Pharmacist-Led Deprescribing of Aspirin in Older People in an Outpatient Setting.

Q2 Medicine Senior Care Pharmacist Pub Date : 2024-06-01 DOI:10.4140/TCP.n.2024.212
Veronica Hernandez Ramos, Laura Hayes, Kayley Simmons, Brooke Trudeau, Adrian Boka
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Abstract

Background In 2019, the American College of Cardiology and American Heart Association updated their joint guidelines stating low-dose aspirin should not be used on a routine basis for primary prevention of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) among people older than 70 years of age because of increased bleeding risk.1 In addition to these updated guidelines, a statement released by the US Preventive Services Task Force in April 2022 recommends against the initiation of low-dose aspirin for primary prevention of cardiovascular disease in people 60 years of age or older.² Despite these updated recommendations, aspirin continues to be a common medication older patients take, providing an opportunity for a clinical pharmacist deprescribing intervention. Objective To identify the role of a pharmacist-led aspirin deprescribing intervention within a safety-net health system in the outpatient setting. Methods This project included patients 70 years of age and older who had aspirin listed as an active medication without documented ASCVD. This project assessed aspirin deprescribing rates, time spent on pharmacist outreach, and reasons for patient and/or provider refusal to discontinue aspirin. Results One hundred thirty-one eligible patients were contacted. Of those, 78 (60%) patients discontinued aspirin after speaking with the pharmacist, and 8 patients discontinued aspirin after a clinical pharmacist recommendation to the patient's primary care provider (PCP). The median time spent on outreach was approximately eight minutes. Of the 6 patients who consented to the project but declined to discontinue aspirin therapy based on pharmacist intervention, 5 preferred to discuss the issue with their PCP, while 1 patient was told by an outside provider to take aspirin. Conclusion Results indicate the successful impact a clinical pharmacist may have in deprescribing aspirin in a high-risk population. These data may also suggest that an active and intentional approach to deprescribing is likely to be more effective than a written recommendation to providers.

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药剂师在门诊环境中为老年人开具阿司匹林处方。
背景 2019 年,美国心脏病学会和美国心脏协会更新了联合指南,指出由于出血风险增加,低剂量阿司匹林不应常规用于 70 岁以上人群动脉粥样硬化性心血管疾病(ASCVD)的一级预防。除了这些更新的指南外,美国预防服务工作组于 2022 年 4 月发布的一份声明也建议不要将低剂量阿司匹林用于 60 岁或以上人群心血管疾病的一级预防。目的 在门诊环境中,确定由药剂师主导的阿司匹林处方干预措施的作用。方法 该项目包括年龄在 70 岁及以上、阿司匹林被列为有效药物且无 ASCVD 记录的患者。该项目评估了阿司匹林停药率、药剂师外联所花费的时间以及患者和/或医疗服务提供者拒绝停用阿司匹林的原因。结果 我们联系了 131 名符合条件的患者。其中 78 名患者(60%)在与药剂师交谈后停用了阿司匹林,8 名患者在临床药剂师向患者的初级保健提供者 (PCP) 推荐后停用了阿司匹林。外展时间的中位数约为 8 分钟。在同意参与项目但拒绝在药剂师干预下停止阿司匹林治疗的 6 名患者中,有 5 名患者倾向于与初级保健医生讨论这一问题,而有 1 名患者则被外部医疗服务提供者告知要服用阿司匹林。结论 结果表明,临床药剂师可以成功地帮助高危人群停用阿司匹林。这些数据还表明,积极、有意识地取消阿司匹林处方可能比向医疗服务提供者提供书面建议更有效。
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来源期刊
Senior Care Pharmacist
Senior Care Pharmacist PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY-
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
160
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