Drug Usage Clinical Trial
Official title:
Cooperation for Improved Pharmacotherapy in Home-dwelling Elderly People Receiving Polypharmacy - The COOP Study
Polypharmacy increases the risk of adverse drug effects, interactions and other drug-related problems, and several studies indicate that inappropriate drug use is a major reason for poor health and impaired function in the elderly. A majority of interventions for improvement of drug treatment in the elderly have been evaluated by the use of surrogate outcomes such as drug-related problems, number of prescribed drugs or prevalence of potentially inappropriate prescriptions - and it is so far unclear whether such interventions can result in clinical significant improvements. The primary objective of this trial is therefore to evaluate the effect upon patients, relatives and local health care service of a structured cooperation between a hospital-based geriatrician and family physicians on complex drug regimens in home-dwelling frail elderly patients.
This is a 24 weeks cluster randomized, single-blinded, controlled trial. Family physicians
will be invited to participate in the project with patients from their lists, and can
participate with 1-5 patients each. The investigators will carry out cluster randomization on
physician level instead of individual randomization on patient level.
The investigators suppose that such a comprehensive clinical evaluation and drug review that
they will test, is most relevant for patients with relatively pronounced polypharmacy. It has
previously been shown that conventionally used limits for polypharmacy, e.g. five drugs used
regularly, identifies many patients without particular complex health states and without drug
related problems. The investigators will therefore limit this project to patients using seven
regular drugs or more, in order to increase the likelihood that they may benefit from a drug
review.
A major challenge when studying complex interventions is to describe the intervention with
sufficient precision as to facilitate replication. Our main strategy for this will be to
compensate for the necessary degree of pragmatism in the interventional approach with a
detailed description of the interventions that were in fact carried out, in particular
changes in the drug regimens of the individual patients.
The intervention will consist of three main parts:
1. Geriatric assessment: The patients will be seen by a physician trained in geriatric
medicine. The physician will carry out a medical history and a physical examination, and
relevant blood analyses and other supplementary test will be ordered if not already
available. The geriatric work-up will be aimed at evaluating whether current medications
are indicated, whether the relevant conditions are satisfactorily compensated, whether
the dosages are appropriate, whether the patient has symptoms that may in reality be
adverse drug effects, and whether drug-drug interactions or drug-disease interactions
are likely to occur. Published tools like the START (Screening Tool of Older Persons'
Prescriptions) criteria, Screening Tool to Alert doctors to Right Treatment (STOPP)
criteria and The Norwegian General Practice (NORGEP) criteria will be used.
2. Conference with common drug review: The main purpose of this conference is to combine
the competence of the geriatrician and that of the family physician in a focused drug
review. The two physicians will discuss the patient's drug list systematically. The
geriatrician may suggest changes in the drug regimen, but the family physician retains
the medical responsibility for the patient and is in charge of all ordinations and
medication changes.
3. Clinical follow-up: Depending on medication changes that have been done, the two
physicians will arrange the necessary follow-up within the project period.
The investigators will assess the outcomes at 16 and 24 weeks, counted from baseline, and
will also assess baseline values for the outcomes in order to adjust for potential
inequalities.
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