Abstract

To reduce potentially inappropriate medications, the FORTA (Fit fOR The Aged) concept classifies drugs in terms of their suitability for geriatric patients with different labels, namely A (indispensable), B (beneficial), C (questionable), and D (avoid). The aims of our study were to assess the medication appropriateness in PD inpatients applying the FORTA list and drug-drug interaction software, further to assess the adequacy of FORTA list for patients with PD. We retrospectively collected demographic data, comorbidities, laboratory values, and the medication from the discharge letters of 123 geriatric inpatients with PD at the university hospital of Hannover Medical School. Patients suffered on average from 8.2 comorbidities. The majority of the medication was labeled A (60.6% of PD-specific and 40.9% of other medication) or B (22.3% of PD-specific and 26.9% of other medication). Administered drugs labeled with D were amantadine, clozapine, oxazepam, lorazepam, amitriptyline, and clonidine. Overall, 545 interactions were identified, thereof 11.9% severe interactions, and 1.7% contraindicated combinations. 81.3% of patients had at least one moderate or severe interaction. The FORTA list gives rational recommendations for PD-specific and other medication, especially for general practitioners. Considering the demographic characteristics and the common multimorbidity of geriatric PD patients, this study underlines the importance of awareness, education, and preventive interventions to increase drug safety.

Highlights

  • Parkinson’s disease (PD) is the second most common neurodegenerative disease

  • The basic demographic and clinical characteristics of the study participants are shown in Table 1. 78 patients were admitted to hospital for PD-related problems, 43 for other neurological diseases, and two for other diseases

  • A significant proportion of the patients suffered from PD-related accompanying diagnoses, like temporary psychosis (27.6%), dementia (25.2%), urinary incontinence (18.7%), depression (17.9%), and orthostatic hypotension (14.6%)

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Summary

Introduction

PD patients suffer from various motor and non-motor symptoms with profound impairments in quality of life (Valkovic et al 2014; Kadastik-Eerme et al 2015; Skorvanek et al 2015; Klietz et al 2018, 2020). Most of these patients are elderly and have several comorbidities (Klietz et al 2019). Inappropriate interactions due to polypharmacy may cause drug-related hospital admissions (Budnitz et al 2011; El Morabet et al 2018; Thevelin et al 2019), increase morbidity and mortality (Thevelin et al 2019),

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