Department of Medicine Cork, University College Cork National University of Ireland, Munster, IE, Ireland.
Department of Geriatric Medicine Cork, Cork University Hospital Group, Munster, IE, Ireland.
Age Ageing. 2019 Jan 1;48(1):10-13. doi: 10.1093/ageing/afy157.
Adverse drug reactions (ADRs) are a recognised unintentional form of iatrogenic harm, which commonly occur in older adults who have high levels of multi-morbidity and associated polypharmacy. Previous studies estimate that at least one in 10 hospitalised older patients will experience an ADR. While recent research indicates that this could be as high as 39% in hospitalised multi-morbid, older adults, up to two-thirds of these ADRs can be considered preventable and therefore potentially avoidable. In addition to increasing patient morbidity and contributing to avoidable mortality, there is an associated cost implication with ADR occurrence. This commentary summarises current mainstream research in terms of ADR detection, prediction and prevention in multi-morbid older patients. At present, the biggest barrier to understanding and comparing ADRs in the literature is the large heterogeneity that exists in the population and study methods. Furthermore, there is the lack of standardised universally accepted methodology for ADR prediction, detection, causality assessment and subsequent prevention in older people. Standard available methods of ADR prediction applied to a heterogeneous multi-morbid population are generally unsatisfactory. Without an instrument that consistently and reliably predicts ADR risk in a reproducible manner, ADR prevention in multi-morbid older patients is challenging. Further attention should be focused on the culprit drugs that commonly lead to major ADRs in older multi-morbid hospitalised patients with polypharmacy. Risk associated with particular drug classes may possibly predict ADR occurrence better than patient characteristics alone. Current research is examining this drug class focus for ADR prevention in multi-morbid older people.
药物不良反应(ADR)是一种公认的非故意的医源性伤害形式,通常发生在患有多种疾病和相关多种药物治疗的老年人中。先前的研究估计,至少有十分之一的住院老年患者会经历药物不良反应。尽管最近的研究表明,住院的多病、老年患者中这一比例可能高达 39%,但多达三分之二的药物不良反应是可以预防的,因此是可以避免的。除了增加患者的发病率和导致可避免的死亡率外,药物不良反应的发生还会带来相关的成本影响。本评论总结了目前关于多病老年患者药物不良反应的检测、预测和预防的主流研究。目前,理解和比较文献中药物不良反应的最大障碍是人群和研究方法中存在的巨大异质性。此外,在老年人中,药物不良反应预测、检测、因果关系评估和随后的预防缺乏标准化的普遍接受的方法。应用于异质多病人群的标准可用药物不良反应预测方法通常不能令人满意。如果没有一种能够以可重复的方式一致可靠地预测药物不良反应风险的工具,那么多病老年患者的药物不良反应预防就具有挑战性。应进一步关注导致患有多种疾病和接受多种药物治疗的住院老年患者发生重大药物不良反应的常见罪魁祸首药物。与特定药物类别相关的风险可能比患者特征本身更能预测药物不良反应的发生。目前的研究正在针对多病老年人的药物不良反应预防,检查这种药物类别重点。