© American Diabetes Association ®, Inc., 2006
Polypharmacy as a Risk Factor in the Treatment of Type 2 Diabetes
The desire to take medicine is perhaps the greatest feature which distinguishes man from animals. Polypharmacy is a term that has been used in health care for decades. In conventional use, it has meant the concurrent use of multiple medications in the same patient. However, this definition understates the potential for harm that polypharmacy may pose to the patient. Other definitions have appeared in the medical literature that put the problem of polypharmacy in a broader perspective. One defines polypharmacy as the "prescription, administration, or use of more medications than are clinically indicated, or when a medical regimen includes at least one unnecessary medication."25 However, polypharmacy may be unavoidable, given that multiple drug therapy has become the standard of care in most chronic conditions.6 The comorbidities of diabetes commonly include hypertension, dyslipidemia, depression, and coagulopathies, each of which may require one or more drugs for adequate control. Add to this other conditions that often accompany diabetes, such as hypothyroidism, heart failure, and osteoporosis, and the total number of possible medications needed becomes significant.
Polypharmacy is inevitable when treating a common chronic condition such as
diabetes, given the large number of treatment options now available. The
potential for polypharmacy will continue to increase with time, as additional
therapeutic options become available. Before the approval of metformin in the
United States in 1995, only insulin and the sulfonylureas were available for
the treatment of diabetes. Now, there are five classes of oral agents, three
rapid-acting insulin analogs, and two long-acting analogs, as well as the
"traditional" insulins. The emergence of other forms of insulin
(inhaled, topical patches), the incretin gut hormones, newer mixed peroxisome
proliferatoractivated receptor-
Predictors for polypharmacy include the number of drugs at start, patient age, the presence of conditions such as diabetes or coronary ischemic disease, and the use of medications without clear indications.7 The most common causes of polypharmacy are listed in Table 12 and discussed in more detail below.
Multiple prescribers Each of these providers may prescribe medications, adding to a growing list of drugs on a patient's profile. All too often, patients' drug lists are not regularly monitored for potential problems. There is a stronger tendency for drugs to be added to a patient's regimen than for drugs to be discontinued. Adding new treatments may make a previously used medication redundant.8 The continuous addition of drugs over time, without periodic reevaluation of the drug regimen, is one of the major contributors to the development of polypharmacy.
Aging population The burden of polypharmacy falls especially hard on the elderly, who incur the highest incidence of chronic conditions coupled with reduced or fixed incomes and therefore inability to afford the cost of multiple medications. Treatment of elderly patients with diabetes requires special considerations, especially in how aggressively diabetes should be treated. Treatment decisions should consider age and life expectancy, comorbid conditions, cognitive status, living arrangements, and severity of vascular conditions.11
Complex drug therapies Clinical practice guidelines rarely address the treatment of patients with three or more chronic diseases, and such patients make up half of the population > 65 years of age in the United States.13 When other aspects of chronic disease management (e.g., dietary or other lifestyle modifications, attending regular office visits, and laboratory monitoring) are added, the burden on elderly patients and their caregivers becomes onerous and, in many cases, unsustainable over time. Guidelines and quality assurance initiatives largely ignore the issue of marginal benefits of multiple medications as recommended by various sets of treatment guidelines.14
Psychosocial contributions
Adverse drug reactions The prevalence of problems associated with multiple medications is probably underestimated. Increasing the number of medications prescribed increases the risk of adverse reactions.14 The interaction of aging, concurrent comorbidities, pharmacokinetics, and polypharmacy places the elderly at increased risk of adverse drug reactions.15
The major consequences of polypharmacy are listed in Table 23.
Duplication of therapy
Decreased adherence Adherence to a course of therapy is more likely when a patient understands the reasons for taking a medication and is involved in the decision to prescribe. Patients are more likely to have confidence in the prescriber if they are given basic knowledge of potential adverse effects and advice about what to do if such effects occur.8 Increasingly, clinical practice guidelines are incorporating quality of life and patient preferences to increase adherence by both physicians and patients.13
Review of a patient's drug therapy should begin with assessing the patient's adherence, asking about problems with side effects, and determining whether the provider's drug list in the patient's record matches the patient's own drug list. Asking patients to bring all of their medication containers to routinely scheduled office visits can facilitate this effort. Providers can also help patients recall the need for each of their medications by adding the purpose to the directions for use in their written prescriptions (i.e., "once daily for blood pressure" or "two times a day for diabetes"). The medication list should include all prescription medications, including those taken routinely and those used on an as-needed basis; over-the-counter medications; herbal products; and vitamins or nutritional supplements. Medication lists constructed from memory or even from written lists are notoriously misleading and incomplete compared to examination of the actual medication containers.
Presentation A 70-year-old white man with diabetes for the past 15 years, atrial fibrillation, heart failure, hypertension, and dsylipidemia comes in for a routine office visit. His blood pressure is 140/82 mmHg, heart rate is 70 bpm, lungs are clear, and abdomen is soft and nontender. The patient is obese with 2+ pedal edema in both lower extremities; pedal pulses are decreased in both feet. Recent lab data include: hemoglobin A1c (A1C) 8.2%, LDL cholesterol 126 mg/dl, triglycerides 180 mg/dl, HDL cholesterol 45 mg/dl, potassium 5.3 mmol/l, albumin-to-creatinine ratio 37.7 mg/g, serum creatinine 1.1 mg/dl, and estimated creatinine clearance 40 ml/min. The patient's medication list, obtained from his chart, included:
Organizing the drug regimen
warfarin
potassium chloride, 20 mEq once daily
Analysis of the drug regimen
Multiple drug therapy has become the standard of care in the treatment of most chronic diseases. However, patients' drug regimens need regular review and evaluation to ensure that unnecessary and redundant medications are discontinued. Patients and providers need to actively and regularly discuss the goals of therapy and address concerns about adherence, cost, side effects, and other matters of significance in achieving an individualized and realistic therapeutic plan.
Roger P. Austin, MS, RPh, CDE, is a clinical pharmacist with the Henry Ford Health System in Sterling Heights, Mich., and an associate editor of Diabetes Spectrum.
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