| Literature DB >> 24278735 |
Paul A F Jansen1, Jacobus R B J Brouwers.
Abstract
The epidemiological transition, with a rapid increase in the proportion in the global population aged over 65 years from 11% in 2010 to 22% in 2050 and 32% in 2100, represents a challenge for public health. More and more old persons have multimorbidities and are treated with a large number of medicines. In advanced age, the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of many drugs are altered. In addition, pharmacotherapy may be complicated by difficulties with obtaining drugs or adherence and persistence with drug regimens. Safe and effective pharmacotherapy remains one of the greatest challenges in geriatric medicine. In this paper, the main principles of geriatric pharmacology are presented.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 24278735 PMCID: PMC3820465 DOI: 10.6064/2012/723678
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scientifica (Cairo) ISSN: 2090-908X
Figure 1Increase in life expectancy from 1950 until 2100. Population by age groups and sex expressed as percentage of total population [2].
Selected pharmacodynamic changes with ageing.
| Drug | Pharmacodynamic effect | Age-related change |
|---|---|---|
| Antipsychotics | Sedation, extrapyramidal symptoms | Increased |
| Benzodiazepines | Sedation, postural sway | Increased |
| Beta-agonists | Bronchodilatation | Decreased |
| Beta-blocking agents | Antihypertensive effects | Decreased |
| Vitamine K antagonists | Anticoagulant effects | Increased |
| Furosemide | Peak diuretic response | Decreased |
| Morphine | Analgesic effects, sedation | Increased |
| Propofol | Anesthetic effect | Increased |
| Verapamil | Antihypertensive effect | Increased |
Clinically relevant drug interactions with St. John's wort [7].
| Drug | Effect of interaction with St. John's wort |
|---|---|
| Amitriptyline | Steady-state concentration decreased by 22% |
| Cyclosporine | Steady-state concentration decreased by 52% |
| Digoxin | Steady-state concentration decreased by 25% |
| Simvastatin | AUC decreased by 50% |
| Tacrolimus | Steady-state concentration decreased by 80% |
| Theophylline | Steady-state concentration decreased by 50% |
| VKAs | INR 50% lower |
AUC: area under plasma concentration time curve.
Structured history taking of medication use (SHIM) questionnaire (Drenth-van Maanen et al., 2011 [8]; http://www.ephor.eu).
| Questions asked per drug on the medication list, provided by the community pharmacist |
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| (1) Are you using this drug as prescribed (dosage, dose frequency, dosage form)? |
| (2) Are you experiencing any side effects? |
| (3) What is the reason for deviating (from the dosage, dose frequency, or dosage form) or not taking a drug at all? |
| (4) Are you using any other prescription drugs, which are not mentioned on this list? (View medication containers) |
| (5) Are you using non-prescription drugs? |
| (6) Are you using homeopathic drugs or herbal medicines (especially st. Johns wort)? |
| (7) Are you using drugs that belong to family members or friends? |
| (8) Are you using any drugs “on demand”? |
| (9) Are you using drugs that are no longer prescribed? |
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| Questions concerning the use of medicines |
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| (10) Are you taking your medication independently? |
| (11) Are you using a dosage system? |
| (12) Are you experiencing problems taking your medication? |
| (13) In case of inhalation therapy: What kind of inhalation system are you using? Are you experiencing any problems using this system? |
| (14) In case of eye drops: Are you experiencing any difficulties using the eye drops? |
| (15) Do you ever forget to take your medication? If so, which medication, why, and what do you do? |
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| Other |
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| (16) Would you like to comment on or ask a question about your medication? |
Methods of measuring adherence (modified Osterberg and Blaschke [9]).
| Methods | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| Directly observed therapy | Most accurate | Patients can hide pills in mouth and then discard them; impractical for routine use |
| Biochemical measurement of the medicine or metabolite or measurement of a biological marker | Objective | Variations in metabolism and “white coat” adherence can give a false impression; expensive |
| Patient questionnaires or self-reports | Simple, inexpensive, most useful in clinical practice | Susceptible to error and distortion |
| Pill counts | Objective, quantifiable and easy to perform | Data easily altered by the patient (e.g., pill dumping) |
| Rates of prescription refills | Objective, easy to obtain data | A prescription refill is not equivalent to ingestion of medication; requires a closed pharmacy system |
| Assessment of the patient's clinical response | Simple; easy to perform | Factors other than medication adherence can affect clinical response |
| Electronic medication monitors | Precise; results are easily quantified; tracks patterns of taking medication | Expensive for example, MEMs; some requires return visits |
| Measurement of physiologic markers | Often easy to perform | Marker may be absent for other reasons |
| Patient diaries | Help to correct for poor recall | Easily altered by the patient |
| Questionnaire for caregiver, for patients who are cognitively impaired. | Help to correct for poor recall; simple; objective | Susceptible to error and distortion |
Common adverse drug reactions in the elderly.
