| Literature DB >> 35761118 |
Mai H Duong1,2, Danijela Gnjidic3,4, Andrew J McLachlan3,4, Marissa A Sakiris5, Parag Goyal6, Sarah N Hilmer7,8.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Frailty is highly prevalent in heart failure populations and a major risk factor for adverse drug reactions (ADRs) and adverse drug events (ADEs). This review aimed to describe the prevalence, causality and severity of ADRs or ADEs from heart failure medications among frail compared with non-frail older adults.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35761118 PMCID: PMC9355931 DOI: 10.1007/s40266-022-00957-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drugs Aging ISSN: 1170-229X Impact factor: 4.271
Fig. 1Search strategy results. HF heart failure, ADR adverse drug reaction, ADE adverse drug event
Summary of study characteristics in frail older people
| Study | Country | Setting (setting, age, study timeframe: follow-up, inclusion, exclusion) | Study population [sample size; mean age, years (SD); no. of females (%)] | HF classification | Frailty definition | Frailty prevalence | Medication (intervention, comparator) | Primary outcomes (severe ADEs) | Definition of adverse outcomes (ADR/ADE) | Secondary outcomes: mild to moderate ADRs/ADEs (prevalence, causality) | Key findings | Level of evidence (GRADE) | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Randomised controlled trials | |||||||||||||
| Dewan et al. (2020) [ | North/Latin America, Western/Central Europe, Asia-Pacific | Multicentre hospital/clinic, 2009–2014: median PARADIGM-HF 26.6 months, ATMOSPHERE 36.7 months) Include: > 75 years of age, frail subgroup analysis Exclude: symptomatic hypotension SBP (< 95 mmHg), eGFR < 35 mL/min/1.73m2, and potassium >5.2 mmol/L | 2098 67.1 (10.3) 882 (24.4%) | HFrEF | Frail FI > 0.210 Subgroups: FI < 0.210 FI 0.211–0.310 FI > 0.311 | 77.4% 37.9% (FI 9.22–0.310) 39.5% (FI > 0.311) | Sacubitril/ valsartan (ARNI), enalapril (ACEI), aliskiren, combined aliskiren and enalapril | Mortality, hospitalisation | ADE | NA for > 75 years of age | Frail with FI > 0.311 had twice the risk of mortality and hospitalisation compared with non-frail ( | Low | Retrospective analysis of two similar clinical trials ( Frailty data for the >75 years of age subgroup ( |
| Observational prospective cohort studies | |||||||||||||
| Ekerstad et al. (2017) [ | Sweden | Single-centre, hospital (TREEE), 2013–2015: 3 months Include: > 75 years of age, frail Exclude: Patients receiving acute care at an organ-specific medical unit (e.g., acute MI, stroke) | 48 85.7 (5.1) 221 (57%) | Both HFrEF/ HFpEF | Frail >2 FRESH: tiredness from short walk, general fatigue, frequent/ anticipation of falls, dependence in shopping and more than three ER visits in the past 12 months | 100% | Digoxin | Rehospitalisation within 30 days | ADR NS >4 or clinical judgement Hallas criteria avoidable hospitalisation | Two ADRs due to digoxin Probable cause of ADR by digoxin NS: falling (NS = 5), nausea, tiredness (NS = 6) Hallas scale: possibly avoidable | HF was the most frequent indication of ADRs causing rehospitalisation Falls, nausea and tiredness from digoxin leading to hospitalisation were preventable ADRs | Very low | 96/390 patients were readmitted early, 48/96 with HF |
| Vidán et al. (2016) [ | Spain | Single-centre, hospital (FRAIL-HF), 2009–2011: up to 1 year Include: > 70 years of age, frail/non-frail Exclude: Severe dependence preadmission (inability to independently perform three or more basic ADLs), moderate to severe dementia (MMS ≤ 15), transferred from nursing home | 450 80 (6.1) 206 (49%) | Both HFrEF/HFpEF | Frail > 3 FP: slowness, weakness, weight loss, exhaustion physical activity | 76% | ACEI/ARB | Mortality (overall survival time from initial admission to death) | ADE | NA | Frailty on ACEI/ARB had no effect on survival ( Frail had a twofold risk of 1-year mortality (HR 2.13, 1.07–4.23) | Very low | 66.5% frail taking an ACEI/ARB |
ACEI angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor, ADEs adverse drug events (no validated method used to screen for ADRs/ADEs), ADLs activities of daily living, ADRs adverse drug reactions, ARB angiotensin receptor blocker, ARNI angiotensin receptor neprilysin inhibitors (i.e. sacubitril/valsartan), eGFR estimated glomerular filtration rate, ER emergency room, FI Frailty Index, FP Frailty Phenotype, FRESH Frail Elderly Support Research group screening instrument, GRADE Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation, HF heart failure, HFpEF heart failure with preserved ejection fraction, HFrEF heart failure with reduced ejection fraction, HR hazard ratio, MI myocardial infarction, MMS mini-mental score, NA not available, NS Naranjo score, SBP systolic blood pressure, SD standard deviation
Fig. 2Severe adverse drug events by Frailty Index Score for sacubitril/valsartan, or enalapril [25]. The p-value interaction for each outcome is provided for treatment effect on overall frailty. HR hazard ratio, CI confidence interval, HF heart failure, CV cardiovascular
Fig. 3The graded quality of evidence in frail compared with non-frail older people summarising the risk of ADRs or ADEs from heart failure medications. *The causes and avoidability of ADRs were defined using the Naranjo and Hallas scales. All other studies were limited to reporting of ADEs. ADRs adverse drug reactions, ADEs adverse drug events, GRADE Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation
| The scarcity of knowledge and uncertainty of reported potential harms from heart failure medications in frail older people, suggests this vulnerable population is very underrepresented in studies. |
| In three studies, there were very low to low levels of evidence in frail older people to support a twofold risk of hospitalisation and mortality with renin-angiotensin system inhibitors, and that falls, nausea and tiredness from digoxin led to possibly avoidable hospital readmissions. |
| There is a need for high-quality research in older heart failure patients to include measures of frailty and frail participants, to inform patient-tailored treatment plans. |