True or false?
1) Medications have led to improved health (T)
2) Medications are helpful for many chronic conditions (T)
3) Most older patients have several chronic diseases (T)
4) Most older patients take many medications (T)
5) More pills mean better health (F)
Sometimes, less is more. For patients with advanced
dementia, most of whom are in their eighties and many of whom have other
chronic conditions such as high blood pressure or high cholesterol, it just
doesn’t make any sense to take all the drugs that are usually prescribed for
them. In a recent article in JAMA Internal Medicine, researchers looked at a large sample of
nursing home patients to determine the proportion taking medications “of
questionable benefit.” What they found was that over half of nursing home
residents with advanced dementia were taking at least one such drug.
We could get distracted by methodological concerns: after
all, the classification used by the researchers was based on the consensus of
experts, who in turn relied on whatever data were available, which was
virtually never high quality, randomized clinical trials. Moreover, these experts assumed that for patients with advanced dementia, a “palliative orientation to care,” is appropriate, though this is not necessarily
what the patients’ surrogate prefer. But the point,
as the authors of the current paper argue, is that commonly used medications such as lipid lowering drugs and chemotherapy are at the
very least “of questionable benefit.” In fact, as suggested by the editorial accompanying the article, the overuse of medications in advanced dementia is just the
tip of the iceberg. Medications of questionable benefit are commonplace in
frail elders and older people with moderate dementia, not just in those whose
dementia is so advanced that death is imminent.
Greg Sachs, Chief of Geriatrics at Indiana University,
proposed a framework for thinking about whether a medication is useful in an
older person. He suggested beginning with life expectancy. Older people
who are in excellent health and can expect to live for another 5 or 10 years are very different from those who are in the last year of life since some medicines work by immediately ameliorating symptoms and
other medicines will only provide benefit after they’ve been taken for
years. This leads to the next question: what is the lag time before a
medication achieves the desired effect? (Pain medicines, for example, are effective
within hours or at most days; some antidepressants work within days, others
take weeks to kick in; medicines to control cholesterol are generally
intended to prevent heart disease years in the future.) Finally, what are the
patient’s goals? Is the patient interested in a longer life, no matter what
price he has to pay, in which case he might want to take a medication with a
small chance of working and a high risk of side effects (such as certain
chemotherapy drugs)? Or is he interested in maximizing quality of life, in
which case he might want a medication that makes him feel better regardless of
the consequences for his length of life (choosing, for example, pain medication
over chemotherapy for cancer).
Deciding whether or not a particular medication makes sense
for a given older individual is not always easy. But it’s crucial to realize
that more is sometimes less. More medications mean more opportunities for
dangerous interactions among drugs. The greater the number of
medicines, the greater the risk of an adverse drug reaction. Optimal drug
regimens are generally determined by studying younger patients who have only
one thing wrong with them—the disease to be treated with that medication.
Extrapolating to older people, whose bodies handle drugs differently from their
younger counterparts, who have multiple illnesses, and who may have a limited
life expectancy, is perilous. Prescribing many medications for the elderly can be an excellent way to treat their diseases—but it might be a trick.
One obstacle to lowering the number of medications prescribed for those with dementia in particular is a misunderstanding on the part of families and, to a degree, physicians that dementia is a terminal illness. With the lack of a specific terminal event, such as those associated with CVA or CVD, the misunderstanding persists that dementia is not, in and of itself, terminal.
ReplyDeleteYou are right that many families do not understand that dementia is a fatal illness and that advanced dementia is the final stage of the disease. My interest in this post was in pointing out that the need to consider limiting medications extends to many older patients, not those who are dying, whether of dementia or some other illness.
ReplyDeleteOh, I quite agree. I chose dementia simply because it's such a glaring example of uselessly medicating folks. Many MDs are reluctant to even stop the dementia meds.
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