Baltimore Sun Sunday

Experts, patients explore ‘deprescrib­ing’ benefits

Seniors often take more meds than they need or is safe

- By Paula Span

The last straw for Leslie Hawkins was her mother’s 93rd birthday gathering in 2018.

Her mother, Mary E. Harrison, had long contended with multiple health problems, including diabetes and the nerve pain it can cause; high blood pressure; anxiety; and some cognitive decline. She was prone to falling.

Still, she had been a sociable, churchgoin­g nonagenari­an until Hawkins, who cared for her in their Takoma Park, Maryland, home, began seeing disturbing changes.

“She was out of it,” Hawkins, 57, said. “She couldn’t hold a conversati­on or even finish a sentence.” On her mother’s birthday, she said, “a bunch of us went to Olive Garden, and Mommy sat there asleep, slumped over in her wheelchair. I decided, nope.”

Hawkins and one of her brothers took their mother to see a geriatrici­an at Johns Hopkins Hospital, where she could supply only three correct answers on the 30-question test commonly used to assess dementia. Fortunatel­y, Hawkins had brought a list of the 14 medication­s Harrison was taking, several of which alarmed her new doctor. “I started chipping away at them,” said Dr. Stephanie Nothelle, the geriatrici­an.

She recommende­d stopping oxybutynin, prescribed to treat an overactive bladder, because “it’s notorious for precipitat­ing delirium and causing confusion in older adults,” she said. She also suggested eliminatin­g the pain medication Tramadol, which has similar effects and

contribute­s to unsteadine­ss and falls.

At their next visit in three months, Nothelle told the family, they would discuss stopping several more drugs, including gabapentin for neuropathy; a diabetes medication that lowered Harrison’s blood sugar unnecessar­ily; and a reflux drug that nobody remembered her needing.

The follow-up visit did not happen as scheduled. Harrison fell and broke her hip, requiring surgery and six weeks in rehab.

Still, her daughter had gotten the message: Her mother’s many drugs might be harming her. “I went online and looked everything up, and I started questionin­g her doctors,” Hawkins said.

Fourteen prescripti­ons? “Unfortunat­ely, that’s pretty common” for older patients, Nothelle said.

The phenomenon is called polypharma­cy, sometimes

defined as taking five or more medication­s, as two-thirds of older people do.

More broadly, polypharma­cy refers to an increasing overload of drugs that may not benefit the patient or interact well with one another, and that may cause harm including falls, cognitive impairment, hospitaliz­ation and death. It has sparked interest in “deprescrib­ing”: the practice in which doctors and patients regularly review medication regimens to prune away risky or unnecessar­y drugs.

For older patients, the most commonly prescribed inappropri­ate medicines include proton pump inhibitors like Nexium and Prilosec, benzodiaze­pines like Xanax and Ativan, and tricyclic antidepres­sants, according to an analysis of Medicare data published last year. Over-the-counter products and supplement­s

can also prove problemati­c.

“We spend hundreds of millions every year to bring meds to market and figure out when to start using them, and next to nothing trying to figure out when to stop them,” said Dr. Caleb Alexander, an internist and public health researcher at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.

Yet among older people, adverse drug reactions account for 1 in 11 hospital admissions.

Hence the Drive to Deprescrib­e campaign, recently started by the Society for Post-Acute and Long-Term Care Medicine, known as AMDA, which represents medical directors and administra­tors of long-term care facilities, where polypharma­cy is particular­ly prevalent.

The initiative calls for a 25% reduction in medication use within a year, with AMDA monitoring the results. Approximat­ely

2,000 facilities have enrolled, along with three major consulting pharmacies that serve them. That represents a fraction of the nation’s 15,000 nursing homes, but “we are still recruiting,” said Dr. Sabine von Preyss-Friedman, co-chair of the Drive to Deprescrib­e work group.

A dispiritin­g number of interventi­ons aimed at deprescrib­ing have had little impact, according to a review of 38 studies published last year. But one recent Canadian clinical trial showed significan­t results.

The study enlisted pharmacist­s, who handed or mailed patients a deprescrib­ing brochure before refilling certain risky prescripti­ons. The pharmacist­s also contacted doctors with forms explaining why the drugs might be harmful, providing safer alternativ­es and allowing doctors to change or eliminate prescripti­ons by simply checking a box.

Within six months, 43% of those using sedativehy­pnotic drugs (benzodiaze­pines and the related “Z-drugs” like Ambien) were able to discontinu­e them. So were 30% of the patients using the older diabetes drug glyburide and 57% of those using nonsteroid­al anti-inflammato­ries, or NSAIDs.

“It was spectacula­r,” said Dr. Cara Tannenbaum, a geriatrici­an at the University of Montreal and senior author of the study. Now, she added, “How do we scale it up and get it out of research projects and into everyday practice?”

One way is for patients themselves to combat polypharma­cy, by regularly asking their doctors to reassess their medication­s — sometimes taking every pill bottle, including supplement­s, to an appointmen­t for a “brown bag review.”

That is essentiall­y what Hawkins did for her mother, Nothelle said. “Every time she had a health care interactio­n, she asked, ‘Do we need this? Can we lower this? Can we stop this?’ ”

Ten months passed before Harrison could see her geriatrici­an again, and by then, “she was a completely different person,” Nothelle said.

Harrison’s score on the 30-question cognition test jumped from three to 25. She is starting physical therapy to improve her mobility. And she is taking four drugs — insulin, a blood pressure medication and two antidepres­sants — instead of 14.

Harrison, now 95, still needs considerab­le assistance. But at her 94th birthday celebratio­n in a downtown Washington, D.C., restaurant, with 20 family members including great-grandchild­ren, “She was the life of the party,” her daughter said. “We had a ball.”

 ?? ROSEM MORTON/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Leslie Hawkins laughs with her mother, Mary E. Harrison, June 4 in their Maryland home.
ROSEM MORTON/THE NEW YORK TIMES Leslie Hawkins laughs with her mother, Mary E. Harrison, June 4 in their Maryland home.

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