| Literature DB >> 26058676 |
Philippe Martin1, Robyn Tamblyn2, Sara Ahmed3, Andrea Benedetti4, Cara Tannenbaum5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Medication safety for older persons represents an ongoing challenge. Inappropriate prescriptions--those with a high risk of evidence-based harm--persist in up to 25% of seniors, and account for a significant proportion of avoidable emergency department visits. This project is the sequel to the EMPOWER study, in which a novel consumer-targeted written knowledge transfer tool aimed at empowering older adults to act as drivers of benzodiazepine de-prescription resulted in a 27% reduction of inappropriate benzodiazepine use at 6-month follow-up (number needed to treat (NNT) = 4). Failure to discontinue in the EMPOWER study was attributable to re-emerging symptoms among participants, prescribing inertia, and lack of knowledge and skills for substituting alternate therapy among physicians and pharmacists. To maximize de-prescription of inappropriate therapy, educational medication-risk reduction initiatives should be tested that simultaneously include patients, physicians and pharmacists. The objective of this trial is to: 1) test the beneficial effect of a new de-prescribing paradigm enlisting pharmacists to transfer knowledge to both patients and prescribers in a 2-pronged approach to reduce inappropriate prescriptions, compared to usual care and 2) evaluate the transferability of the EMPOWER study concept to other classes of inappropriate prescriptions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26058676 PMCID: PMC4512085 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-015-0791-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Fig. 1Study flowchart
Targeted medication classes
| Medication class | Rationale |
|---|---|
| All benzodiazepines as well as non-benzodiazepine hypnotics | • Associated with: |
| ○ A 5-fold increased risk of cognitive events [ | |
| ○ A 30 % to 2-fold increased risk of falls [ | |
| ○ A 25 % to 2-fold increased risk of motor vehicle accidents [ | |
| ○ Increased risk of Alzheimer’s disease by up to 80 % [ | |
| • Similar evidence of harm exists for non-benzodiazepine hypnotics [ | |
| • Hypnotics are associated with a greater than 3-fold increased risk of death even when prescribed < 18 pills/year [ | |
| Anticholinergic agents including first-generation antihistamines (as single agents or as part of combination products) | • Can cause cognitive impairment [ |
| • Have been associated with an increased risk of [ | |
| ○ Confusion | |
| ○ Dry mouth | |
| ○ Constipation | |
| ○ Functional decline | |
| Long-acting sulfonylurea oral hypoglycemic agents chlorpropamide or glyburide used for the treatment of diabetes | • Estimated to be responsible for 11 % of emergency hospitalizations for adverse drug events in older adults [ |
| • Glyburide is associated with a 52 % greater risk of experiencing at least one episode of hypoglycemia compared with other secretagogues and with 83 % greater risk compared with other sulfonylureas [ | |
| • Chlorpropramide has potential to cause SIADH (syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion) [ | |
| • Glyburide was a new addition to the Beers list in 2012 [ | |
| Chronic non-COX-selective non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAIDs) | • Increased risk of gastro-intestinal bleeding/peptic ulcer disease in older adults |
| • Ulcers, bleeding, or perforation caused by NSAIDs occur in approximately 1 % of patients treated for 3–6 months, and in about 2–4 % of patients treated for 1 year with trends continuing with longer duration of use [ | |
| • Use of misoprostol or a proton pump inhibitor reduces this risk, it does not eliminate it |
A full list of medication associated with these drug classes is presented in Appendix 1: Table 3
Complete list of medications
| Benzodiazepines | First generation antihistamines | Long-acting sulfonylurea | Non-COX-selective NSAIDs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alprazolam | Hydroxyzine | Chlorpropamide | Aspirin (>325 mg/day) |
| Estazolam | Promethazine | Glyburide | Diclofenac |
| Lorazepam | Brompheniramine | Diflunisal | |
| Oxazepam | Carbinoxamine | Fenoprofen | |
| Temazepam | Chlorpheniramine | Etodolac | |
| Triazolam | Clemastine | Ibuprofen | |
| Clorazepate | Cyproheptadine | Ketoprofen | |
| Chlordiazepoxide | Dexbrompheniramine | Meclofenamate | |
| Chlordiazepoxide-amitriptyline | Dexchlorpheniramine | Mefenamic acid | |
| Clidinium-chlordiazepoxide | Diphenhydramine (oral) | Meloxicam | |
| Clonazepam | Doxylamine | Naproxen | |
| Diazepam | Triprolidine | Oxaprozin | |
| Flurazepam | Piroxicam | ||
| Quazepam | Sulindac | ||
| Eszopiclone | Tolmetin | ||
| Zolpidem | |||
| Zaleplon |
Overview of data collection and measurements in both trial arms
| Baseline | Follow-up | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Visit number | T0 | T1 | T2 | T3 |
| Time | Day 0 | 7 days post | 6 weeks post | 6 months post |
| Inclusion and exclusion criteria | X | |||
| Sociodemographic characteristics | X | |||
| SF-12 | X | X | ||
| VES-13 | X | X | ||
| MMSE | X | |||
| PATD | X | X | ||
| Blood glucose monitoring | Xc | Xc | Xc | |
| Medication use characteristics | X | |||
| Benzodiazepine Tapering Questionnaire | Xa,b | Xa,b | Xa,b | |
| DTSQs | Xc | Xc | ||
| Medication risk assessment | X | X | ||
| BMQ-Specific | X | X | ||
| Patient Self-Efficacy Scale | X | X | X | |
| Intervention-related questionnaire | X | X | X | |
| Intervention Appreciation Questionnaire | X | |||
BMQ-Specific, Beliefs about Medicines Questionnaire - Specific segment [66]; DTSQs, Diabetes Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire [67]; MMSE, Mini-Mental State Exam [68]; PATD, Patients Attitude Towards De-prescribing Questionnaire [69]; SF-12, 12-Item Short Form Survey to measure health status and health-related quality of life [70]; VES-13, Vulnerable Elders Survey [71]. aOnly administered if in benzodiazepine group
bOnly administered if benzodiazepine tapering had begun
cOnly administered if in sulfonylurea group