Giorgia Cosano1, Manuela Giangreco1, Silvia Ussai2, Tullio Giorgini3, Emanuele Biasutti3, Fabio Barbone1,2,4, Federica Edith Pisa2. 1. a Institute of Hygiene and Epidemiology, Department of Biological and Medical Sciences , University of Udine , Udine , Italy. 2. b Institute of Hygiene and Clinical Epidemiology , University Hospital of Udine , Udine , Italy. 3. c Unit for the Rehabilitation of Acquired Neuropsychological Disturbances , Institute of Rehabilitation and Physical Medicine , Gervasutta Hospital , Udine , Italy. 4. d Department of Medicine , University of Trieste , Trieste , Italy.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This study assessed the use of medications during inpatient post-acute rehabilitation for acquired brain injury (ABI). MATERIALS AND METHODS: All inpatients with ABI undergoing post-acute rehabilitation in centres identified through the roster of the Italian Society for Rehabilitation Medicine were included. A designated physician in each centre collected information through a structured questionnaire. This study calculated (a) prevalence of medication use, (b) logistic regression Odds Ratio (OR), with 95% confidence interval (95% CI), of polypharmacy (≥ 6 medications). RESULTS: A total of 484 patients (median age = 52 years, 63.4% men, median time from acute event = 18.5 weeks) were included; 33.8% had Rancho Los Amigos Levels of Cognitive Functioning Scale (RLAS) score 1-2, 8.1% had a score of 7-8, of whom 92.0% received medications, 51.8% had a score of 6-10, of whom 83.9% had at least one psychotropic medication and 66.9% had two or more; 51.8% received anti-epileptics, 32.1% anti-depressants, 14.5% anti-psychotics, peaking in RLAS 4 (37.3%) and decreasing in RLAS 7-8. Polypharmacy was directly associated with age (55-64 years, OR = 2.1; 95% CI = 1.1-4.1; ≥ 65 years, OR = 1.7; 95% CI = 0.9-3.3), inversely with RLAS score (1-2 vs 7-8, OR = 4.3; 95% CI = 1.9-9.8). CONCLUSION: Polypharmacy and concurrent use of psychotropic medications was common, raising concern about drug-drug interactions. Safety and effectiveness of medications should be monitored, particularly when used concurrently.
BACKGROUND: This study assessed the use of medications during inpatient post-acute rehabilitation for acquired brain injury (ABI). MATERIALS AND METHODS: All inpatients with ABI undergoing post-acute rehabilitation in centres identified through the roster of the Italian Society for Rehabilitation Medicine were included. A designated physician in each centre collected information through a structured questionnaire. This study calculated (a) prevalence of medication use, (b) logistic regression Odds Ratio (OR), with 95% confidence interval (95% CI), of polypharmacy (≥ 6 medications). RESULTS: A total of 484 patients (median age = 52 years, 63.4% men, median time from acute event = 18.5 weeks) were included; 33.8% had Rancho Los Amigos Levels of Cognitive Functioning Scale (RLAS) score 1-2, 8.1% had a score of 7-8, of whom 92.0% received medications, 51.8% had a score of 6-10, of whom 83.9% had at least one psychotropic medication and 66.9% had two or more; 51.8% received anti-epileptics, 32.1% anti-depressants, 14.5% anti-psychotics, peaking in RLAS 4 (37.3%) and decreasing in RLAS 7-8. Polypharmacy was directly associated with age (55-64 years, OR = 2.1; 95% CI = 1.1-4.1; ≥ 65 years, OR = 1.7; 95% CI = 0.9-3.3), inversely with RLAS score (1-2 vs 7-8, OR = 4.3; 95% CI = 1.9-9.8). CONCLUSION: Polypharmacy and concurrent use of psychotropic medications was common, raising concern about drug-drug interactions. Safety and effectiveness of medications should be monitored, particularly when used concurrently.
Authors: Yasmina Molero; David James Sharp; Brian Matthew D'Onofrio; Henrik Larsson; Seena Fazel Journal: J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry Date: 2021-02-09 Impact factor: 10.154