Dietary supplement use is common in older adult drivers: an analysis from the AAA LongROAD study.

IF 3.3 2区 医学 Q1 INTEGRATIVE & COMPLEMENTARY MEDICINE BMC Complementary Medicine and Therapies Pub Date : 2024-08-30 DOI:10.1186/s12906-024-04623-x
Ryan Moran, Sara Baird, Carolyn G DiGuiseppi, David W Eby, Sarah Hacker, Chelsea Isom, Vanya Jones, Kelly C Lee, Guohua Li, Lisa J Molnar, Rudy Patrick, David Strogatz, Linda Hill
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Abstract

Background: Dietary supplement (DS) use is common and increasing among older adults, though much data available on use frequencies are from surveys and performed cross-sectionally. This paper sought to assess the frequency and pattern of dietary supplement use among older adults over time.

Methods: A secondary analysis of data from the AAA LongROAD study, a longitudinal prospective cohort study of older adult drivers, using data from baseline and the first two years of follow up included a total of 2990 drivers aged 65-79 years recruited at five study sites across the US from July 2015 to March 2017. Participants underwent baseline and annual evaluations, which included a "brown bag" medication review. DS were identified and categorized according to type and key components. Prevalence and pattern of DS use over time and relationship to demographics were measured with frequency and Chi squared analyses.

Results: 84% of participants took at least one dietary supplement during the 2-year study period, and 55% of participants continually reported use. DS accounted for approximately 30% of the total pharmacologic-pill burden in all years. Participants who were White non-Hispanic, female, 75-79 years of age at baseline, and on more non-supplement medications took significantly more dietary supplements (P < 0.05). Vitamin D, multivitamins, calcium, and omega-3 formulations were the most common supplements, with stable use over time. Use of individual herbal supplements and cannabis products was uncommon (< 1% participants per year).

Conclusions: DS use among older adults is common and relatively stable over time and contributes to polypharmacy. In clinical settings, providers should consider the influence of DS formulations on polypharmacy, and the associated cost, risk of medication interactions, and effect on medication compliance.

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老年驾驶员普遍使用膳食补充剂:美国汽车协会 LongROAD 研究分析。
背景:膳食补充剂(DS)的使用在老年人中很普遍,而且还在不断增加,但有关使用频率的数据大多来自调查,而且是横截面的。本文试图评估老年人长期使用膳食补充剂的频率和模式:对美国汽车协会 LongROAD 研究(一项针对老年驾驶员的纵向前瞻性队列研究)的数据进行了二次分析,使用了基线数据和头两年的随访数据,其中包括 2015 年 7 月至 2017 年 3 月期间在全美五个研究地点招募的 2990 名 65-79 岁驾驶员。参与者接受了基线和年度评估,其中包括 "棕色袋 "药物审查。根据类型和主要成分对 DS 进行了识别和分类。通过频率分析和卡方分析测量了随着时间推移使用DS的流行率和模式以及与人口统计学的关系:84%的参与者在两年的研究期间至少服用过一种膳食补充剂,55%的参与者持续报告服用过膳食补充剂。在所有年份中,膳食补充剂约占总药片负担的 30%。非西班牙裔白人、女性、基线年龄在 75-79 岁之间、服用非补充剂药物较多的参与者服用膳食补充剂的比例明显更高(P 结论:膳食补充剂在老年人中的使用很常见,但其使用量并不高:在老年人中使用膳食补充剂很常见,而且随着时间的推移相对稳定,这也是造成多药并存的原因之一。在临床治疗中,医疗服务提供者应考虑膳食补充剂配方对多种药物治疗的影响,以及相关费用、药物相互作用风险和对药物依从性的影响。
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来源期刊
BMC Complementary Medicine and Therapies
BMC Complementary Medicine and Therapies INTEGRATIVE & COMPLEMENTARY MEDICINE-
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
2.60%
发文量
300
审稿时长
19 weeks
期刊介绍:
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