S4: Pharmacology and Older People Flashcards

1
Q

Statistics on elderly patients and drugs

A
  • Older 65s make up around 14% of the population and 45% of regular prescriptions are dispensed to the over 65s.
  • Regular medication use increases with age but despite this, older people are not always represented proportionately in clinical trials.
  • Prevalence rate of ADR related acute hospital admissions of 9.5% for patient over the age of 75.
  • Over 80% of elderly patients admitted to hospital were taking drugs.
  • Over 50% were taking between 4 and 6 medications daily.
  • 15% were admitted because of side effects of drugs.
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2
Q

How are older people more vulnerable to drugs?

A
  • More likely to take over the counter drugs, use a mean of about 2. Most include analgesics, vitamins, antacids and laxatives. Older people tend to take them and not disclose the fact to doctors which can interact with prescribed drugs.
  • Care home patients are on an average of 8 drugs, understandably this has financial consequences.
  • More likely to experience ADR which can be due to polypharmacy and frailty with age (e.g. Metabolism is slower).
  • Elderly often take multiple drugs with potential interactions and they suffer more serious and prolonged consequences of any adverse effect compared not old people.
  • So by understanding how drugs work in the older population we can hopefully try minimise unnecessary prescriptions, ADRs and hospital admissions.
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3
Q

What are the biggest drug offenders that cause side effects in elder.ly?

A

Digoxin, diuretics, hypotensive drugs, non steroidal anti inflammatory drugs and anti parkinsonian drugs were the biggest offenders.

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4
Q

Describe normal absorption of oral medication

A

The absorption of a drug is the movement of the drug from the site of administration into the bloodstream. The amount of drug that reaches the systemic circulation gives the blood concentration and thus reaches the site of action is partly dependent on the absorption of the drug. Various factors can influence the likelihood of a drug being absorbed, such as features of the drug itself but also aspects of the GI tract.

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5
Q

Describe the effect age has on absorption of oral medication

A

The GI tract undergoes normal changes with age and this can affect drug absorption, changes include:

  • Reduced GI motility (would increase drug absorbed).
  • Reduced GI blood flow (Decreases drug absorbed).
  • Decreased gastric secretions resulting in an increased gastric pH (depends on drug, but generally decrease absorption as most drugs are weak acids that require being neutral in stomach to be absorbed e.g. aspirin).
  • The overall effect of age on drug absorption is therefore difficult to predict on an individual basis, but it is thought that there is likely to be no significant change in oral absorption with age.
  • There other extrinsic factors that can affect absorption that are more common older people, for example polypharmacy which means there is increased likelihood of drug interactions or having feeding tubes. Thus these will result in changes in concentration of the drug in the plasma.
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6
Q

What is drug distribution?

A

Drug distribution is the movement of the drug between different body compartments and therefore will affect the concentration in the plasma and at the site of action. It also affects the clearance of the drug. The measure we use for the amount a drug is distributed is the volume of distribution.

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7
Q

Describe how age affects drug distribution

A

Drug distribution changes in older adults due to changes in their body composition such as:

  • A decrease in lean body mass.
  • A decrease in total body water.
  • An increase in body fat.
  • These changes result in changes of distribution depending on the drug. A drug that is hydrophilic like alcohol in an older person will have a higher concentration for a set volume drunk as it is in less water.
  • Increased body fat means that drugs that are lipophilic will distribute into fat more and stay for longer, this means that clearance will take longer and effects be prolonged.
  • There is a reduced volume of distribution of water-soluble drugs and an increased volume of distribution of lipid soluble drugs.
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8
Q

Describe how age affects protein binding which then affects drug distribution

A
  • Drug distribution is also affected by protein binding, only unbound (free) drug can distribute out of the plasma and have effects on tissue.
  • In older people there are lower levels of plasma proteins and albumin, although this is not thought to be directly due to the ageing process, rather due to associated changes like lower nutrition.
  • A reduction in plasma proteins means that there will be more free drug and thus increase the free drug concentration, this can be problematic with drugs that have a narrow therapeutic range as then the dosage becomes an overdose and ADRs may be experienced.
  • An example is with phenytoin that binds strongly to albumin, if it decreases means more free phenytoin in blood and reaches toxic levels.
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9
Q

