年度回顾:老年人用药事故

Emily P. Peron PharmD , Zachary A. Marcum PharmD , Richard Boyce PhD , Joseph T. Hanlon PharmD, MS , Steven M. Handler MD, PhD
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引用次数: 22

摘要

目的对2010年以来有关老年人用药事故(即用药错误和药物不良事件[ADEs])的研究进行综述。方法使用药物错误、药物依从性、药物依从性、次优处方、监测、药物不良事件、药物不良停药事件、治疗失败、年龄等检索MEDLINE和EMBASE数据库中2010年发表的英文文献。人工搜索已确定文章的参考文献列表和作者的文章文件、书籍章节和最近的评论,以确定其他出版物。选取了5项值得注意的研究进行注释和批判。从文献检索中,本文还生成了2010年发表的手稿参考书目(不包括之前发表在《美国老年药物治疗杂志》或作者之一发表的手稿),这些手稿涉及老年人各种类型的用药错误和不良事件。结果3项研究集中于用药差错的类型。一项研究将药物使用不足(由于处方)作为一种药物错误进行了调查。这项来自荷兰的前后对比研究报告称,那些接受全面老年病学评估的人,慢性病治疗不足率降低了三分之一以上(从32.9%降至22.3%)。0.05)。第二项研究的重点是减少因处方可能不适当的药物而导致的用药错误。这项准实验研究发现,计算机化的医疗服务提供者订单输入临床决策支持系统减少了≥65岁住院患者可能不适当的药物订单数量(入院前11.56单至入院后9.94单)。0.001)。第三个用药错误研究是对管理护理的老年人进行横断面电话调查,发现黑人比白人更低的抗高血压药物依从性(分别为18.4%对12.3%;P & lt;0.001)。此外,黑人比白人更多地使用补充和替代医学(CAM)治疗高血压(分别为30.5%和24.7%;P = 0.005)。在按种族分层的多变量分析中,使用CAM的黑人比不使用CAM的黑人更有可能有较低的抗高血压药物依从性(患病率比= 1.56;95% ci, 1.14-2.15;P = 0.006)。其余两项研究涉及某种形式的与药物相关的患者不良事件。一项针对Medicare Advantage患者的病例对照研究首次显示,骨骼肌松弛剂的使用与骨折风险增加显著相关(校正优势比= 1.40;95% ci, 1.15-1.72;P & lt;0.001)。这种增加的风险在同时使用苯二氮卓类药物时更为明显。最后,在法国的16个中心进行了一项随机对照试验,对康复保健团队进行了为期一周的关于高危药物和ade的教育干预。结果显示,干预组不良事件发生率低于常规护理组(分别为22% vs 36%, P = 0.004)。结论这些研究提供的信息有助于提高卫生专业人员对用药错误和ADEs的认识,并有助于指导今后的研究和临床实践。
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Year in Review: Medication Mishaps in the Elderly

Objective

This paper reviews articles from 2010 that examined medication mishaps (ie, medication errors and adverse drug events [ADEs]) in the elderly.

Methods

The MEDLINE and EMBASE databases were searched for English-language articles published in 2010 using a combination of search terms including medication errors, medication adherence, medication compliance, suboptimal prescribing, monitoring, adverse drug events, adverse drug withdrawal events, therapeutic failures, and aged. A manual search of the reference lists of the identified articles and the authors' article files, book chapters, and recent reviews was conducted to identify additional publications. Five studies of note were selected for annotation and critique. From the literature search, this paper also generated a selected bibliography of manuscripts published in 2010 (excluding those previously published in the American Journal of Geriatric Pharmacotherapy or by one of the authors) that address various types of medication errors and ADEs in the elderly.

Results

Three studies focused on types of medication errors. One study examined underuse (due to prescribing) as a type of medication error. This before-and-after study from the Netherlands reported that those who received comprehensive geriatric assessments had a reduction in the rate of undertreatment of chronic conditions by over one third (from 32.9% to 22.3%, P < 0.05). A second study focused on reducing medication errors due to the prescribing of potentially inappropriate medications. This quasi-experimental study found that a computerized provider order entry clinical decision support system decreased the number of potentially inappropriate medications ordered for patients ≥ 65 years of age who were hospitalized (11.56 before to 9.94 orders per day after, P < 0.001). The third medication error study was a cross-sectional phone survey of managed-care elders, which found that more blacks than whites had low antihypertensive medication adherence as per a self-reported measure (18.4% vs 12.3%, respectively; P < 0.001). Moreover, blacks used more complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) than whites for the treatment of hypertension (30.5% vs 24.7%, respectively; P = 0.005). In multivariable analyses stratified by race, blacks who used CAM were more likely than those who did not to have low antihypertensive medication adherence (prevalence rate ratio = 1.56; 95% CI, 1.14–2.15; P = 0.006).

The remaining two studies addressed some form of medication-related adverse patient events. A case-control study of Medicare Advantage patients revealed for the first time that the use of skeletal muscle relaxants was associated significantly with an increased fracture risk (adjusted odds ratio = 1.40; 95% CI, 1.15–1.72; P < 0.001). This increased risk was even more pronounced with the concomitant use of benzodiazepines. Finally, a randomized controlled trial across 16 centers in France used a 1-week educational intervention about high-risk medications and ADEs directed at rehabilitation health care teams. Results indicated that the rate of ADEs in the intervention group was lower than that in the usual care group (22% vs 36%, respectively, P = 0.004).

Conclusion

Information from these studies may advance health professionals' understanding of medication errors and ADEs and may help guide research and clinical practices in years to come.

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来源期刊
American Journal Geriatric Pharmacotherapy
American Journal Geriatric Pharmacotherapy GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY-PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY
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