Affiliation:
1. Department of Medicine/Division of Geriatrics Duke University Durham North Carolina USA
2. Geriatric Research Education Clinical Center Durham Veteran Affairs Health Care System Durham North Carolina USA
3. Center for the Study of Aging and Human Development Duke University Durham North Carolina USA
4. Claude D. Pepper Older Americans Independence Center Duke University Durham North Carolina USA
5. Department of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics Duke University Durham North Carolina USA
6. Department of Medicine/Division of General Internal Medicine/Hospital Medicine Duke University Durham North Carolina USA
7. Health Services Research & Development Durham Veterans Affairs Health Care System Durham North Carolina USA
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundCentral nervous system (CNS) medication use is common among older adults, yet the impact of hospitalizations on use remains unclear. This study details CNS medication use, discontinuations, and user profiles during hospitalization periods.MethodsRetrospective cohort study using electronic health records on patients ≥65 years, from three hospitals (2018–2020), and prescribed a CNS medication around hospitalization (90 days prior to 90 days after). Latent class transitions analysis (LCTA) examined profiles of CNS medication class users across four time points (90 days prior, admission, discharge, 90 days after hospitalization).ResultsAmong 4666 patients (mean age 74.3 ± 9.3 years; 63% female; 70% White; mean length of stay 4.6 ± 5.6 days (median 3.0 [2.0, 6.0]), the most commonly prescribed CNS medications were antidepressants (56%) and opioids (49%). Overall, 74% (n = 3446) of patients were persistent users of a CNS medication across all four time points; 7% (n = 388) had discontinuations during hospitalization, but of these, 64% (216/388) had new starts or restarts within 90 days after hospitalization. LCTA identified three profile groups: (1) low CNS medication users, 54%–60% of patients; (2) mental health medication users, 30%–36%; and (3) acute/chronic pain medication users, 9%–10%. Probability of staying in same group across the four time points was high (0.88–1.00). Transitioning to the low CNS medication use group was highest from admission to discharge (probability of 9% for pain medication users, 5% for mental health medication users). Female gender increased (OR 2.4, 95% CI 1.3–4.3), while chronic kidney disease lowered (OR 0.5, 0.2–0.9) the odds of transitioning to the low CNS medication use profile between admission and discharge.ConclusionsCNS medication use stays consistent around hospitalization, with discontinuation more likely between admission and discharge, especially among pain medication users. Further research on patient outcomes is needed to understand the benefits and harms of hospital deprescribing, particularly for medications requiring gradual tapering.
Funder
Doris Duke Charitable Foundation
National Institute on Aging