Maxwell Colleen J, Mondor Luke, Pefoyo Koné Anna J, Hogan David B, Wodchis Walter P
Schools of Pharmacy and Public Health & Health Systems, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.
ICES, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
PLoS One. 2021 Apr 26;16(4):e0250567. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0250567. eCollection 2021.
Multimorbidity is increasing among older adults, but the impact of these recent trends on the extent and complexity of polypharmacy and possible variation by sex remains unknown. We examined sex differences in multimorbidity, polypharmacy (5+ medications) and hyper-polypharmacy (10+ medications) in 2003 vs 2016, and the interactive associations between age, multimorbidity level, and time on polypharmacy measures.
We employed a repeated cross-sectional study design with linked health administrative databases for all persons aged ≥66 years eligible for health insurance in Ontario, Canada at the two index dates. Descriptive analyses and multivariable logistic regression models were conducted; models included interaction terms between age, multimorbidity level, and time period to estimate polypharmacy and hyper-polypharmacy probabilities, risk differences and risk ratios for 2016 vs 2003. Multimorbidity, polypharmacy and hyper-polypharmacy increased significantly over the 13 years. At both index dates prevalence estimates for all three were higher in women, but a greater absolute increase in polypharmacy over time was observed in men (6.6% [from 55.7% to 62.3%] vs 0.9% [64.2%-65.1%] for women) though absolute increases in multimorbidity were similar for men and women (6.9% [72.5%-79.4%] vs 6.2% [75.9%-82.1%], respectively). Model findings showed that polypharmacy decreased over time among women aged < 90 years (especially for younger ages and those with fewer conditions), whereas it increased among men at all ages and multimorbidity levels (with larger absolute increases typically at older ages and among those with 4 or fewer conditions).
There are sex and age differences in the impact of increasing chronic disease burden on changes in measures of multiple medication use among older adults. Though the drivers and health consequences of these trends warrant further investigation, the findings support the heterogeneity and complexity in the evolving association between multimorbidity and polypharmacy measures in older populations.
老年人的多种疾病共患情况日益增多,但这些近期趋势对多重用药的程度和复杂性的影响以及性别差异仍不明确。我们研究了2003年与2016年多种疾病共患、多重用药(服用5种及以上药物)和超多重用药(服用10种及以上药物)方面的性别差异,以及年龄、多种疾病共患水平和时间对多重用药指标的交互关联。
我们采用重复横断面研究设计,利用加拿大安大略省两个索引日期时所有年龄≥66岁且有资格享受医疗保险的人的关联健康管理数据库。进行了描述性分析和多变量逻辑回归模型分析;模型包括年龄、多种疾病共患水平和时间段之间的交互项,以估计2016年与2003年的多重用药和超多重用药概率、风险差异和风险比。在这13年中,多种疾病共患、多重用药和超多重用药显著增加。在两个索引日期,所有这三项的患病率估计女性均高于男性,但随着时间推移,男性多重用药的绝对增加幅度更大(6.6%[从55.7%增至62.3%],而女性为0.9%[从64.2%至65.1%]),尽管男性和女性多种疾病共患的绝对增加幅度相似(分别为6.9%[从72.5%至79.4%]和6.2%[从75.9%至82.1%])。模型结果显示,90岁以下女性的多重用药情况随时间减少(尤其是年轻女性和病情较少者),而所有年龄和多种疾病共患水平的男性多重用药情况均增加(通常年龄较大者和病情为4种及以下者的绝对增加幅度更大)。
在老年人中,慢性病负担增加对多种药物使用指标变化的影响存在性别和年龄差异。尽管这些趋势的驱动因素和健康后果值得进一步研究,但研究结果支持老年人群中多种疾病共患与多重用药指标之间不断演变的关联具有异质性和复杂性。