University of South Australia, UniSA: Clinical and Health Sciences, Quality Use of Medicines and Pharmacy Research Centre (QUMPRC), Adelaide, SA, Australia.
University of Sydney, Sydney School of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine and Health, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci. 2022 May 5;77(5):1020-1034. doi: 10.1093/gerona/glab222.
Harmful and/or unnecessary medication use in older adults is common. This indicates deprescribing (supervised withdrawal of inappropriate medicines) is not happening as often as it should. This study aimed to synthesize the results of the Patients' Attitudes Towards Deprescribing (PATD) questionnaire (and revised versions).
Databases were searched from January 2013 to March 2020. Google Scholar was used for citation searching of the development and validation manuscripts to identify original research using the validated PATD, revised PATD (older adult and caregiver versions), and the version for people with cognitive impairment (rPATDcog). Two authors extracted data independently. A meta-analysis of proportions (random-effects model) was conducted with subgroup meta-analyses for setting and population. The primary outcome was the question: "If my doctor said it was possible, I would be willing to stop one or more of my medicines." Secondary outcomes were associations between participant characteristics and primary outcome and other (r)PATD results.
We included 46 articles describing 40 studies (n = 10,816 participants). The meta-analysis found the proportion of participants who agreed or strongly agreed with this statement was 84% (95% CI 81%-88%) and 80% (95% CI 74%-86%) in patients and caregivers, respectively, with significant heterogeneity (I2 = 95% and 77%).
Consumers reported willingness to have a medication deprescribed although results should be interpreted with caution due to heterogeneity. The findings from this study moves toward understanding attitudes toward deprescribing, which could increase the discussion and uptake of deprescribing recommendations in clinical practice.
老年人中有害和/或不必要的药物使用很常见。这表明,不应该经常进行去处方(监督不当药物的停用)。本研究旨在综合 Patients' Attitudes Towards Deprescribing(PATD)问卷(及其修订版)的研究结果。
从 2013 年 1 月到 2020 年 3 月,数据库被搜索。谷歌学术用于检索开发和验证文献的引文,以确定使用经过验证的 PATD、修订版 PATD(老年患者和护理人员版本)以及针对认知障碍患者的版本(rPATDcog)的原始研究。两位作者独立提取数据。采用多比例(随机效应模型)进行荟萃分析,并进行了亚组荟萃分析,以确定研究环境和人群。主要结果是:“如果我的医生说有可能,我愿意停止使用一种或多种药物。”次要结果是参与者特征与主要结果和其他(r)PATD 结果之间的关系。
我们纳入了 46 篇描述了 40 项研究(n=10816 名参与者)的文章。荟萃分析发现,同意或强烈同意这一说法的患者和护理人员比例分别为 84%(95%可信区间 81%-88%)和 80%(95%可信区间 74%-86%),存在显著的异质性(I2=95%和 77%)。
尽管由于异质性,结果应谨慎解释,但消费者报告愿意减少药物使用。这项研究的结果有助于理解对去处方的态度,这可能会增加在临床实践中讨论和采纳去处方建议的机会。