Prescribing in Elderly Flashcards

1
Q

What environment do drugs require for absorption?

A

Acidic drugs require acidic environment

Basic drugs require basic environment

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2
Q

Why is drug absorption different in older people?

A

Increased gastric pH and decreased small bowel surface area

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3
Q

What are some issues that may present in older people that may affect absorption?

A

Previous GI surgery, NJ tube or PEG feed composition, transdermal patches and oedema, proportionally more of basic drugs absorbed

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4
Q

How may route of drug delivery need to be changed in an older person?

A

Liquid/syrup for dysphagia, crush tablets for PEG or NG tube, confused patients may refuse tablets

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5
Q

What do drugs bind to in the body?

A

Albumin binds to acidic drugs and alpha-1 acid glycoprotein binds to basic drugs = older people have low albumin but higher a-1 AG

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6
Q

How is drug distribution different in older people?

A

Increased fat = increases Vd of lipophilic drugs increasing half life
Decreased body water by 10-15% = lower Vd of hydrophilic drugs
Lower Vd and CrCL so half life unchanged

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7
Q

How is hepatic drug metabolism different in older people?

A

Reduced liver function due to decreased size and blood flow = first pass metabolism reduced, biotransforming enzymes reduced

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8
Q

How is renal drug metabolism different in older people?

A

Lower GFR = decreased size, tubular secretion and renal blood flow

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9
Q

How are pharmacodynamics different in older people?

A

Lower doses achieve same effect

Some effects are decreased (e.g B blockers)

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10
Q

What drugs should be used with caution in older people?

A

Those with therapeutic index <2 = theophylline, warfarin, lithium, digoxin, vancomycin, gentamicin

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11
Q

What are some drugs that commonly cause side effects?

A

Warfarin, digoxin, insulin, benzodiazepines, diuretics, NSAIDs, corticosteroids, antihypertensives, opioids, theophylline

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12
Q

What are some ways to manage risk of side effects of certain drugs?

A
Opioids = begin laxative prophylactically
Steroids = osteoporosis prevention if long term
Levothyroxine = remember calcium interferes with absorption
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13
Q

What are some side effects of NSAIDs?

A

GI haemorrhage, decline in GFR, decreased effectiveness of diuretics and antihypertensives

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14
Q

What are some side effects of opioids and benzodiazepines?

A

Impair psychomotor function = falls and confusion

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15
Q

What are some side effects of antibiotics?

A

Resistance and C.diff diarrhoea

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16
Q

What are some examples of older people who may be at risk of complications?

A

Recent hospital discharges and use of multiple drugs
Change in patient condition and multiple prescribers
Impaired cognitive status or communication issues

17
Q

What types of medications are associated with increased risk of complications in older people?

A

OTC, complementary medicine, drugs with narrow therapeutic index, drugs associated with side effects

18
Q

How common is polypharmacy?

A

Average use for patient >65 = 4 prescription drugs and 2.5 OTC medications
Average nursing home patient on 7 medications

19
Q

How can polypharmacy be avoided?

A

Try to avoid treating side effect of drug with another drug and try to prescribe a drug that will treat more than one existing problem

20
Q

What is Beers criteria of medication?

A

List of >50 medications split into three categories

21
Q

What are the categories in the Beers criteria?

A
A = always avoided
B = potentially inappropriate 
C = use with caution
22
Q

What is the disadvantage of the Beers criteria?

A

issues with use in UK as >50% of drugs are not available in Europe

23
Q

What are the components of the STOPP-START tool for prescribing?

A
STOPP = screening tool for older people's potentially inappropriate prescriptions 
START = screening tool to alert doctors to right treatment
24
Q

What is the purpose of the STOPP-START tool for prescribing?

A

Highlights prescriptions that are potentially inappropriate if age >=65 and those that should be considered if there are no contraindications

25
Q

What are some GI medications that should be stopped in older people?

A

Loperamide, prochlorperazine/metoclopramide in Parkinsonism, stimulant laxatives for intestinal obstruction

26
Q

What are some GI medications that should be considered in older people?

A

PPI for severe GORD or patients >80 on antiplatelets and SSRIs, fibre supplement for chronic symptomatic diverticular disease

27
Q

What are some CV medications that should be stopped in older people?

A

B-blockers with verapamil, non-selective B-blockers in COPD, CCB in chronic constipation or class 3/4 heart failure, dipyridamole, atorvastatin 80mg for >6 months post MI

28
Q

What are some CV medications that should be considered in older people?

A

Antihypertensives where SBP >160 mmHg, ACEi in chronic heart failure or post MI, PPI with aspirin and warfarin, warfarin in chronic AF