Lindsay Julian, Dooley Michael, Martin Jennifer, Fay Michael, Kearney Alison, Khatun Mohsina, Barras Michael
Royal North Shore Hospital, New South Wales, Australia, Monash University, Victoria, Australia,
Support Care Cancer. 2015 Jan;23(1):71-8. doi: 10.1007/s00520-014-2322-0. Epub 2014 Jul 1.
Current data suggests that potentially inappropriate medicines (PIMs) are common in palliative cancer patients; however, there is a lack of criteria to assist clinicians in identifying PIMs in these patients. The aims of this study were to design and validate a deprescribing guideline for palliative cancer patients and to undertake a descriptive analysis of the identified PIMs.
This prospective, non-interventional cohort study consisted of four major stages: developing an 'OncPal Deprescribing Guideline' from current evidence, the prospective recruitment of consecutive palliative cancer inpatients with an estimated <6-month prognosis, the assessment of all medications to identify PIMs using both a panel of medical experts without access to the guideline as well as a Clinical Pharmacist independently using the OncPal Deprescribing Guideline and the evaluation of the guideline by testing concordance. Descriptive data on the incidence of PIMs identified were also assessed.
A total of 61 patients were recruited. The OncPal Deprescribing Guideline matched 94% of 617 medicines to the expert panel with a Kappa value of 0.83 [95% CI (0.76, 0.89)] demonstrating an 'outstanding' concordance. Forty-three (70%) patients were taking at least one PIM, with 21.4% of the total medicines assessed identified as PIMs. The medication-associated cost per patient/month was AUD$26.71.
A guideline to assist in the de-escalation of inappropriate medications in palliative cancer patients was developed from current literature. The OncPal Deprescribing Guideline was successfully validated, demonstrating statistically significant concordance with an expert panel. We found that the incidence of PIMs was high in our patient group, demonstrating the potential benefits for the OncPal Deprescribing Guideline in clinical practice.
目前的数据表明,潜在不适当用药(PIMs)在癌症姑息治疗患者中很常见;然而,缺乏帮助临床医生识别这些患者中PIMs的标准。本研究的目的是设计并验证一项针对癌症姑息治疗患者的减药指南,并对识别出的PIMs进行描述性分析。
这项前瞻性、非干预性队列研究包括四个主要阶段:根据现有证据制定“OncPal减药指南”;前瞻性招募预计预后<6个月的连续癌症姑息治疗住院患者;使用一组无法获取该指南的医学专家以及一名临床药师独立使用OncPal减药指南对所有药物进行评估,以识别PIMs;通过测试一致性来评估该指南。还评估了所识别的PIMs发生率的描述性数据。
共招募了61名患者。OncPal减药指南将617种药物中的94%与专家小组的判断相匹配,Kappa值为0.83 [95%置信区间(0.76,0.89)],显示出“出色”的一致性。43名(70%)患者至少服用了一种PIM,在评估的所有药物中,有21.4%被确定为PIMs。每位患者每月与药物相关的费用为26.71澳元。
根据现有文献制定了一项有助于减少癌症姑息治疗患者不适当用药的指南。OncPal减药指南成功得到验证,与专家小组的判断具有统计学上的显著一致性。我们发现我们的患者群体中PIMs的发生率很高,这表明OncPal减药指南在临床实践中具有潜在益处。