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Many health care providers believe "less-is-more" for older adults, and evidence suggests minimizing certain medications might improve health outcomes. While this evidence focuses on specific medications believed potentially problematic for seniors, it is really adverse reactions to COMMON medications (e.g. medications lowering blood sugar or treating pain) that bring older adults to emergency departments.
Knowing recommended drug doses are lower in seniors, and knowing most adverse drug reactions are dose-related, the investigators are organizing primary care providers (family physicians and nurse practitioners) to invite their patients 80 years and older on 6 or more medications to review with them whether some medications could be safely reduced.
For drugs treating a symptom (e.g. heartburn), patients and providers will work together to find the lowest dose that provides the same benefit. For drugs that lower blood pressure or blood sugar, doses will be adjusted to keep blood pressure and blood sugar in the upper end of the target range, a range many providers feel to be safer for older adults.
Each provider will invite half their eligible patients to a minimization visit at the start of the study, and invite the other half later - after the health effects of minimizing the early group's medications is assessed. To do this, investigators will compare early minimizers to those whose medicines have not yet changed using electronic health data routinely collected on all Albertans. We hypothesize that minimizing medications will prolong independence, reduce mortality and hospitalization, and improve quality of life.
It is important to recognize that the intervention (reviewing all medications and determining the lowest effective doses) is already widely recommended as best practice when prescribing for older adults. Despite this however, such medication reviews only infrequently take place. In this study investigators hope to demonstrate that family physicians can minimize their own prescribing, and that organizing providers in a way that permits such reviews to take place can provide health benefits to patients.
Full description
PURPOSE
To organize primary care providers, and their older patients with polypharmacy, in a way that permits them to collaboratively determine the lowest effective dose of all amenable medications. And, in so doing, to provide randomized controlled trial evidence as to whether minimizing medication doses improves health outcomes in this population.
HYPOTHESIS
JUSTIFICATION
A) THE PROBLEM
The number of medications used to treat chronic conditions increases with age. "Polypharmacy" is said to be present when the number of daily medications is high, although the threshold to meet that definition (e.g. ≥6 daily medications) is not universally agreed upon.
According to data provided by Alberta Health Services (AHS), 62.2% of community-dwelling Albertans ≥80 yrs (74,525 individuals as of Dec 31, 2016) renew 6 or more medications annually. Many such individuals are frail, and virtually all have multiple chronic conditions that place them at high risk of adverse health events - events that can threaten their independence.
The potential for adverse drug-drug and drug-disease interactions increases exponentially with each additional co-morbidity, and each additional medication. Although prescribed for good reasons, all medications have potential for adverse effects. This is especially true for seniors, who are more susceptible to adverse drug effects, in whom adverse drug effects may go unrecognized, and in whom these drugs are seldom studied (only 7% of cardiovascular trial participants are over 75).
Polypharmacy is associated with disturbances of balance, and deterioration of gait (walking ability). Observational studies that control for comorbidity (the presence of various health conditions) additionally show the number of daily medications to be associated with falls, fractures, adverse drug events, all-cause hospitalization, cognitive impairment, diminished physical function (e.g. ability to cook or clean for yourself), and death. Conceivably, if such associations are causal, reducing the number of medications (termed "deprescribing") might reduce the cost of care while simultaneously improving quality of care, potentially prolonging independence, delaying mortality, and improving a sense of well-being.
B) THE SOLUTION
BACKGROUND: Efforts to reduce polypharmacy typically 1) focus on stopping drugs deemed potentially inappropriate for seniors, and 2) employ external experts (e.g. pharmacists or geriatricians) to evaluate medications and make recommendations to the primary care provider. Although these are undoubtedly valuable reviews, the number of medications stopped following such an intervention is not large. Cochrane systematic review suggests five patients must be reviewed to stop one potentially inappropriate drug, in one patient. However, the vast majority of emergency room visits for adverse drug events are for COMMONLY USED MEDICATIONS that are NOT deemed potentially inappropriate (e.g. glucose lowering medications, opioids, anticoagulants, antihypertensives). Potentially inappropriate drugs make up only 3.4% of such presentations.
A NEW PERSPECTIVE: Most adverse drug reactions are dose-related, the optimal dose of most mediations is lower in seniors, and 2/3 of older adults want to reduce their medications. A simple evidence-based approach that appropriately MINIMIZES (e.g. reduces by 50%) doses of ALL amenable medications in older adults may do more to reduce adverse drug events than targeting the subset of potentially inappropriate medications for discontinuation.
AN UNRECOGNIZED OPPORTUNITY: Relying on external experts to review medication lists is not readily scalable without significant cost. It also produces little change in medications since the usual care provider often declines the changes, citing patient context and history not available to the reviewer. If a mechanism existed to enable primary care providers to rationalize/minimize THEIR OWN PRESCRIBING, it would be far more cost-effective and spreadable.
PILOT DATA: To determine if family physicians can reduce their own prescribing, the investigators organized 2 large clinics to present medication profiles for 44 randomly selected patients (≥80 yrs with ≥6 daily medications) to each patient's provider (14 family physicians, 1-5 patients/physician). These physicians identified 25.2% of medications as potentially reducible or stoppable if patients wanted that and came in for medication review. This compares to 2.5% of medications being stopped (albeit potentially inappropriate medications) in conventional deprescribing trials.
THE TRIAL: The investigators intend to implement organizational changes that will enable primary care providers to focus on minimizing/rationalizing the prescribing of all medications in their older polypharmacy patients - something widely recommended as good geriatric prescribing practice. The intention is to do this in over 150 primary care practices spread widely across Alberta, and use administrative claims data to assess differences in patient-oriented outcomes (e.g. all-cause death, nursing home admission) between those receiving early versus delayed targeting for medication minimization.
OBJECTIVES
RESEARCH METHOD/PROCEDURES
Setting: "Real-World" primary care clinics widely distributed across Alberta.
Population: All community dwelling adults (no exclusions) ≥80 years of age using ≥6 longterm medications.
Design: Parallel randomized controlled trial with patient level randomization. No stratification or blocking, however eligible patients with the same residence (likely to be spouses) will be allocated to the same study arm to minimize confounding.
Intervention: Workflow efficiencies enabling patients and their usual primary care provider to work together on minimizing medication dosages - i.e. advising providers of eligible patients, arranging minimization specific visits, "brown-bag" review of medications, symptom-driven minimization, and adding a lower limit to the target range for blood pressure (e.g. systolic BP 130-140 mmHg), and blood sugar (e.g. HbA1c 7.5-8.0).
Comparator: Usual care
Outcomes:
All outcomes are derived from administrative claims data that are collected, accessed, and analyzed by Alberta Health Services (Alberta Provincial Government). Specific outcomes are listed below.
STUDY FLOW:
PLAN FOR DATA ANALYSIS
All data analysis will be conducted by AHS data analysts. At no time will the investigators view or receive identifiable patient level data. Only the analysts/programmers working for the data steward, and the care providers, will know who the participants are.
Most primary / secondary / safety outcomes will be analyzed by Cox proportional hazards survival analysis or multiple linear regression utilizing covariates predictive of the outcome of interest. These covariates will be analysis specific, and pre-identified in an upcoming protocol publication.
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1,800 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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