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Older
Adults at high risk for Drug Interactions
Newswise
— At least one in 25 older adults, about 2.2
million people in the United States, take
multiple drugs in combinations that can
produce a harmful drug-drug interaction, and
half of these interactions involve a
non-prescription medication, researchers
from the University of Chicago Medical
Center report in the Dec. 24/31, 2008, issue
of JAMA.
Although the number of people taking
medications has remained stable for the last
decade, the number of drugs taken by older
people has significantly increased.
This may be because of more intense therapy
for chronic illness, improved access to
medications due to Medicare Part D, and the
growth of the generic drug market. More than
half of older adults now take five or more
medications or supplements.
"Older adults are the largest consumer of
prescription drugs," said study author Stacy
Tessler Lindau, MD, assistant professor of
obstetrics and gynecology and of medicine at
the University of Chicago Medical Center.
"We find that they commonly combine these
prescription medications with
over-the-counter medications and dietary
supplements, which can increase their
vulnerability to medication side-effects and
drug-drug interactions."
"We were reassured that we did not find
combinations of the most commonly used drugs
that were absolutely forbidden," she added,
"one indication that drug safety systems
used by physicians, nurses and pharmacists
are working."
"However," she added, "our results probably
underestimate total risk." Patients using
less common drugs and non-prescription
medications could be more at risk for
harmful interactions because health care
providers may be less familiar with their
safety profile.
The study also found ethnic and gender
differences. Older Hispanics were more
likely than other ethnic groups to be taking
no medications. Older women were less likely
than older men to take medicines to reduce
cholesterol.
"In our study, men and women were equally
likely to report a history of cardiovascular
disease," said co-author Dima M. Qato,
PharmD, MPH, research associate in
obstetrics and gynecology at the University.
Despite efforts to increase awareness in the
medical community that older men and women
are equally at risk for a cardiovascular
event, "disparities persist in the use of
statin medications," she said.
"Far fewer women than men were taking these
effective cholesterol-lowering drugs."
The study used data collected for the
National Social Life, Health and Aging
Project, a nationally representative
multi-purpose survey of adults aged 57 to 85
administered between July 2005 and March
2006.
The survey team interviewed 3005
participants in their homes about the
medications they used "on a regular
schedule, like every day or every week."
Ninety-nine percent, 2,976 respondents,
completed the interview and medication log.
Ninety-one percent of all respondents
regularly used at least one medication, a
percentage that increased with age.
Twenty-nine percent of older adults took
more than five prescription medications.
Sixty-eight percent of the adults who took
prescription drugs also used
over-the-counter medications or dietary
supplements.
Men were more likely to take
over-the-counter medicines. Women were more
likely to use supplements, such as vitamins
or herbal remedies.
Nearly half of the drug-drug interactions
identified could cause bleeding problems.
One of the most common was taking warfarin,
a prescription drug designed to prevent
blood clots, along with an over-the-counter
drug such as aspirin, which also interferes
with clotting.
The most common potentially severe
medication interactions
|
Type |
Medications |
Risks |
|
Prescription-prescription |
Lisinopril-potassium |
Elevated blood-potassium levels (can
disrupt heart rhythm) |
|
|
Warfarin-simvastatin |
Bleeding |
|
Prescription-non prescription |
Warfarin-aspirin |
Bleeding |
|
|
Atorvastatin-naicin |
Muscle weakness, muscle breakdown |
|
|
Simvastatin-niacin |
Muscle weakness, muscle breakdown |
|
Non-prescription-non-prescription |
Ginkgo-aspirin |
Bleeding |
"Physicians and pharmacists need to ask
their patients about the use of
nonprescription medications," said Lindau.
"Patients need to inform their providers
about all medications they use--prescription
and nonprescription--and should ask their
physician or pharmacist about interactions
any time they start a new drug, on their own
or following the doctor's recommendation."
Carrying a list of all medications in a
wallet might be a good idea, the authors
suggest. So is using the same pharmacy or
chain for all medications, said Qato.
The researchers also stressed that health
professionals need to stay on top of
drug-safety information and consider the
evidence, where available, for safety in
older adults.
The National Institutes of Health and the
University of Chicago Program on
Pharmaceutical Policy funded the study.
Additional authors include Caleb Alexander,
Rena Conti, Michael Johnson, and Phil Schumm
of the University of Chicago.
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