Ahmed Bilal, Nanji Kashmira, Mujeeb Rakshinda, Patel Muhammad Junaid
Department of Medicine, Aga Khan University, Karachi, Pakistan.
Department of Family Medicine, Aga Khan University, Karachi, Pakistan.
PLoS One. 2014 Nov 17;9(11):e112133. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0112133. eCollection 2014.
Adverse drug reactions (ADRs) present a challenging and expensive public health problem. Polypharmacy is defined according to the WHO criteria as the, "concurrent use of five or more different prescription medication". Elderly are more prone to adverse reactions due to comorbid conditions, longer lists of medications and sensitivity to drug effects. The aim of the study is to estimate the incidence and strength of association of ADRs due to polypharmacy among the geriatric cohort attending outpatient clinics at a tertiary care center.
A hospital based prospective cohort study was conducted at ambulatory care clinics of Aga Khan University Hospital April 2012 to March 2013. One thousand geriatrics patients (age ≥ 65 years) visiting ambulatory clinics were identified. They were divided on the basis of exposure (polypharmacy vs. no polypharmacy). We followed them from the time of their enrollment (day zero) to six weeks, checking up on them once a week. Incidence was calculated and Cox Proportional Hazard Model estimates were used.
The final analysis was performed on 1000 elderly patients. The occurrence of polypharmacy was 70% and the incidence of ADRs was 10.5% among the study cohort. The majority (30%) of patients were unable to read or write. The use of herbal medicine was reported by 3.2% of the patients and homeopathic by 3%. Our Cox adjusted model shows that polypharmacy was 2.3 times more associated with ADRs, con-current complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) was 7.4 times and those who cannot read and write were 1.5 times more associated with ADRs.
The incidence of ADRs due to poly pharmacy is alarmingly high. The factors associated with ADRs are modifiable. Policies are needed to design and strengthen the prescription pattern.
药物不良反应(ADR)是一个具有挑战性且成本高昂的公共卫生问题。根据世界卫生组织的标准,多重用药被定义为“同时使用五种或更多不同的处方药”。老年人由于合并症、用药清单较长以及对药物作用敏感,更容易出现不良反应。本研究的目的是估计在一家三级医疗中心门诊就诊的老年人群中,多重用药导致的药物不良反应的发生率及关联强度。
2012年4月至2013年3月,在阿迦汗大学医院的门诊护理诊所进行了一项基于医院的前瞻性队列研究。确定了1000名到门诊就诊的老年患者(年龄≥65岁)。他们根据暴露情况(多重用药与非多重用药)进行分组。从入组时间(第零天)开始对他们进行为期六周的随访,每周检查一次。计算发病率并使用Cox比例风险模型进行估计。
对1000名老年患者进行了最终分析。研究队列中多重用药的发生率为70%,药物不良反应的发生率为10.5%。大多数患者(30%)无法读写。3.2%的患者报告使用草药,3%的患者报告使用顺势疗法药物。我们的Cox校正模型显示,多重用药与药物不良反应的关联度高2.3倍,同时使用补充和替代医学(CAM)与药物不良反应的关联度高7.4倍,无法读写的患者与药物不良反应的关联度高1.5倍。
多重用药导致的药物不良反应发生率高得惊人。与药物不良反应相关的因素是可以改变的。需要制定政策来设计和加强处方模式。