Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Department of Laboratory Medicine, Lund University, Lund, Sweden.
Department of Health Sciences, Lund University, Lund, Sweden.
PLoS One. 2018 Jun 19;13(6):e0199218. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0199218. eCollection 2018.
Falls are the most common cause of injury for older people in the general population as well as among those with intellectual disability. There are many risk factors for falls, including a range of drugs which are considered to be fall-risk-increasing (FRIDs). The aim of the present study was to describe prescription patterns of FRIDs in itself as well as in relation to falls requiring health care among older people with intellectual disability and their age-peers in the general population. Moreover, to investigate possible differences between the two groups.
A cohort of people with intellectual disability and a referent cohort, one-to-one-matched by sex and year of birth, were established. Each cohort comprised 7936 people aged 55+ years at the end of 2012. Register data were collected for 2006-2012 on prescription of antidepressants, anxiolytics, hypnotics and sedatives, opioids, and antipsychotics, as well as for fall-related health care contacts. Analyses were performed on yearly data, using repeated measures models.
People with intellectual disability were more likely to be prescribed at least one FRID (Relative Risk [RR] 2.31). The increase was highest for antipsychotics (RR 25.0), followed by anxiolytics (RR 4.18), antidepressants (RR 2.72), and hypnotics and sedatives (RR 1.42). For opioids, however, a lower prevalence (RR 0.74) was found. In both cohorts, those with prescription of at least one FRID were more likely to have a fall-related injury that required health care. The increased risk was higher in the referent cohort (RR 3.98) than among people with intellectual disability (RR 2.27), although people with intellectual disability and prescription still had a higher risk of falls than those with prescription in the referent cohort (RR 1.27). A similar pattern was found for all drug groups, except for opioids, where prescription carried the same risk of having a fall-related injury that required health care in both cohorts.
With or without prescription of FRIDs, older people with ID have a higher risk of falls requiring health care than their age-peers in the general population. It is important to be aware of this when prescribing drugs that further increase the risk of falls.
在普通人群和智力障碍人群中,跌倒都是老年人受伤的最常见原因。有许多跌倒的风险因素,包括一系列被认为增加跌倒风险的药物(FRIDs)。本研究的目的是描述智力障碍老年人自身以及与普通人群中年龄相匹配的老年人跌倒相关医疗保健需求中 FRIDs 的处方模式。此外,还调查了两组之间可能存在的差异。
建立了一个智力障碍人群队列和一个参考队列,通过性别和出生年份一对一匹配。每个队列都包括 7936 名在 2012 年底年龄在 55 岁以上的人。收集了 2006-2012 年的处方数据,包括抗抑郁药、抗焦虑药、催眠镇静剂和安定药、阿片类药物和抗精神病药,以及与跌倒相关的医疗保健接触。使用重复测量模型对每年的数据进行分析。
智力障碍者更有可能开至少一种 FRID(相对风险 [RR] 2.31)。抗精神病药的增幅最高(RR 25.0),其次是抗焦虑药(RR 4.18)、抗抑郁药(RR 2.72)和催眠镇静剂(RR 1.42)。然而,阿片类药物的处方率较低(RR 0.74)。在两个队列中,至少有一种 FRID 处方的人更有可能因跌倒受伤而需要医疗保健。在参考队列中,风险增加更高(RR 3.98),而在智力障碍者中(RR 2.27)则较低,尽管智力障碍者和处方的人比参考队列中处方的人跌倒受伤的风险更高(RR 1.27)。除了阿片类药物外,所有药物组都呈现出类似的模式,在这两种队列中,处方都会增加跌倒受伤需要医疗保健的风险。
无论是否开 FRIDs,智力障碍老年人因跌倒受伤需要医疗保健的风险都高于普通人群中年龄相匹配的老年人。在开具可能进一步增加跌倒风险的药物时,这一点很重要。