| Literature DB >> 35723858 |
Francesca Remelli1, Maria Giorgia Ceresini1, Caterina Trevisan1,2, Marianna Noale3, Stefano Volpato1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Polypharmacy is a prevalent condition in older adults, especially those with multiple chronic diseases, and has been largely associated with adverse outcomes, including disability, hospitalizations, and death. AIMS: This systematic review focused on diabetes and aimed to investigate the prevalence and impact of polypharmacy in older adults affected by such disease.Entities:
Keywords: Aged; Diabetes; Mortality; Polypharmacy; Review
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35723858 PMCID: PMC9464133 DOI: 10.1007/s40520-022-02165-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aging Clin Exp Res ISSN: 1594-0667 Impact factor: 4.481
Fig. 1Flow diagram of the study selection
Main characteristics of the nine identified studies
| Author/year | Cohort (Country) | Study design (observation period) | Population characteristics | Age (years) | Sex (F) | Definition of polypharmacy | Outcome | Prevalence of polypharmacy | Results | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Al-Musawe et al., 2020 [ | Population-based study, Portugal | Cross-sectional | 670 individuals with diabetes | Mean 73.0 (SD: 6.2) | 49.6% | > 5 drugs | Quality of Life (QoL) | 72.1% | Polypharmacy was associated with severe problems in mobility ( | Polypharmacy is associated with worse QoL in older adults with diabetes |
| Amin et al | Population-based study, Kurdistan | Cross-sectional | 150 individuals with diabetes ≥ 65 years | Mean 77.7 (SD: 7.11) | 59% | ≥ 4 drugs | Fall history | 61% | Polypharmacy was highly prevalent among older adults with diabetes. No estimates on the association between polypharmacy and fall history were provided | Polypharmacy is a prevalent condition in older adults with diabetes |
| Bernier et al., 2012 [ | Population-based study, United States | Retrospective (2 years) | 120 individuals with diabetes ≥ 65 years | Median 75 [IQR 69–82] | 57.5% | > 5 drugs | Glycemic control (HbA1c blood level) | 97.5% | The total number of medications took daily was inversely associated with glycemic control (OR 0.28, 95% CI 0.10–1.80, per each 1-drug increase) | Polypharmacy is associated with poor glucose control in diabetes |
| Forbes et al | THIN data set, United Kingdom | Prospective (10 years) | 337,635 individuals (35,717 diabetic) ≥ 70 years | Diabetic: Mean 78.98 (SD 6.36) Nondiabetic: Mean 78.13 (SD 5.82) | Diabetic: 60.7% Nondiabetic: 52.3% | Four groups based on the number of drugs: 0–2 3–4 5–6 ≥ 7 | 1, 5, 10-year mortality | 0–2 drugs: 33.5% 3–4 drugs: 35.8% 5–6 drugs: 23.4% ≥ 7 drugs: 7.3% | Polypharmacy was associated with higher mortality, with stronger results in the younger age groups (70–74 and 75–79 years). The association was confirmed both in diabetic and, more markedly, in non-diabetic individuals | Polypharmacy is associated with higher mortality both in diabetic and non-diabetic older adults |
| Kabue et al | SUPREME- DM DataLink project, United States | Retrospective (1 year) | 120,256 individuals with diabetes ≥ 65 years | Mean 73 (SD: 6.8) | 49.5% | 5–9 drugs (polypharmacy) ≥ 10 drugs (hyper-polypharmacy) | Hypoglycemia, hip fractures, syncope, emergency department (ED) or hospital admissions, 1-year mortality | Prevalence: N/A Number of medications, median (5) and mean 5 (SD: 3.4) | Compared with the use of < 5 drugs/day, hyper-polypharmacy was associated with an increased risk of hypoglycemia (OR 2.46; 95% CI 1.59–3.82). Both polypharmacy and hyper-polypharmacy were associated with higher odds of syncope, ED or hospital admissions, and 1-year mortality. No significant results were observed for hip fractures | The use of multiple drugs is associated with a higher risk of experiencing hypoglycemia, syncope, hospital admission, and death |
| McCracken et al., 2017 [ | Population-based study, Canada | Cross-sectional | 214 nursing home residents (57 with diabetes) | With polypharmacy: Mean 84 (SD: 10) Without polypharmacy: Mean 86 (SD: 9) | 68.7% (total sample) | ≥ 9 drugs | Glycemic control (HbA1c blood level) | 57.9% | Polypharmacy showed a marginal significant association with overtreated diabetes (RR 4.0, 95%; CI 0.97–16.41; | Polypharmacy is associated with more intensive treatment of diabetes |
| Noale et al | METABOLIC Study data set, Italy | Cross-sectional | 1,342 individuals with diabetes ≥ 65 years | Mean 73.3 (SD: 5.5) | 47.5% | ≥ 5 drugs | Hypoglycemia, chronic diabetes-related complications | 57.1% | Patients with polypharmacy had a longer median duration of diabetes (10 vs 8 years, (15.8% vs 6.9%, | Older diabetic patients with polypharmacy have more hypoglycemic events and diabetes-related complications compared to those using fewer drugs |
| Oktora et al | IADB.nl database, Netherlands | Cross-sectional (over 5 years) | 24,809 individuals with diabetes ≥ 45 years (15,267 ≥ 65 years) in 2016 | 61.5% of the total sample with age ≥ 65 years | N/A | ≥ 5 drugs | Potentially inappropriate medication (PIM) prevalence | 66.2% (in 2016)* | From 2012 to 2016 there was a slight increase in the prevalence of polypharmacy. Instead, the frequency of older people with polypharmacy and at least one PIM showed a decreasing trend from 2012, and it was 24.9% in 2016 | Almost a quarter of older diabetic patients with polypharmacy had also at least one PIM |
| Yang et al | Population-based study, Taiwan | Cross-sectional | 316 individuals with diabetes > 60 years | Mean 69.6 (SD: 6.6) | 49% | ≥ 5 drugs | Quality of Life (QoL) | 46.6% | Polypharmacy was the most common geriatric syndrome in individuals with diabetes. There were no differences in QoL scores between individuals with vs without polypharmacy. The number of medications significantly contributed to the social domain of QoL, and marginal significant results were found for the physical and environmental domains | Polypharmacy is highly prevalent in older adults with diabetes. The use of multiple medications may be negatively associated with QoL |
*The prevalence of polypharmacy refers to individuals aged 65 years or older
Fig. 2Pooled prevalence of polypharmacy in the nine selected studies (a) and in the four studies defining polypharmacy as ≥ 5 medications/day (b)
Fig. 3New findings highlighted by the present review
Major strategies for the clinical management of polypharmacy in older patients with diabetes
| Main strategies to manage polypharmacy in older people with diabetes |
|---|
| Regular pharmacological review of the ongoing therapies |
| Pharmacological deprescription of potentially inappropriate medications |
| Revision of glycemic targets according to patient’s health status |
| Prescription of antidiabetic therapy based on patient’s social context and skills, assessed by the comprehensive geriatric assessment |
| Deintensification of antidiabetic therapy using long-acting medications |
| Promotion of healthy dietary habits (e.g. reducing the carbohydrates per meal) |
| Promotion of physical activity with realistic goals (e.g. walking at home at least for 15–20 min daily) |