Holton Alice E, Gallagher Paul, Fahey Tom, Cousins Gráinne
School of Pharmacy, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland (RCSI), Dublin 2, Ireland.
HRB Centre for Primary Care Research, Department of General Practice, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland (RCSI), Dublin 2, Ireland.
BMC Geriatr. 2017 Jul 17;17(1):148. doi: 10.1186/s12877-017-0532-2.
Older adults are susceptible to adverse effects from the concurrent use of medications and alcohol. The aim of this study was to systematically review the prevalence of concurrent use of alcohol and alcohol-interactive (AI) medicines in older adults and associated adverse outcomes.
A systematic search was performed using MEDLINE (PubMed), Embase, Scopus and Web of Science (January 1990 to June 2016), and hand searching references of retrieved articles. Observational studies reporting on the concurrent use of alcohol and AI medicines in the same or overlapping recall periods in older adults were included. Two independent reviewers verified that studies met the inclusion criteria, critically appraised included studies and extracted relevant data. A narrative synthesis is provided.
Twenty studies, all cross-sectional, were included. Nine studies classified a wide range of medicines as AI using different medication compendia, thus resulting in heterogeneity across studies. Three studies investigated any medication use and eight focused on psychotropic medications. Based on the quality assessment of included studies, the most reliable estimate of concurrent use in older adults ranges between 21 and 35%. The most reliable estimate of concurrent use of psychotropic medications and alcohol ranges between 7.4 and 7.75%. No study examined longitudinal associations with adverse outcomes. Three cross-sectional studies reported on falls with mixed findings, while one study reported on the association between moderate alcohol consumption and adverse drug reactions at hospital admission.
While there appears to be a high propensity for alcohol-medication interactions in older adults, there is a lack of consensus regarding what constitutes an AI medication. An explicit list of AI medications needs to be derived and validated prospectively to quantify the magnitude of risk posed by the concurrent use of alcohol for adverse outcomes in older adults. This will allow for risk stratification of older adults at the point of prescribing, and prioritise alcohol screening and brief alcohol interventions in high-risk groups.
老年人易受药物与酒精同时使用所产生的不良反应影响。本研究旨在系统回顾老年人中酒精与酒精相互作用(AI)药物同时使用的患病率及相关不良后果。
利用MEDLINE(PubMed)、Embase、Scopus和Web of Science(1990年1月至2016年6月)进行系统检索,并手工检索检索到的文章的参考文献。纳入报告老年人在相同或重叠回忆期内酒精与AI药物同时使用情况的观察性研究。两名独立评审员核实研究符合纳入标准,对纳入研究进行严格评估并提取相关数据。提供了叙述性综合分析。
纳入20项均为横断面研究。9项研究使用不同的药物手册将多种药物归类为AI,因此各研究之间存在异质性。3项研究调查了任何药物的使用情况,8项研究聚焦于精神药物。根据纳入研究的质量评估,老年人同时使用的最可靠估计范围在21%至35%之间。精神药物与酒精同时使用的最可靠估计范围在7.4%至7.75%之间。没有研究考察与不良后果的纵向关联。3项横断面研究报告了跌倒情况,结果不一,而1项研究报告了适度饮酒与入院时药物不良反应之间的关联。
虽然老年人中酒精与药物相互作用的倾向似乎很高,但对于什么构成AI药物缺乏共识。需要前瞻性地得出并验证AI药物的明确清单,以量化老年人同时使用酒精对不良后果造成的风险程度。这将有助于在开处方时对老年人进行风险分层,并在高危人群中优先进行酒精筛查和简短酒精干预。