| Medicine | Adverse drug reaction |
|---|---|
| Anticonvulsants | Drowsiness |
| Anti-parkinsonic drugs | Hallucinations, postural hypotension |
| Antipsychotic drugs | Drowsiness, movement disorders and falls |
| Vitamin K antagonists | Bleeding |
| Digoxin | Nausea, bradycardia, falls |
| Lithium | Delirium, nausea, ataxia, drowsiness nephrotoxicity, thyroid disturbances |
| Opioids | Drowsiness, constipation, falls |
| Sulfonylurea anti-diabetics | Hypoglycemia, falls |
| Tricyclic antidepressants | Drowsiness, postural hypotension, movement disorders and falls |
| Verapamil, diltiazem | Bradycardia, hypotension, constipation, falls |
Common undertreated conditions and advised medication according to guidelines.
| Disease or problem | Advised medicines |
|---|---|
| Angina pectoris | beta-receptor blocking drug |
| Atrial fibrillation | VKA, when contraindicated acetylsalicylic acid |
| Cardiovascular disease1 | in case of oversensitiveness: clopidogrel, prasugrel |
| Cardiovascular disease + LDL > 2.5 | Statin |
| Cerebral infarction/TIA | Consider antihypertensive treatment, even with normal blood pressure |
| COPD | Inhalation ipratropium or tiotropium/ |
| Corticosteroids used > 1 month | Medication to prevent osteoporosis: bisphosphonates |
| Depression | Antidepressants: SSRI's or nortriptyline |
| Diabetes Mellitus | Lipid lowering drugs |
| Diabetes with proteinuria | ACE-inhibitor |
| Heart failure | ACE-inhibitor, or AT II antagonist if necessary beta-receptor blocking drug |
| Hypertension | Anti-hypertensive treatment |
| Insufficient daylight | Vitamin D3 |
| Myocardial Infarction | Acetylsalicylic acid, ACE-inhibitor, beta-receptor blocking drug |
| NSAID | Gastric protection with Proton Pump Inhibitors |
| Opioids | Laxatives |
| Osteoporosis | Antiosteoporosis drugs |
| Pain | Analgesics |
1Cardiovascular disease: by atherothrombotic processes caused clinical manifestations, like myocardial infarction, angina pectoris, cerebral infarction, transient ischaemic attack (TIA), aortic aneurysm, and peripheral arterial vessel disease.
Conditions with (relatively) contraindicated drugs [10, 11].
| Disease or problem | Contraindicated drugs |
|---|---|
| COPD | Long acting benzodiazepines, non-selective beta-receptor blocking drugs (e.g., propranolol, carvedilol, labetalol, sotalol) |
| Dementia | Strong acting anticholinergic agents1 |
| Heart failure | Verapamil, diltiazem, short acting nifedipine, NSAIDs, rosiglitazone |
| Lower Urinary Tract Syndrome | Anticholinergic agents1 |
| Active peptic ulcer disease, reflux oesophagitis, or gastritis/duodenitis | NSAIDs |
| Narrow angle glaucoma | Strong acting anticholinergic agents1 |
| Constipation | Verapamil, diltiazem, anticholinergic agents1 |
| Postural hypotension | Tricyclic antidepressants |
| Parkinson's disease | Metoclopramide, all antipsychotics except clozapine and quetiapine |
| Hyponatremia (SIADH) | SSRIs |
| Falls | Psychoactive drugs |
1Strong acting anticholinergic drugs: spasmolytics, tricyclic antidepressants, and anticholinergic antiparkinsonic drugs.
