Laflamme Lucie, Monárrez-Espino Joel, Johnell Kristina, Elling Berty, Möller Jette
Karolinska Institutet, Department of Public Health Sciences, Stockholm, Sweden.
Aging Research Center, Karolinska Institutet and Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden.
PLoS One. 2015 Mar 27;10(3):e0123390. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0123390. eCollection 2015.
Drug use is a modifiable risk factor for fall-related injuries in older people. Whereas the injurious effect of polypharmacy is established, that of low numbers of medications has not been fully ascertained. Neither do we know whether it is the number per se or the type of medications that actually matters. We assessed this question for fall injuries leading to hospitalization.
National register-based, population-based, matched case-control study.
Community dwellers aged 65+ years living in Sweden between March 2006 and December 2009.
Cases (n = 64,399) were identified in the national inpatient register and four controls per case were randomly matched by gender, date of birth and residential area. The association between number of prescribed medications, assessed through linkage with the Swedish prescribed drug register, and the risk of injurious falls was estimated with odds ratios with 95% confidence intervals using conditional logistic regression, adjusted for demographic and health status.
The number of medications was associated with an increased risk of fall injury in a dose-response fashion, even after adjustment for marital status, comorbidity and number of fall-risk-inducing drugs (FRIDs). Using ten or more medications was associated with an almost two-fold higher risk (adjusted OR: 1.76, 95% CI: 1.66 to 1.88). When stratified by use (or not) of at least one FRID, the association weakened slightly among both non-users (adjusted OR: 1.50, 95% CI: 1.34 to 1.67) and users (adjusted OR: 1.67, 95% CI: 1.58 to 1.77).
In older people, not only large but also small numbers of medications may affect the risk for them to sustain injurious falls. Although the mechanisms lying behind this are complex, the finding challenges the prevention strategies targeting either specific types of medications (FRIDs) or high numbers of them.
药物使用是老年人跌倒相关伤害的一个可改变的风险因素。虽然多重用药的有害影响已得到证实,但少量药物的影响尚未完全确定。我们也不知道究竟是药物数量本身还是药物类型真正重要。我们针对导致住院的跌倒伤害评估了这个问题。
基于全国登记册的、以人群为基础的匹配病例对照研究。
2006年3月至2009年12月期间居住在瑞典的65岁及以上社区居民。
在国家住院登记册中识别出病例(n = 64399),并按性别、出生日期和居住地区为每个病例随机匹配四名对照。通过与瑞典处方药登记册联动评估的处方药数量与伤害性跌倒风险之间的关联,使用条件逻辑回归估计比值比及95%置信区间,并对人口统计学和健康状况进行了调整。
即使在调整婚姻状况、合并症和跌倒风险诱导药物(FRID)数量后,药物数量仍以剂量反应方式与跌倒伤害风险增加相关。使用十种或更多药物与几乎两倍的更高风险相关(调整后的比值比:1.76,95%置信区间:1.66至1.88)。按是否使用至少一种FRID进行分层时,在非使用者(调整后的比值比:1.50,95%置信区间:1.34至1.67)和使用者(调整后的比值比:1.67,95%置信区间:1.58至1.77)中,这种关联均略有减弱。
在老年人中,不仅大量用药而且少量用药都可能影响他们遭受伤害性跌倒的风险。尽管其背后的机制很复杂,但这一发现对针对特定类型药物(FRID)或大量药物的预防策略提出了挑战。