Hajjar Emily R, Cafiero Angela C, Hanlon Joseph T
Philadelphia College of Pharmacy, University of the Sciences in Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 15213, USA.
Am J Geriatr Pharmacother. 2007 Dec;5(4):345-51. doi: 10.1016/j.amjopharm.2007.12.002.
Polypharmacy (ie, the use of multiple medications and/or the administration of more medications than are clinically indicated, representing unnecessary drug use) is common among the elderly.
The goal of this research was to provide a description of observational studies examining the epidemiology of polypharmacy and to review randomized controlled studies that have been published in the past 2 decades designed to reduce polypharmacy in older adults.
Materials for this review were gathered from a search of the MEDLINE database (1986-June 2007) and International Pharmaceutical Abstracts (1986-June 2007) to identify articles in people aged >65 years. We used a combination of the following search terms: polypharmacy, multiple medications, polymedicine, elderly, geriatric, and aged. A manual search of the reference lists from identified articles and the authors' article files, book chapters, and recent reviews was conducted to identify additional articles. From these, the authors identified those studies that measured polypharmacy.
The literature review found that polypharmacy continues to increase and is a known risk factor for important morbidity and mortality. There are few rigorously designed intervention studies that have been shown to reduce unnecessary polypharmacy in older adults. The literature review identified 5 articles, which are included here. All studies showed an improvement in polypharmacy.
Many studies have found that various numbers of medications are associated with negative health outcomes, but more research is needed to further delineate the consequences associated with unnecessary drug use in elderly patients. Health care professionals should be aware of the risks and fully evaluate all medications at each patient visit to prevent polypharmacy from occurring.
多重用药(即使用多种药物和/或使用的药物数量超过临床指征,代表不必要的药物使用)在老年人中很常见。
本研究的目的是描述观察性研究中多重用药的流行病学情况,并回顾过去20年发表的旨在减少老年人多重用药的随机对照研究。
通过检索MEDLINE数据库(1986年 - 2007年6月)和国际药学文摘(1986年 - 2007年6月)收集本综述的资料,以识别65岁以上人群的文章。我们使用了以下搜索词的组合:多重用药、多种药物、多药治疗、老年人、老年病学、老龄。对已识别文章的参考文献列表以及作者的文章文件、书籍章节和近期综述进行人工检索,以识别其他文章。作者从这些文章中确定了那些测量多重用药情况的研究。
文献综述发现,多重用药情况持续增加,并且是重要发病和死亡的已知危险因素。很少有经过严格设计的干预研究表明可以减少老年人不必要的多重用药情况。文献综述确定了5篇文章,此处予以收录。所有研究均显示多重用药情况有所改善。
许多研究发现,不同数量的药物与负面健康结果相关,但需要更多研究来进一步阐明老年患者不必要药物使用的相关后果。医疗保健专业人员应意识到这些风险,并在每次接诊患者时全面评估所有药物,以防止多重用药情况的发生。