Pharmacy, School of Rural Medicine, University of New England, Armidale, NSW 2351, Australia.
Department of Clinical Pharmacy, School of Pharmacy, University of Gondar, Gondar, Ethiopia.
Int J Clin Pharm. 2022 Aug;44(4):860-872. doi: 10.1007/s11096-022-01414-7. Epub 2022 Jul 1.
People living with diabetes often experience multiple morbidity and polypharmacy, increasing their risk of potentially inappropriate prescribing. Inappropriate prescribing is associated with poorer health outcomes.
The aim of this scoping review was to explore and map studies conducted on potentially inappropriate prescribing among adults living with diabetes and to identify gaps regarding identification and assessment of potentially inappropriate prescribing in this group.
Studies that reported any type of potentially inappropriate prescribing were included. Studies conducted on people aged < 18 years or with a diagnosis of gestational diabetes or prediabetes were excluded. No restrictions to language, study design, publication status, geographic area, or clinical setting were applied in selecting the studies. Articles were systematically searched from 11 databases.
Of the 190 included studies, the majority (63.7%) were conducted in high-income countries. None of the studies used an explicit tool specifically designed to identify potentially inappropriate prescribing among people with diabetes. The most frequently studied potentially inappropriate prescribing in high-income countries was contraindication while in low- and middle-income countries prescribing omission was the most common. Software and websites were mostly used for identifying drug-drug interactions. The specific events and conditions that were considered as inappropriate were inconsistent across studies.
Contraindications, prescribing omissions and dosing problems were the most commonly studied types of potentially inappropriate prescribing. Prescribers should carefully consider the individual prescribing recommendations of medications. Future studies focusing on the development of explicit tools to identify potentially inappropriate prescribing for adults living with diabetes are needed.
患有糖尿病的人常常同时患有多种疾病并服用多种药物,这增加了他们潜在不合理用药的风险。不合理用药与更差的健康结果相关。
本综述的目的是探索和绘制针对患有糖尿病的成年人潜在不合理用药的研究,并确定在该人群中识别和评估潜在不合理用药方面的差距。
纳入报告任何类型潜在不合理用药的研究。排除针对年龄<18 岁的人群或患有妊娠糖尿病或糖尿病前期的人群的研究。在选择研究时,未对语言、研究设计、出版状况、地理区域或临床环境进行限制。文章从 11 个数据库中进行系统检索。
在纳入的 190 项研究中,大多数(63.7%)是在高收入国家进行的。没有一项研究使用专门用于识别糖尿病患者潜在不合理用药的明确工具。在高收入国家,最常研究的潜在不合理用药是禁忌症,而在低收入和中等收入国家,最常见的是用药遗漏。软件和网站主要用于识别药物-药物相互作用。在不同的研究中,被认为是不合理的具体事件和情况并不一致。
禁忌症、用药遗漏和剂量问题是最常研究的潜在不合理用药类型。临床医生应仔细考虑药物的个体用药建议。需要进一步开展针对明确工具的研究,以识别患有糖尿病的成年人的潜在不合理用药。