| Literature DB >> 30065350 |
Sara J T Guilcher1,2,3,4, Mary-Ellen Hogan5, Andrew Calzavara6, Sander L Hitzig7,8,9,10, Tejal Patel11,12,13,14, Tanya Packer15,16,17, Aisha K Lofters6,18,19.
Abstract
STUDYEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30065350 PMCID: PMC6218396 DOI: 10.1038/s41393-018-0174-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Spinal Cord ISSN: 1362-4393 Impact factor: 2.772
Fig. 1Participant flow chart. Prior to exclusions, we identified 2667 persons with traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) between 2004 and 2014. After exclusions, we had a final cohort of 418 individuals ≥66 years of age with complete data and alive during our observation window
Population characteristics of individuals ≥ 66 years of age with a traumatic spinal cord injury (fiscal years 2004–2014), Ontario, Canada (n = 418)
| Overall | Polypharmacy (≥ 10 drug classes) | < 10 drug classes | Females | Males | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Female, | 153 (37) | 88 (38) | 65 (35) | 153 (100) | NA |
| Age at injury, mean (SD) | 75 (6) | 74 (6) | 75 (7) | 76 (6) | 74 (6)** |
| Injury level, | |||||
| 1 (cervical) | 321 (77) | 173 (74) | 148 (80) | 110 (72) | 211 (80) |
| 2 to 4 (thoracic, lumbar, sacral) | 97 (23) | 60 (26) | 37 (20) | 43 (28) | 54 (20) |
| Income quintile, | |||||
| 1 (low) | 72 (17) | 32 (17) | 40 (17) | 29 (19) | 43 (16) |
| 2 | 94 (22) | 45 (24) | 49 (21) | 37 (24) | 57 (22) |
| 3 | 81 (19) | 31 (17) | 50 (22) | 26 (17) | 55 (21) |
| 4 | 77 (18) | 34 (18) | 43 (18) | 29 (19) | 48 (18) |
| 5 (high) | 94 (22) | 43 (23) | 51 (22) | 32 (21) | 62 (23) |
| Deprivation quintile, | |||||
| 1 (least deprived) | 93 (22) | 49 (21) | 44 (24) | 36 (24) | 57 (22)* |
| 2 | 99 (24) | 54 (23) | 45 (24) | 29 (19) | 70 (26) |
| 3 | 82 (20) | 48 (21) | 34 (18) | 23 (15) | 59 (22) |
| 4 | 85 (20) | 52 (22) | 33 (18) | 41 (27) | 44 (17) |
| 5 (most deprived) | 59 (14) | 30 (13) | 29 (16) | 24 (16) | 35 (13) |
| Continuity of care with a single health care provider, | |||||
| <50% (low continuity of care) | 251 (60) | 154 (66) | 97 (52)** | 53 (35) | 99 (37) |
| 50–75% | 126 (30) | 65 (28) | 61 (33) | 62 (41) | 108 (41) |
| >75% (best continuity of care) | 41 (10) | 14 (6) | 27 (15) | 38 (25) | 58 (22) |
| ADG quintile, | |||||
| 1 (low comorbidity) | 70 (17) | 28 (12) | 42 (23)** | 18 (12) | 52 (20)** |
| 2 | 119 (28) | 58 (25) | 61 (33) | 33 (22) | 86 (32) |
| 3 | 63 (15) | 42 (18) | 21 (11) | 26 (17) | 37 (14) |
| 4 | 94 (22) | 55 (24) | 39 (21) | 39 (25) | 55 (21) |
| 5 (high comorbidity) | 72 (17) | 50 (21) | 22 (12) | 37 (24) | 35 (13) |
| Pre-injury drug classes, mean (SD) | 8 (6) | 10 (6) | 5 (4)** | 10 (7) | 8 (6)** |
| In-patient rehab, | 241 (58) | 146 (63) | 95 (51)* | 78 (51) | 163 (62)* |
| Days in rehab, median (IQR)d | 66 (40–99) | 76 (42–107) | 56 (35–86)** | 59 (30–81) | 72 (42–107)** |
NA not applicable
aMaterial deprivation is a dimension of the Ontario Marginalization Index and incorporates education attainment, single parent families, government transfer payments, unemployment, income, and homes in poor repair.
b
cADG = Aggregated diagnosis groups, Johns Hopkins ACG® system. A system to classify health conditions in administrative health data over 2 years pre-injury. Larger numbers of ADGs reflect more comorbidity.
dFor those who were admitted to inpatient rehabilitation (n = 241)
*p < 0.05
**p < 0.01
Prescribed medications, chronic conditions and continuity of care pre- and post-injury, for individuals ≥ 66 years of age with a traumatic spinal cord injury (fiscal years 2004–2014), Ontario, Canada (n = 418)
| ≥ 66 years of age ( |
| ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 year pre-injury | 1 year post-injury | ||
| Prescribed drug classes, | |||
| 0 | 28 (7) | 23 (6) | <0.01 |
| 1–4 | 110 (26) | 31 (7) | |
| 5–9 | 137 (33) | 131 (31) | |
| 10–19 | 126 (30) | 205 (49) | |
| 20+ | 17 (4) | 28 (7) | |
| Chronic conditions, | |||
| Asthma | 53 (13) | 57 (14) | 0.125 |
| Congestive heart failure | 48 (11) | 64 (15) | <0.01 |
| Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease | 45 (11) | 63 (15) | <0.01 |
| Hypertension | 303 (72) | 319 (76) | <0.01 |
| Diabetes | 135 (32) | 144 (34) | <0.01 |
| Rheumatoid arthritis | 15 (4) | 18 (4) | 0.250 |
| Dementia | 26 (6) | 26 (6) | 1.00 |
| Continuity of care, | |||
| <50% | 152 (36) | 251 (60) | <0.01 |
| 50–75% | 170 (41) | 126 (30) | |
| >75% | 96 (23) | 41 (10) | |
aWilcoxon sign rank test
bMcNemar test
Fig. 2Most common drug classes used by individuals ≥66 years of age with a traumatic spinal cord injury (fiscal years 2004–2014), Ontario, Canada (n = 418). Only drug classes >25% are shown
Fig. 3Risk of polypharmacy (10+ drugs) for individuals ≥66 years of age with a traumatic spinal cord injury (fiscal years 2004–2014), Ontario, Canada (n = 418). Relative risks greater than 1 are associated with polypharmacy. ADG quintile 1 = low comorbidity. Deprivation quintile 5 = most deprived. Results are adjusted for length of stay in rehabilitation facility, level of injury and number of pre-injury drugs