Describe effect of ageing on drug elimination

A

The elimination of a drug from the body primarily occurs via the renal excretion, this is the removal of the unaltered or metabolised drug from the body. As the body ages kidney function is seen to decline:
- we see a decreased GFR as a result of decreased blood flow.
- a decrease in kidney mass.
- reduction in the size and number of nephrons.
- Again, this decline in kidney function means that the drug is cleared from the body at a slower rate and its half-life is increased.
Various illnesses in the older population can also worsen kidney function e.g. hypertension.
- We use formula’s to estimate renal function, this is because want to ensure that we do not overdose the patient. Generally we use creatinine clearance as a marker of renal function, however with creatinine it is important we adjust for age in the equation as creatinine levels are also dependent on muscle mass. As older individuals have less muscle mass it may give us a false reading of creatinine being poor. Clearance is volume of serum from which the drug is removed per unit of time (mL/min or L/hr).
- Drug dosages can then be adjusted according to the estimated renal function.

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10
Q

Describe how age changes the pharmacodynamics of a drug

A

Generally we see that with age a lower drug dose is required to achieve the same effect, in other words older people are more sensitive to drugs.This is thought to be due to the number of receptors and the affinity of the drug to them, we see this especially in the CNS with the receptors being more sensitive to drugs.

  • Also as older individuals have decreased homeostatic mechanisms and are less able to compensate to change, this can lead to the drug overshooting in its effects.For example in people taking anti-hypertensives, it can mean that when they stand up their body is unable to compensate as its homeostatic mechanisms are less effective leading to orthostatic hypotension.
  • Increased sensitivity to sedation and psychomotor impairment.
  • Increased intensity and duration of effects of morphine / opiates.
  • Increased cardiac sensitivity to digoxin.
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11
Q

What is optical pharmacotherapy?

A

A balance between overprescribing and underprescribing. Using knowledge of pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics and common sense when prescribing to ensure:
- Correct drug
- Correct dose
- Targets appropriate condition
- Is appropriate for the patient (discuss with patient about the drug e.g. Side effects for individual patient may be at high risk for complication).
Avoid “a pill for every ill” and always consider non-pharmacologic therapy.

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12
Q

Two criteria for inappropriate medication use

A
  1. Beers criteria (came first).

2. Stop start criteria

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13
Q

Describe stop start criteria

A

As polypharmacy is a risk, we can use the STOPP/START criteria to do a medication review, this is a critical examination of a patients medication in order to try optimise their regime.
- STOPP -> Screening Tool of Older Person’s Prescriptions.
- START -> Screening Tool to Alert doctors to Right Treatment.
The aims of using the STOPP/START on patients is to:
- Improve the appropriateness of their medication.
- Prevent them suffering ADRs due to their drug regime.
- Reduce the drug costs.

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14
Q

How do we approach common side effects from drugs on elderly?

A
  • Distinguish between common side effect and ADR (sometimes they interlink).
  • Often non specific and symptoms could be due to drug or illness e.g. postural hypotension.
  • Many different drugs can cause similar side-effects.
  • Certain drug groups particularly common e.g. cardiovascular, psychotropic, anti-parkinsonian.
  • Warn the patient and discuss with them the common side effects of their medication regime –> increases adherence. Discuss: pro and cons, rationale, side effects.
  • Common drug side effects: confusion, cognitive impairment, hypotension
    and acute renal failure.
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15
Q

What is polypharmacy?

A

Polypharmacy is defined taking more than 5 drugs regularly and it is very common in the older population. This includes over the counter medications and vitamins, sometimes patients don’t reveal they are taking these as they don’t think they are drugs. Polypharmacy can be the rational thing to do for an individual, where each medication they take is required and necessary. This is appropriate polypharmacy.

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16
Q

How can polypharmacy be harmful?

