Polypharmacy Management in Chronic Conditions: A Systematic Literature Review of Italian Interventions

Author:

Perrella Lara1,Mucherino Sara1ORCID,Casula Manuela23ORCID,Illario Maddalena4ORCID,Orlando Valentina1ORCID,Menditto Enrica1

Affiliation:

1. CIRFF-Center of Pharmacoeconomics and Drug Utilization, Department of Pharmacy, University of Naples Federico II, 80131 Naples, Italy

2. Epidemiology and Preventive Pharmacology Service (SEFAP), Department of Pharmacological and Biomolecular Sciences, University of Milan, 20133 Milan, Italy

3. IRCCS MultiMedica Hospital, Sesto S. Giovanni, 20099 Milan, Italy

4. Division of Health Innovation, Campania Region Health Directorate, 80143 Naples, Italy

Abstract

Background: Potentially inappropriate polypharmacy (PIP) is among the major factors leading to adverse drug reactions, increased healthcare costs, reduced medication adherence, and worsened patient conditions. This study aims to identify existing interventions implemented to monitor and manage polypharmacy in the Italian setting. Methods: A systematic literature review (PROSPERO: CRD42023457049) was carried out according to the PRISMA statement guidelines. PubMed, Embase, ProQuest, and Web of Science were queried without temporal constraints, encompassing all published papers until October 2023. Inclusion criteria followed the PICO model: patients with polypharmacy; interventions to monitor/manage polypharmacy regimen versus no/any intervention; outcomes in terms of intervention effectiveness and cost variation. Results: After duplicate deletion, 153 potentially relevant publications were extracted. Following abstract and full-text screenings, nine articles met the inclusion criteria. Overall, 78% (n = 7) were observational studies, 11% (n = 1) were experimental studies, and 11% (n = 1) were two-phase studies. A total of 44% (n = 4) of the studies involved patients aged ≥ 65 years, while 56% (n = 5) were disease-specific. Monitoring was the most prevalent choice of intervention (67%; n = 6). Outcomes were mainly related to levels of polypharmacy (29%; n = 6) and comorbidities (29%; n = 6), effectiveness rates (14%; n = 3), and avoidable costs (9%; n = 2). Conclusions: This review outlines that Italy is still lacking in interventions to monitor/manage PIP, addressing an unmet need in developing patient-tailored strategies for reducing health-system burden.

Funder

PNRR M4C2 Inv.1.3 PE-Partenariati Estesi

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference43 articles.

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3. Health outcomes associated with polypharmacy in community-dwelling older adults: A systematic review;Fried;J. Am. Geriatr. Soc.,2014

4. Polypharmacy prevalence among older adults based on the survey of health, ageing and retirement in Europe;Giardini;Arch. Gerontol. Geriatr.,2018

5. How healthy is community-dwelling elderly population? Results from southern Italy;Guerriero;Transl. Med.,2015

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