recognized as a way to improve medication compliance. This is done through "deprescribing", where the risks and benefits are weighed when considering whether to continue a medication.[47] This includes drugs such as bisphosphonates (for osteoporosis), which are often taken indefinitely although there is only evidence to use it for five to ten years.[47] Patient educational programs, reminder messages, medication packaging, and the use of memory tricks has also been seen to improve adherence and reduce pill burden in several countries.[40] These include associating medications with mealtimes, recording the dosage on the box, storing the medication in a special place, leaving it in plain sight in the living room, or putting the prescription sheet on the refrigerator.[40] The development of applications has also shown some benefit in this regard.[40] The use of a polypill regimen, such as combination pill for HIV treatment, as opposed to a multi-pill regimen, also alleviates pill burden and increases adherence.[43]
The selection of long-acting active ingredients over short-acting ones may also reduce pill burden. For instance, ACE inhibitors are used in the management of hypertension. Both captopril and lisinopril are examples of ACE inhibitors. However, lisinopril is dosed once a day, whereas captopril may be dosed 2-3 times a day. Assuming that there are no contraindications or potential for drug interactions, using lisinopril instead of captopril may be an appropriate way to limit pill burden.
Interventions
The most common intervention to help people who are struggling with polypharmacy is deprescribing.[48] Deprescribing can be confused with medication simplification, which does not attempt to reduce the number of medicines but rather reduce the number of dose forms and administration times.[49] It is important to acknowledge that medication use does not appear to be influenced by paper-based or electronic prescribing.[50] Deprescribing refers to reducing the number of medications that a person is prescribed and includes the identification and discontinuance of medications when the benefit no longer outweighs the harm.[51] In elderly patients, this can commonly be done as a patient becomes more frail and treatment focus needs to shift from preventative to palliative.[51] Deprescribing was also deemed feasible and effective in other settings such as residential care, communities and hospitals.[48] This preventative measure should be considered for anyone who exhibits one of the following: (1) a new symptom or adverse event arises, (2) when the person develops an end-stage disease, (3) if the combination of drugs is risky, or (4) if stopping the drug does not alter the disease trajectory.[52]
Several tools exist to help physicians decide when to deprescribe and what medications can be added to a pharmaceutical regimen. The Beers Criteria and the STOPP/START criteria help identify medications that have the highest risk of adverse drug events (ADE) and drug-drug interactions.[53] The Medication appropriateness tool for comorbid health conditions during dementia (MATCH-D) is the only tool available specifically for people with dementia, and also cautions against polypharmacy and complex medication regimens.[54][55]
Barriers faced by both physicians and people taking the medications have made it challenging to apply deprescribing strategies in practice.[56] For physicians, these include fear of consequences of deprescribing, the prescriber's own confidence in their skills and knowledge to deprescribe, reluctance to alter medications that are prescribed by specialists, the feasibility of deprescribing, lack of access to all of patients' clinical notes, and the complexity of having multiple providers.[56][57][58] For patients who are prescribed or require the medication, barriers include attitudes or beliefs about the medications, inability to communicate with physicians, fears and uncertainties surrounding deprescribing, and influence of physicians, family, and the media.[56] Barriers can include other health professionals or carers, such as in residential care, believing that the medicines are required.[59]
The effectiveness of specific interventions to improve the appropriate use of polypharmacy such as pharmaceutical care and computerised decision support is unclear.[60] This is due to low quality of current evidence surrounding these interventions.[60] High quality evidence is needed to make any conclusions about the effects of such interventions in care homes.[61] Deprescribing rounds has been proposed as a potentially successful methodology in reducing polypharmacy.[62] Sharing of positive outcomes from physicians who have implemented deprescribing, increased communication between all practitioners involved in patient care, higher compensation for time spent deprescribing, and clear deprescribing guidelines can help enable the practice of deprescribing. [58]
See also
- Adverse effect
- Classification of Pharmaco-Therapeutic Referrals
- Compliance
- Deprescribing
- Multimorbidity
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- Lo, Sarita Y.; Reeve, Emily; Page, Amy T.; Zaidi, Syed Tabish R.; Hilmer, Sarah N.; Etherton-Beer, Christopher; McLachlan, Andrew; Pont, Lisa; Naganathan, Vasi (2021-08-01). "Attitudes to Drug Use in Residential Aged Care Facilities: A Cross-Sectional Survey of Nurses and Care Staff". Drugs & Aging. 38 (8): 697–711. doi:10.1007/s40266-021-00874-2. ISSN 1179-1969. PMID 34169458. S2CID 235630612.
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Further reading
- Golchin N, Frank SH, Vince A, Isham L, Meropol SB (April 2015). "Polypharmacy in the elderly". Journal of Research in Pharmacy Practice. 4 (2): 85–8. doi:10.4103/2279-042X.155755. PMC 4418141. PMID 25984546.
External links
- American Nurses Association Position Statement on Polypharmacy and the Older Adult
- NASMHPD.org (pdf) - 'Technical Report on Psychiatric Polypharmacy', National Association of State Mental Health Program Directors, (October 9, 2001)
- PsychRights.org - 'Psychiatric Polypharmacy: A Word of Caution', Leslie Morrison, MS, RN, Esq, Paul B. Duryea, Charis Moore, Alexandra Nathanson-Shinn, Stephen E. Hall, MD, James Meeker, PhD, DABFT, Charles A. Reynolds, PharmD, BCPP, Protection & Advocacy, Inc.
- "Polypharmacy in Older Adults: Information for people who are taking several medications", University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine
- - "Appropriate Prescribing for Patients and Polypharmacy Guidance for Review of Quality, Safe and Effective Use of Long-term Medication." Scotland NHS, 2012 Archived 2013-01-24 at the Wayback Machine