The Prevalence of Polypharmacy In Older Europeans: A Multi-country Database Study of General Practitioner Prescribing

Authorea (Authorea)(2023)

引用 0|浏览7
暂无评分
摘要
Aim: To measure the prevalence of polypharmacy and describe the prescribing of potentially inappropriate medication (PIM) in older people with polypharmacy in primary care. Methods: A multi-country retrospective cohort study across six countries: Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, UK. We used anonymized longitudinal patient level information from general practice databases hosted by IQVIA. Patients ≥65 years were included. Polypharmacy was defined as having 5-9, and ≥10 distinct drug classes (ATC Level 3) prescribed during a 6-month period. PIM defined: opioids, antipsychotics, proton pump inhibitors (PPI), benzodiazepines (ATC Level 5). We included country experts on the health care context to interpret findings. Results: Age and gender distribution was similar across the six countries (mean age 75-76 years; 54-56% female). The prevalence of polypharmacy of 5-9 drugs was 22.8% (UK) to 58.3% (Germany); ≥10 drugs from 11.3% (UK) to 28.5% (Germany). In the polypharmacy population prescribed ≥5 drugs, opioid prescribing ranged from 11.5% (France) to 27.5% (Spain). Prescribing of PPI was highest with almost half of patients receiving a PPI, 42.3% (Germany) to 65.5% (Spain). Benzodiazepine prescribing showed a marked variation between countries, 2.7% (UK) to 34.9% (Spain). The health care context information explained possible underreporting for PIM. Conclusion: We have found a high prevalence of polypharmacy with more than half of the older population being prescribed ≥5 drugs in four of the six countries. Whilst polypharmacy may be appropriate in many patients, worrying high usage of PIM (PPIs and benzodiazepines) supports current efforts to improve polypharmacy management across Europe.
更多
查看译文
关键词
general practitioner prescribing,polypharmacy,older europeans,prevalence,multi-country
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要