Abstract

BackgroundThere is a lack of evidence that multidrug use triggers adverse events. Therefore, the main purpose of this study was to clarify the relationship between the total number of drugs and number of high-risk prescriptions administered to Japanese elderly patients.MethodsUsing hospital electronic medical records (EMR), we evaluated the prescriptions of outpatients aged 65 years or older. We defined prescriptions of potentially inappropriate medications (PIMs) and overlapping prescription of drugs with the same mechanism of action (DSAs) as high-risk prescriptions. We analyzed the relationship among total number of drugs and high-risk prescriptions. In addition, we performed a secondary research to determine whether the hospitalization rate and concomitant medication contents differ depending on the high-risk prescriptions.ResultsData for 13,630 outpatients were analyzed. A significant positive correlation between the numbers of total drugs and PIMs was found. The prescription frequency of individual PIMs rose as the total number of prescription drugs increased. The odds ratio (OR) of overlapping DSAs was significantly higher in patients using 5 or more drugs. In addition, there were significantly more prescriptions of laxatives among patients with overlapping prescriptions of anticholinergic drugs. The use of almost all PIMs was not an independent risk factor for hospitalization; instead, the number of PIMs was an independent risk factor for hospitalization [OR 1.18 (95% CI, 1.12–1.26)].ConclusionsThe number of PIMs and overlapping DSAs were high in patients receiving multidrug treatment. To avoid adverse events and hospitalization, it might be useful to review prescriptions and consider the number of PIMs and overlapping DSAs.

Highlights

  • There is a lack of evidence that multidrug use triggers adverse events

  • This study aimed to clarify the relationship between total number of drugs and high-risk prescriptions administered to Japanese elderly patients, and to clarify whether hospitalization rate and concomitant medication differ based on high-risk prescriptions used by these patients

  • In the Screening Tool of Older Persons’ Prescriptions (STOPP)-J, eight categories had limited disease and patient background, which were excluded from potentially inappropriate medications (PIMs) because it was impossible to extract their data from the electronic medical records (EMR) using our method

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Summary

Introduction

The main purpose of this study was to clarify the relationship between the total number of drugs and number of high-risk prescriptions administered to Japanese elderly patients. PIMs pose a high risk of adverse events in the elderly and should be avoided. Two sets of criteria for PIMs, the Beers criteria [5] and the Screening Tool of Older Persons’ Prescriptions (STOPP) [6, 7], are used globally. In Japan, the “Screening Tool for Older Persons’ Appropriate Prescriptions for Japanese (STOPP-J) [8]” is used. The use of drugs related to the Beers or STOPP criteria and the consequent under-prescribing of medications were reported to be frequent in patients receiving multidrug treatment [9,10,11]; similar reports were published in

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