| Literature DB >> 21731193 |
André R Maddison1, Judith Fisher, Grace Johnston.
Abstract
Persons with limited life expectancy (LLE) - less than 1 year - are significant consumers of health care, are at increased risk of polypharmacy and adverse drug events, and have dynamic health statuses. Therefore, medication use among this population must be appropriate and regularly evaluated. The objective of this review is to assess the current state of knowledge and clinical practice presented in the literature regarding preventive medication use among persons with LLE. We searched Medline, Embase, and CINAHL using Medical Subject Headings. Broad searches were first conducted using the terms 'terminal care or therapy' or 'advanced disease' and 'polypharmacy' or 'inappropriate medication' or 'preventive medicine', followed by more specific searches using the terms 'statins' or 'anti-hypertensives' or 'bisphosphonates' or 'laxatives' and 'terminal care'. Frameworks to assess appropriate versus inappropriate medications for persons with LLE, and the prevalence of potentially inappropriate medication use among this population, are presented. A considerable proportion of individuals with a known terminal condition continue to take chronic disease preventive medications until death despite questionable benefit. The addition of palliative preventive medications is advised. There is an indication that as death approaches the shift from a curative to palliative goal of care translates into a shift in medication use. This literature review is a first step towards improving medication use and decreasing polypharmacy in persons at the end of life. There is a need to develop consensus criteria to assess appropriate versus inappropriate medication use, specifically for individuals at the end of life.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21731193 PMCID: PMC3118532 DOI: 10.1179/174329111X576698
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prog Palliat Care ISSN: 0969-9260
Figure 1Process to identify relevant literature.
Studies examining prevalence of unnecessary and inappropriate medication use among individuals with LLE
| Study | Study location | Population | Outcomes | Criteria/index |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Blass | Baltimore, Maryland, USA | 125 nursing home residents with advanced dementia | Total number and type of prescribed medications at baseline, with changes prior to death | Medications were not assessed as appropriate versus inappropriate |
| 88 patients died within 6-month study period | ||||
| Currow | Adelaide, South Australia | 260 patients referred to palliative care programs | Medication use from palliative care referral to death | Medications classified as either for co-morbid conditions or for symptom control using the Beers' consensus criteria |
| Fahlman | USA | 4602 community elderly (>65) from a managed care organization | Use of potentially inappropriate medications during last year of life | Beers consensus criteria |
| Fede | Sao Paulo, Brazil | 87 patients with advanced cancer | Use of unnecessary medications | Unnecessary medications determined by authors through a literature search and expert consensus |
| Holmes | Illinois, USA | 34 community and long-term care residents with advanced dementia | Appropriate versus inappropriate medication used by individuals with advanced dementia | Appropriate versus inappropriate determined by panel of 12 geriatricians; classified as never, rarely, sometimes, or always appropriate, or no consensus |
| Koh and Koo (2002)[ | Singapore | 345 patients in an in-patient palliative care program, in-patient hospice program, or receiving home care service | Number of medications taken prior to and after a palliative care referral | Futility or appropriateness not assessed |
| Nicholson | England | 106 patients admitted to St Benedict's Hospice | Number of futile or inappropriate medications when admitted | Futility and inappropriateness assessed by physician |
| Riechelmann | Toronto, ON, Canada | 372 patients with advanced cancer receiving care in palliative care clinics | Proportion taking futile medications | Futility of medications determined by authors; classified as duplicates or unnecessary |
| Silveira | Central Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, and Northwest Ohio, USA | 337 cases with LLE versus 1247 controls without LLE; LLE identified using Palliative Care Index diagnoses | Prevalence of statin use during last 6 months of life; variations by presence or absence of LLE | Futility or appropriateness not assessed |
| Suhrie | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA | 89 patients who died in a geriatric palliative care unit | Unnecessary medication use at first admission and in last 30 days before death from pharmacist drug review | Assessed using unnecessary drug use measure, a classification of Medication Appropriateness Index |
| Tanvetyanon and Choudhury (2006)[ | Chicago, Illinois, USA | 47 patients with advanced lung cancer receiving statins at diagnosis | Discontinuation of statins by timing and characteristics of discontinuation | Futility or appropriateness not assessed |
Figure 2Conceptualizing the transition in medication use at end of life. (A) Goal of care begins to transition towards palliative and supportive care. (B) Goal of care is solely supportive and palliative. All long-term preventive medications and disease-modifying medications discontinued.