英文摘要 |
Polypharmacy may increase incidents of falls, physical and cognitive impairment, hospitalization and even death due to potentially inappropriate medications and adverse drug events. Chronic use of proton pump inhibitors (PPI) increases the risk of diarrhea associated with Clostridium difficile infections, pneumonia, and fractures. Deprescribing may manage polypharmacy and improve outcomes. The aim of this study is to evaluate the safety, effectiveness and feasibility of the intervention conducted by deprescribing of long-term PPI for the improvement of medication safety and health outcomes among older adults. We searched online electronic databases (e.g., PubMed, EMBASE) from the earliest record to February 21, 2019. The inclusion criteria were the studies that evaluated older adults who took PPI for more than 8 weeks. The exclusion criteria were the necessarily chronic use of PPI to provide gastroprotection. The effects associated with deprescribing PPI in older adults were determined. There were 3 studies that met the inclusion criteria. The results showed the discontinuation method significantly increased the risk of recurrence of gastrointestinal symptoms. The successful discontinuation rate of the tapering method was higher, but without statistical significance. The on-demand method displayed nonsignificant difference for the comparison of symptom alleviation, but significantly lower number of pills consumed daily. No significant differences were found for convenience of medication and subjective satisfaction. Due to the small number of studies included, the result of this meta-analysis in regard to the deprescribing of long-term PPI among older adults is not conclusive. Further randomized controlled trials are required for the exploration of the relevant issues in the future. |