Abou Jamila, Elders Petra J M, Huijts Danielle, van Marum Rob, Hugtenburg Jacqueline
Department of Clinical Pharmacology and Pharmacy, Amsterdam University Medical Centers, Location VUMC, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Department of General Practice, Amsterdam UMC, Location VU, Amsterdam Public Health Research Institute, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Int J Clin Pharm. 2025 Jan 23. doi: 10.1007/s11096-025-01863-w.
Deprescribing inappropriate cardiovascular and antidiabetic medication has been shown to be feasible and safe. Healthcare providers often perceive the deprescribing of cardiovascular and antidiabetic medication as a challenge and therefore it is still not widely implemented in daily practice.
The aim was to assess whether training focused on conducting a deprescribing-oriented clinical medication review (CMR) results in a reduction of the inappropriate use of cardiovascular and antidiabetic medicines.
A cluster randomized controlled trial involving 20 community pharmacists, who conducted a clinical medication review in 10 patients. The intervention group received training on deprescribing. Patients 70 years or older with polypharmacy having a systolic blood pressure below 140 mmHg and using antihypertensive medication and/or an HbA1c level below 54 mmol/mol and using antidiabetic medication, were included. Follow-up took place within 4 weeks (T1) and after 3 months (T2). The primary outcome measure was the proportion of patients with one or more cardiovascular and antidiabetic medicine deprescribed within 3 months after the CMR (T2).
A total of 71 patients in the intervention group and 69 patients in the control group were included. At T2, 32% of patients in the intervention group and 26% in the control group (OR 1.4, CI 0.65-2.82, p = 0.413) had one or more cardiovascular or antidiabetic medicines discontinued. Regarding any medication, these percentages were 51% and 36%, (OR 1.8, CI 0.92-3.56, p = 0.085) respectively.
Increased awareness and ability of community pharmacists to deprescribe medication and use of general practitioners' data, led community pharmacists and general practitioners to successfully conduct a more deprescribing-focused CMR in daily practice. Further research is needed to assess the necessity of additional training to optimize the deprescribing of cardiovascular and antidiabetic medication. The study was registered at The Netherlands Trial Register (registration no: NL8082).
停用不适当的心血管和抗糖尿病药物已被证明是可行且安全的。医疗保健提供者通常认为停用心血管和抗糖尿病药物具有挑战性,因此在日常实践中仍未广泛实施。
评估以停用药物为导向的临床用药审查(CMR)培训是否能减少心血管和抗糖尿病药物的不当使用。
一项整群随机对照试验,涉及20名社区药剂师,他们对10名患者进行了临床用药审查。干预组接受了停用药物培训。纳入年龄在70岁及以上、使用多种药物、收缩压低于140 mmHg且正在使用抗高血压药物和/或糖化血红蛋白水平低于54 mmol/mol且正在使用抗糖尿病药物的患者。在4周内(T1)和3个月后(T2)进行随访。主要结局指标是CMR后3个月内(T2)停用一种或多种心血管和抗糖尿病药物的患者比例。
干预组共纳入71例患者,对照组共纳入69例患者。在T2时,干预组32%的患者和对照组26%的患者(比值比1.4,可信区间0.65 - 2.82,p = 0.413)停用了一种或多种心血管或抗糖尿病药物。对于任何药物,这些百分比分别为51%和36%(比值比1.8,可信区间0.92 - 3.56,p = 0.085)。
社区药剂师停用药物的意识和能力提高以及对全科医生数据的使用,使社区药剂师和全科医生在日常实践中成功开展了更以停用药物为重点的CMR。需要进一步研究以评估额外培训对于优化心血管和抗糖尿病药物停用的必要性。该研究已在荷兰试验注册中心注册(注册号:NL8082)。