A
  • Patients are more likely to have ADR.
  • There is more likely to be interaction between drugs (co-prescription of drugs have directly opposing mechanism of action) e.g. giving fluids and furosemide.
  • Polypharmacy is associated with decreased compliance.
  • So many drugs can lead to incidence of side effects.
  • Can cause prescribing cascade where we keep prescribing more drugs for new symptoms that keep presenting that are side effects of other drugs.
  • Side effects of drugs e.g. dizzy, poor sleep may just be disregarded as being simply due to ageing, this is harmful as this drug may be inappropriate!
17
Q

Describe ADR in elderly

A
  • An adverse drug reaction is an unwanted or harmful reaction which occurs after administration of a drug(s) and is suspected or known to be due to the drug(s).
  • ADRs are increasingly common the older you get, being up to 3x more frequent in the over 80s (partly due to inability to compensate for drug effects!).
  • ADRs are associated with morbidity, mortality and are a common reason for hospital admission!
  • Most ADRs are predictable and therefore preventable through knowledge of the drugs effects and the individual! It is the prescribers responsibility to be aware of this before prescribing to elderly people.
18
Q

Risk factors for suffering an ADR

A

All these factors are common in older population and therefore contribute to their risk of an ADR as well as the fact they are older:

  • Multiple medications (drug interactions).
  • Multi-morbidity (drug-illness interactions).
  • Previous adverse reactions.
  • Low body mass index (sarcopaenia).
  • Older >85 years.
  • Renal impairment (pharmacokinetics).
  • Compliance.
19
Q

List common ADR

A
  • NSAIDs –> GI bleeding and renal dysfunction.
  • Diuretics and Anti-hypertensives –> Hypotension, electrolyte dysfunction, renal dysfunction.
  • Warfarin and NOACs –> Bleeding.
  • Opiates –> Confusion, constipation.
  • Steroids –> Confusion, osteoporosis, GI bleeding.
  • Benzodiazepines or other drugs acting on CNS –> Confusion, drowsiness.
20
Q

What are the two most common drug interactions?

A

Cardiovascular drugs

and Psychotropic drugs

21
Q

Why are elderly more susceptible to ADR with drugs acting on CNS?

A
  • e.g. morphine, benzodiazepines.
  • Increased sensitivity.
  • Greater intensity and duration of CNS depressant effect.
  • Impairment of motor and cognitive skills.
  • Important risk factor for falls and traumatic injury. Use of 4+ drugs is independent risk factor for falls.
22
Q

Consequences of ADR in elderly

A
  • As older potentially more life threatening as lower reserve.
  • Life style.
  • Further illness/ disability, ie hip fractures.
  • Life expectancy and more importantly quality of life.
23
Q

What is compliance?

A

Compliance is the degree to which a patient follows medical advice, such as a drug regimen.

24
Q

Why may older individuals not comply with their treatment?

A
  • Cognitive impairement: Not understanding the drug regime or Forgetting.
  • Manual dexterity: Mobility effected so can’t reach drugs or open drug packets.
  • Visual impairement: Reading instructions and drug.
  • Unpleasant side effects so don’t want to take them.
25
Q

How can we try and improve patients compliance?

A
  • Communicating with patient properly, how they take their drug, the benefits, why they are taking it and the risks.
  • Keeping drug regimes simple.
  • Reducing polypharmacy.
  • Making the labels readable with precise instructions.
  • Packets/containers that are easy to open.
  • Effective dispensing mechanisms.
  • Involving carers of the patient with the drug treatment.
  • Recognising and appreciating side effects.
26
Q

Principles of prescribing in older people

A
  • Avoid prescribing prior to diagnosis.
  • Start with a low dose and titrate slowly.
  • Avoid starting 2 agents at the same time.
  • Reach therapeutic dose before switching or adding agents.
  • Consider non-pharmacologic agent.
  • regular review and discussions.
  • Consider different formulations.if patients’ condition changes.
    There are some questions we need to bear in mind when prescribing to older individuals.
    Do they actually need the drug? (are alternatives available?)
    Is the patient contraindicated to the drug?
    Are there any likely interactions of the drug with other drugs?
    What are the possible side effects? (how will they affect the patient?)
    What does should we start the drug at? (is it safe? Is it therapeutic?)
    How long will they need to take the medication for? (is it safe?)
    How will we assess whether the drug is working?