University of Lincoln
Browse

The impact of polypharmacy on health outcomes in the aged: A retrospective cohort study.

Download (438.87 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2025-03-13, 12:54 authored by Irene BoatengIrene Boateng, Carlos Rodriguez Pascual, Paul GrassbyPaul Grassby, Zahid AsgharZahid Asghar, Kinda Ibrahim

Objectives

To estimate the prevalence of polypharmacy among community-dwelling adults in the UK and determine its association with mortality, hospitalization, adverse drug reactions and falls at one and five years. To also determine the effect of polypharmacy on the outcomes in different patient groups.

Methods

A retrospective cohort study was carried out using 1000 patients aged 75 years and above from the Clinical Practice Research Datalink. The study periods for the one- and five-years analysis were January 2010-December 2010 and January 2010-December 2014 respectively. Sociodemographic and clinical variables were retrieved using medical and product codes. Polypharmacy was defined as the use of five or more medicines. The association between polypharmacy and mortality, falls, adverse drug reactions, or hospitalization was determined using cox regression analysis while confounding for age, sex, Charlson’s comorbidity index, potentially inappropriate medicines, hospitalization prior to study, and falls prior to study. Subgroup analysis was used to determine the effect of polypharmacy on the outcomes for different patient groups.

Key findings

977 people were reviewed. 36% were male and the mean age was 83 years. The prevalence of polypharmacy was 47%. Adjusted hazard ratios with their 95% confidence intervals for association between polypharmacy and outcomes at five years were: mortality 1.60 (1.30–2.00), hospitalization 1.49 (1.30–1.70), falls 1.49 (0.90–2.40) and adverse drug reactions 0.97 (0.50–1.80). The results for the one-year analysis were mortality 2.37 (1.40–3.90), hospitalization 2.47 (1.40–4.30), and falls 0.37 (0.03–4.00).

Conclusion

Polypharmacy was found to be a risk factor for mortality and hospitalization. The risk increased with an increase in age, potentially inappropriate medicines and comorbidities.

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Health and Care Sciences (Research Outputs)
  • College of Health and Science (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

PLoS ONE

Volume

20

Issue

2

Pages/Article Number

e0317907

Publisher

Public Library of Science

eISSN

1932-6203

Date Submitted

2024-09-26

Date Accepted

2025-01-07

Date of Final Publication

2025-02-03

Open Access Status

  • Open Access

Date Document First Uploaded

2025-02-12

Will your conference paper be published in proceedings?

  • N/A