The most common drug interactions in elderly patients [12].
| Drug | Interaction | Effect |
|---|---|---|
| ACE inhibitors | NSAIDs, Coxibs, potassium-sparing diuretics | Decreased renal function, hyperkalemia |
| Antidepressants | Enzyme inducers1 | Less antidepressant effect |
| Antihypertensives | Vasodilators, antipsychotic drug, tricyclic antidepressants | Increased antihypertensive effect |
| NSAIDs | Decreased antihypertensive effect | |
| Beta-receptor-blocking drugs | Anti-diabetic drugs | Masks hypoglycemia |
| Fluoxetine, paroxetine (especially in combination with metoprolol and propranolol) | Bradycardia | |
| Corticosteroids (oral) | NSAIDs | Gastro-duodenal ulcer disease |
| enzyme inducers1 | Decreased corticosteroid effect | |
| Digoxin | NSAIDs, diuretics, qinidine, verapamil, diltiazem, amiodarone | Digoxin intoxication |
| Fluoroquinolones | Al-Mg containing antacids, iron, calcium | Decreased bioavailability |
| Levodopa | Iron | Decreased bioavailability |
| Lithium | NSAIDs, thiazide diuretics, antipsychotics | Lithium toxicity |
| Phenytoin | Enzyme inhibitors2 | Increased toxicity |
| Sulfonylurea anti-diabetics | SSRIs, chloramphenicol, VKA's, phenylbutazone | Hypoglycemia |
| SSRIs | Diuretics, NSAIDs | Hyponatremia, gastric bleeding |
| Tetracyclines | Antacids, iron | Decreased bioavailability |
| VKA's | Acetylsalicylic acid, NSAIDs, metronidazole, miconazole and other azole-type drugs | Bleeding |
1Important enzyme inducers: carbamazepine, rifampicin, phenobarbital, phenytoin, St. John's wort.
2Important enzyme inhibitors: verapamil, diltiazem, amiodarone, fluconazole, miconazole, ketoconazole, erythromycin, claritromycin, sulfonamides, cimetidine, ciprofloxacin, and grapefruit juice.
Adjustment of dosage in renal insufficiency. Calculate the creatinine clearance or GFR (http://nephron.com/cgi-bin/CGSI.cgi). For Crcl < 10 mL/min consult the nephrologist.
| Decreased renal function and dose adjustment | |
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| ACE Inhibitors | |
| Benazepril | Clcr 10–30 mL/min: start with 2.5–5 mg once daily. Adjust dosage based on effect. |
| Captopril | Clcr 10–30 mL/min: start with 12.5–25 mg once daily. Adjust dosage based on effect until 75–100 mg/day |
| Cilazapril | Clcr 10–30 mL/min: start with max. 0.5 mg/day. Adjust dosage based on effect until max. 2.5 mg/day |
| Enalapril | Clcr 10–30 mL/min: start with max. 5 mg/day. Adjust dosage based on effect until max. 10 mg/day |
| Lisinopril | Clcr 10–30 mL/min: start with max. 5 mg/day. Adjust dosage based on effect until max. 40 mg/day |
| Perindopril | Clcr 30–50 mL/min: max. 2 mg/day; Clcr 10–30 mL/min: max. 2 mg every two days |
| Quinapril | Clcr 30–50 mL/min: start with 5 mg/day; Clcr 10–30 mL/min: start with 2.5 mg/day. Adjust dosage based on effect. |
| Ramipril | Clcr 20–50 mL/min: start with max. 1.25 mg/day. Adjust dosage based on effect. |
| Clcr 10–20 mL/min: insufficient data for sound advise | |
| Trandolapril | Clcr 10–30 mL/min: start with max. 0.5 mg/day. Adjust dosage based on effect until max. 2 mg/day |
| Zofenopril | Clcr 10–50 mL/min: start with max. 7.5 mg/day. Adjust dosage based on effect until max. 15 mg/day |
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| Antibiotics | |
| Cephalosporins | |
| Cephalexin | Clcr 10–50 mL/min: prolong interval to once per every 12 hours. |
| Cephalothin | Clcr 50–80 mL/min 2 g every 6 hours; 30–50 mL/min 1.5 g every 6 hours; 10–30 mL/min 1 g every 8 hours. |
| Cephamandole | Clcr 50–80 mL/min 2 g every 6 hours, in case of life-threatening infection 1.5 g every 4 hours; |
| Clcr 30–50 mL/min 2 g every 8 hours, in case of life-threatening infection 1.5 g every 6 hours; | |
| Clcr 10–30 mL/min 1.25 g every 6 hours, in case of life-threatening infection 1 g every 6 hours. | |
