Abstract

The term deprescribing (de-prescribe) means the abolition of appointments. In the modern researches, deprescribing is presented as a planned and controlled process of dose reduction or drug cessation, which can potentially harm the patient and/or does not benefit the patient. The target population for deprescribing is the older people, as old age and limited life expectancy are themselves reasons to try to reduce and optimize the drug load. Frailty syndrome or dementia, decreased kidney function and comorbidity are expected to coexist with polypragmasy and inconsistent appointments of different specialists. In foreign and domestic scientific studies there are manuals and recommendations on deprescribing of various groups of drugs for the elderly and seniors: proton pump inhibitors, sugary drugs, psychotropic drugs and others. However, with regard to osteoporosis drug therapy, the concept of deprescribing is debated rather sparingly, despite the possible serious side effects of osteoporosis treatment in the older age group.The review presents data from small clinical studies and systematic reviews describing deprescribing antiosteoporotic drugs from the bisphosphonate group, the reasons for their withdrawal and its consequences for the elderly and seniors with osteoporosis, as well as the analysis of tools for optimizing pharmacotherapy in elderly and seniors with respect to deprescribing of bisphosphonates.

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