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Changes in chronic disease medications after admission to a Geriatric Health Services Facility: A multi-center prospective cohort study.

Hiroshi MaruokaShota HamadaYukari HattoriKatsuaki AraiKayoko ArimitsuKazumi HigashiharaSaiko SaotomeAsami KobayashiNoriko WatanabeNaomi KurataKeiko KishimotoTaro Kojima
Published in: Medicine (2023)
Older adults often receive polypharmacy, including some medications for chronic diseases. Nutritional management after admission to a nursing home may enable to deprescribe some chronic disease medications. This study aimed to investigate the status of deprescribing of chronic disease medications among nursing home residents, and to assess the appropriateness based on changes of laboratory test values and nutritional status. A multi-center prospective cohort study was conducted in 6 Geriatric Health Services Facilities, a major type of nursing homes in Japan. Newly admitted residents aged ≥ 65 years who took ≥1 medication for hypertension, diabetes, or dyslipidemia at admission were recruited. Participants who stayed for 3 months were included in the analysis. Medications at admission and 3 months after admission and situations for deprescribing were investigated. Changes in body mass index, blood pressure, laboratory tests (e.g., cholesterol and hemoglobin A1c levels), energy intake, and International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health staging were evaluated. Sixty-nine participants (68% female, 62% aged ≥ 85 years) were included. At admission, 60 participants had medications for hypertension, 29 for dyslipidemia, and 13 for diabetes. Those receiving lipid-modifying drugs (mainly statins) decreased from 29 to 21 (72%; P = .008), since their cholesterol levels was within the normal range or was low at admission, and they had no history of cardiovascular events. However, there were no statistically significant changes in the frequencies of antihypertensive drugs (60 to 55; 92%; P = .063) or antidiabetic drugs (13 to 12; 92%; P = 1.000). During the 3-month observation, body mass index and diastolic blood pressure decreased, while energy intake and serum albumin level increased. Nutritional management after admission to a ROKEN may facilitate appropriate deprescribing of lipid-modifying drugs, by offseting the effects of discontinuation of these drugs.
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