| Cephazolin | Clcr 30–50 mL/min: 500 mg every 12 hours; 10–30 mL/min: 500 mg every 24 hours. |
| Cephradine | Clcr <30 mL/min: contra-indicated |
| Cephtazidime | Clcr 30–50 mL/min: 1 g every 12 hours; 10–30 mL min: 1 g every 24 hours. |
| Cephtibuten | Clcr 30–50 mL/min: 200 mg every 24 hours; 10–30 mL/min: 100 mg every 24 hours. |
| Cephuroxime parenteral | Clcr 10–30 mL/min: standard dosage every 12 hours. |
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| Fluoroquinolones | |
| Ciprofloxacin | Clcr 10–30 mL/min: 50% of normal dosage |
| Levofloxacin; ofloxacin | Clcr 30–50 mL/min: 50% of normal dosage; Clcr 10–30 mL/min: 25% of normal dosage |
| Norfloxacin | Clcr 10–30 mL/min: prolong interval to once every 24 hours |
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| Nitrofurantoin | |
| Nitrofurantoin | Clcr < 50: contra-indicated. Risk of neuropathy and failure of therapy. |
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| Macrolide | |
| Claritromycin | Clcr 10–30 mL/min: 50% of normal dosage with normal dose frequency |
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| Penicillins | |
| Amoxicillin/clavulanate | Clcr 10–30 mL/min: standard dosage every 12 hours (orally, i.v. of.im.) |
| Benzylpenicillin | Clcr 10–30 mL/min: dosage dependent of indication. Consider intended effect, risks of overdosage and underdosage. |
| Piperacillin | Clcr 30–50 mL/min: max. 12 g per day in 3 or 4 doses; Clcr 10–30 mL/min: max. 8 g per day in 2 doses |
| Piperacillin/tazobactam | Clcr 30–50 mL/min: piperacillin/tazobactam 12 g/1.5 g per day in 3 or 4 doses |
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| Tetracyclines | |
| Tetracycline | Clcr 10–30 mL/min: maintenance dosage 250 mg once daily |
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| Antidiabetics | |
| Metformin | Clcr 30–50 mL/min: start with twice daily 500 mg; Clcr 10–<30 mL/min: contraindicated |
| Sulfonylurea (e.g., Tolbutamide) | Clcr < 50 mL/min start with half the dosage |
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| Antihistaminics | |
| Acrivastine | Clcr 10–50 mL/min: 50% of normal dosage OR prolong interval to 1-2x per day |
| Cetirizine/Levocetirizine/Hydroxyzine/ | Clcr 10–50 mL/min: 50% of normal dosage |
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| Antimycotics | |
| Fluconazole | In case of >once daily dosing regimen: Clcr 10–50 mL/min: normal starting dosage, decrease maintenance dosage until 50% of normal dosage |
| Flucytosine | Clcr 30–50 mL/min: prolong interval to once every 12 hours, then based on serum plasma concentration |
| Clcr 10–30 mL/min: prolong interval to once every 24 hours, then based on serum plasma concentration | |
| Terbinafine | Clcr 10–50 mL/min: 50% of normal dosage |
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| Antiparkinson drugs | |
| Pramipexole | Clcr 30–50 mL/min: start with 0.125 mg (= 0.088 base) twice daily, then based on effect/adverse events |
| Clcr 10–30 mL/min: start with 0.125 mg (= 0.088 base) once daily, then based on effect/adverse events | |
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| Antithrombotics | |
| Dabigatran | Clcr <30 mL/min: contra-indicated |
| Eptifibatide | Clcr 10–50 mL/min: normal starting dosage, then 50% of normal dosage |
| Tirofiban | Clcr 10–30 mL/min: 50% of normal dosage |
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| Antiviral medication | |
| Acyclovir orally | Decrease dosage used for herpes zoster treatment: Clcr 10–30 mL/min: 800 mg 3 times a day |
| Amantadine | Start with 200 mg, maintenance dosage: Clcr 50–80 mL/min: 100 mg once daily; |
| Clcr 30–50 mL/min: 100 mg every 2 days; Clcr 10–30 mL/min 100 mg every 3 days. | |
| Cidofovir | Clcr <50 mL/min: preferably do not use |
| Famciclovir | Clcr 30–50 mL/min: normal dosage every 24 hours; 10–30 mL/min: 50% of normal dosage every 24 hours |
