Department of Neurology, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA, USA.
School of Nursing, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA, USA.
J Parkinsons Dis. 2022;12(2):599-606. doi: 10.3233/JPD-212769.
Individuals with Parkinson's disease (PD) may be especially vulnerable to future cognitive decline from anticholinergic medications.
To characterize anticholinergic medication burden, determine the co-occurrence of anticholinergic and cholinesterase inhibitors, and to assess the correlations among anticholinergic burden scales in PD outpatients.
We studied 670 PD outpatients enrolled in a clinic registry between 2012 and 2020. Anticholinergic burden was measured with the Anticholinergic Cognitive Burden Scale (ACB), Anticholinergic Drug Scale (ADS), Anticholinergic Risk Scale (ARS), and Drug Burden Index-Anticholinergic component (DBI-Ach). Correlations between scales were assessed with weighted kappa coefficients.
Between 31.5 to 46.3% of PD patients were taking medications with anticholinergic properties. Among the scales applied, the ACB produced the highest prevalence of medications with anticholinergic properties (46.3%). Considering only medications with definite anticholinergic activity (scores of 2 or 3 on ACB, ADS, or ARS), the most common anticholinergic drug classes were antiparkinsonian (8.2%), antipsychotic (6.4%), and urological (3.3%) medications. Cholinesterase inhibitors and medications with anticholinergic properties were co-prescribed to 5.4% of the total cohort. The most highly correlated scales were ACB and ADS (κ= 0.71), ACB and ARS (κ= 0.67), and ADS and ARS (κ= 0.55).
A high proportion of PD patients (20%) were either taking antiparkinsonian, urological, or antipsychotic anticholinergic medications or were co-prescribed anticholinergic medications and cholinesterase inhibitors. By virtue of its detection of a high prevalence of anticholinergic medication usage and its high correlation with other scales, our data support use of the ACB scale to assess anticholinergic burden in PD patients.
帕金森病(PD)患者可能特别容易受到抗胆碱能药物未来认知能力下降的影响。
描述抗胆碱能药物负担,确定抗胆碱能药物和胆碱酯酶抑制剂的同时发生情况,并评估 PD 门诊患者中抗胆碱能负担量表之间的相关性。
我们研究了 2012 年至 2020 年间在诊所登记处登记的 670 名 PD 门诊患者。使用抗胆碱能认知负担量表(ACB)、抗胆碱能药物量表(ADS)、抗胆碱能风险量表(ARS)和药物负担指数-抗胆碱能成分(DBI-Ach)来衡量抗胆碱能负担。使用加权 kappa 系数评估量表之间的相关性。
31.5%至 46.3%的 PD 患者正在服用具有抗胆碱能特性的药物。在所应用的量表中,ACB 产生了具有抗胆碱能特性的药物的最高患病率(46.3%)。仅考虑具有明确抗胆碱能活性的药物(ACB、ADS 或 ARS 评分为 2 或 3),最常见的抗胆碱能药物类别为抗帕金森病药物(8.2%)、抗精神病药物(6.4%)和泌尿科药物(3.3%)。胆碱酯酶抑制剂和具有抗胆碱能特性的药物共处方给总队列的 5.4%。相关性最高的量表是 ACB 和 ADS(κ=0.71)、ACB 和 ARS(κ=0.67)以及 ADS 和 ARS(κ=0.55)。
相当比例的 PD 患者(20%)正在服用抗帕金森病、泌尿科或抗精神病抗胆碱能药物,或同时服用抗胆碱能药物和胆碱酯酶抑制剂。由于其检测到抗胆碱能药物使用的高患病率及其与其他量表的高度相关性,我们的数据支持使用 ACB 量表来评估 PD 患者的抗胆碱能负担。