Avoiding Inappropriate Medication Prescription in Older Intensive Care Survivors
Inappropriate Medications at Hospital Discharge
Medications typically intended for short-term use during acute illness are sometimes continued after discharge without documented indication [51]. Poudel et al found that in 206 patients 70 years of age and older discharged to residential aged care facilities from acute care, at least 1 PIM was identified in 112 (54.4%) patients on admission and 102 (49.5%) patients on discharge [11]. Commonly prescribed PIM categories, at both admission and discharge, were central nervous system, cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, and respiratory drugs and analgesics [6,11,52,53]. Of all medications prescribed at admission (1728), 10.8% were PIMs, and at discharge, of 1759 medications, 9.6% were PIMs. Of the total 187 PIMs on admission, 56 (30%) were stopped, and 131 (70%) were continued; 32 new PIMs were introduced [11].
Morandi et al in 2011 conducted a prospective cohort study including 120 patients age ≥ 60 who were discharged after receiving care in a medical, surgical, or cardiovascular ICU for shock or respiratory failure. The percentage of patients prescribed at least 1 PIM increased from 66% at pre-admission to 85% at discharge. The number of patients with 0 PIMs dropped from 34% at preadmission to 14% at discharge, and the number of patients with 3 or more PIMS increased from 16% at preadmission to 37% at discharge. While it is possible that these drugs may be appropriate when started during an acute illness in the ICU (eg, stress ulcer prophylaxis with H2-antagonists in mechanically ventilated patients), most should have been discontinued at ICU and/or hospital discharge [21].
Inappropriate prescriptions of proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) in hospital and primary care have been widely reported [54,55]. In a study conducted by Ahrens et al in 31 primary care practices, for 58% (263/506) of patients discharged from 35 hospitals with a PPI recommendation in hospital discharge letters, an appropriate indication was missing. In 57% of these cases general practitioners followed this recommendation and continued the prescription for more than 1 month [54]. The strongest factor associated with appropriate and inappropriate continuation of PPI after discharge was PPI prescription prior to hospitalization [54]. Although PPIs are safe, they can cause adverse effects. PPI intake has been found to have a significant association with risk of community-acquired pneumonia [56,57], hip fractures [58], Clostridium difficile-associated diarrhea [55,61,62], and to reduce the therapeutic effects of bisphosphonates [59] and low-dose aspirin [60].
Unintentional medication continuation is not a problem isolated to a single drug class or disease [63]. Scales et al evaluated rates of and risk factors for potentially unintentional medication continuation following hospitalization in a population of elderly patients (≥ 66 years) [51]. They created distinct cohorts by identifying seniors not previously receiving four classes of medications typically used to treat or prevent complications of acute illness: antipsychotic medications; gastric acid suppressants (ie, histamine-2 blockers and proton pump inhibitors); benzodiazepines; and inhaled bronchodilators and steroids [51]. Prescription without documented indication occurred across all medication classes, from 12,209 patients (1.4 %) for antipsychotic medications to 34,140 patients (6.1 %) for gastric acid suppressants [51].
Several potential risk factors were considered. The relationship between multimorbidity and polypharmacy is well described in the literature, and several studies have identified a positive association between the number of drugs and the use of PIMs [64–66]. Conversely, Poudel et al did not find any association between polypharmacy and PIM use [11]. Associations were found between the use of PIMs, frailty status, and cognitive decline of patients at admission and at discharge [11], while no association was observed with age, gender, in-hospital falls, delirium, and functional decline [11,67]. Other potential risk factors of a high number of PIMs at discharge were a high number of pre-admission PIMs, discharge to a location other than home, and discharge from a surgical service [1,6,68,69]. Length of ICU stay and mechanical ventilation had a positive influence on the number of PIMs used by acutely ill older patients [11,63,69]. In the study of Scales et al, the greatest absolute risk factor across all medication groups was longer hospitalization. The increased OR for medication continuation after a hospitalization lasting more than 7 days ranged from 2.03 (95% CI 1.94–2.11) for respiratory inhalers to 6.35 (95% CI 5.91–6.82) for antipsychotic medications [51].
Inappropriate Medications: Where and How to Intervene?
Early detection of PIMs may prevent adverse drug events and improve geriatric care in older adults [13,70]. PIM prevalence can often be a useful indicator of prescribing quality [2]. Appropriate interventions and an improved quality of prescribed medications require appropriate assessment tools to decrease the number of patients discharged on these medications [71,72]. Medication reconciliation is the process of avoiding inadvertent inconsistencies within a patient’s drug regimen, which can occur during transitions in different setting of care [73]. A multidisciplinary team should be involved in the medication reconciliation at each care transition to reevaluate medications use according to the clinical conditions, cognitive/functional status and the coexistence of geriatric syndromes (eg, dementia, malnutrition, delirium, urinary incontinence, frailty) (Figure).