| Foscarnet | Clcr 30–80 mL/min: dosage according to schedule manufacturer; <30 mL/min: do not use |
| Ganciclovir | Induction: Clcr 50–80 mL/min: 50% of normal dosage every 12 hours; 30–50 mL/min: 50% of normal dosage every 24 hours; 10–30 mL/min: 25% of normal dosage every 24 hours |
| Maintenance: Clcr 50–80 mL/min: 50% of normal dosage every 24 hours; 30–50 mL/min: 25% of normal dosage every 24 hours; 10–30 mL/min: 12.5% of normal dosage every 24 hours | |
| Oseltamivir | Clcr 10–30 mL/min: 50% of normal dosage OR normal dosage but double interval |
| Ribavirin | Clcr 10–50 mL/min: dosage based on hemoglobin concentration |
| Valaciclovir | Clcr 10–80 mL/min: adjust dosage according to schedule manufacturer |
| Valganciclovir | Clcr 30–50 mL/min: 50% of normal dosage plus double interval |
| Clcr 10–30 mL/min: 50% of normal dosage twice a week | |
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| Beta-receptor-blocking drugs | |
| Acebutolol; Atenolol | Clcr 10–30 mL/min: 50% of normal dosage |
| Bisoprolol | Clcr 10–20 mL/min: start with 50% of normal dosage. Then max. 10 mg/day |
| Sotalol | Clcr 30–50 mL/min: max 160 mg/day; Clcr 10–30 mL/min: max. 80 mg/day |
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| Calcium antagonists, dihydropyridine type | |
| Barnidipine | Clcr <50 mL/min: contraindicated |
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| Digoxin | |
| Digoxin | Clcr 10–50 mL/min: decrease initial dosage by 50%, then go to 0.125 mg/day. Next adjust dosage based on clinical symptoms |
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| DMARDs | |
| Anakinra | Clcr < 30 mL/min: contraindicated |
| Methotrexate | Clcr 40–70 mL/min: 50% of normal dosage. Clcr < 40 mL/min: based on serum plasma concentration |
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| Gout medication | |
| Allopurinol | Clcr 50–80 mL/min: 300 mg/day; 30–50 mL/min: 200 mg/day; 10–30 mL/min: 100 mg/day |
| Benzbromarone | Clcr <30 mL/min: contraindicated |
| Colchicine | Clcr 10–50 mL/min: 0.5 mg/day |
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| H2-antagonists | |
| Nizatidine; cimetidine; famotidine; ranitidine | Clcr 10–30 mL/min: 50% of normal dosage, once daily |
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| Hypnotics, sedative agents, anxiolytic drugs, Antipsychotics | |
| Chloralhydrate | Clcr <50 mL/min: preferably do not use |
| Meprobamate | Clcr 10–50 mL/min: 50% of normal dosage OR double dosage interval |
| Risperidone | Clcr 10–50 mL/min: 50% of normal dosage, then based on effect and adverse events |
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| Muscle relaxants | |
| Baclofen | Clcr 10–50 mL/min: start with 5 mg once daily, then adjust based on effect and adverse events. |
| Tizanidine | Clcr 10–30 mL/min: start with 2 mg once daily, then increase dosage slowly based on effect and adverse events. End with increasing the dose frequency. |
| NSAIDs | All NSAID's: Clcr < 30 mL/min: consider if chronic use is indicated. Check renal function previously to and 1 week after start |
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| OPIOIDs | |
| Morphine | Clcr 10–50 mL/min: dosage based on effect and adverse events. Be alert to accumulation of M6G |
| Tramadol | Clcr 10–30 mL/min: decrease dose frequency to 2-3 x per day |
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| Tuberculostatics | |
| Ethambutol | Clcr 10–50 mL/min: 50% of normal dosage |
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| Vertigo medication | |
| Piracetam | Clcr 30–50 mL/min: 50% of normal dosage; Clcr 10–30 mL/min: 25% of normal dosage |
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| Xanthine derivates | |
| Pentoxifylline | Clcr 30–50 mL/min: 400 mg twice daily; Clcr 10–30 mL/min: 400 mg once daily |