Prevention of adverse drug reactions in hospitalized older patients with multi-morbidity and polypharmacy: the SENATOR* randomized controlled clinical trial

Author:

O'Mahony Denis1,Gudmundsson Adalsteinn2,Soiza Roy L3,Petrovic Mirko4,Cruz-Jentoft Alfonso Jose5,Cherubini Antonio6,Fordham Richard7,Byrne Stephen8,Dahly Darren9,Gallagher Paul10,Lavan Amanda11,Curtin Denis11,Dalton Kieran12ORCID,Cullinan Shane13,Flanagan Evelyn14,Shiely Frances15,Samuelsson Olafur16,Sverrisdottir Astros16,Subbarayan Selvarani17,Vandaele Lore18,Meireson Eline18,Montero-Errasquin Beatriz5,Rexach-Cano Aurora5,Correa Perez Andrea5,Lozano-Montoya Isabel5,Vélez-Díaz-Pallarés Manuel5,Cerenzia Annarita6,Corradi Samanta6,Soledad Cotorruelo Ferreiro Maria6,Dimitri Federica6,Marinelli Paolo6,Martelli Gaia6,Fong Soe Khioe Rebekah19ORCID,Eustace Joseph20

Affiliation:

1. University College Cork School of Medicine—Medicine Cork Ireland, Cork University Hospital Group, Cork, Ireland

2. Landspitali University Hospital Reykjavik, Landspitali, Iceland

3. NHS Grampian, University of Aberdeen Institute of Applied Health Sciences—Ageing Clinical and Experimental Research, Aberdeen, UK

4. University of Ghent—Medicine, University Hospital Ghent, Ghent, Belgium

5. Hospital Universario Ramón y Cajal—Geriatrics, Madrid, Spain

6. Italian National Research Center on Aging (IRCCS-INRCA), Geriatrics and Geriatrics Emergency Care, Ancona, Italy

7. Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK

8. School of Pharmacy, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland

9. University College Cork, Cork, Ireland

10. Cork University Hospital—Geriatric Medicine, Cork, Ireland

11. University College Cork, School of Medicine—Geriatrics, Cork, Ireland

12. University College Cork, National University of Ireland, Pharmaceutical Care Research Group, School of Pharmacy, Cork Ireland

13. Royal College of Surgeons, School of Pharmacy, Dublin, Ireland

14. University College Cork, Clinical Research Facility, Cork, Ireland

15. University College Cork, School of Epidemiology and Public Health, Cork, Ireland

16. Landspitali University Hospital, Geriatric Medicine Reykjavik, Iceland

17. NHS Grampian, Aberdeen Royal Infirmary, Aberdeen UK

18. University Hospital Ghent, Ghent, Belgium

19. University of East Anglia, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Norwich, UK

20. University College Cork, National University of Ireland—Clinical Research Facility, Cork, Ireland

Abstract

Abstract Background Multi-morbidity and polypharmacy increase the risk of non-trivial adverse drug reactions (ADRs) in older people during hospitalization. Despite this, there are no established interventions for hospital-acquired ADR prevention. Methods We undertook a pragmatic, multi-national, parallel arm prospective randomized open-label, blinded endpoint (PROBE) controlled trial enrolling patients at six European medical centres. We randomized 1,537 older medical and surgical patients with multi-morbidity and polypharmacy on admission in a 1:1 ratio to SENATOR software-guided medication optimization plus standard care (intervention, n = 772, mean number of daily medications = 9.34) or standard care alone (control, n = 765, mean number of daily medications = 9.23) using block randomization stratified by site and admission type. Attending clinicians in the intervention arm received SENATOR-generated advice at a single time point with recommendations they could choose to adopt or not. The primary endpoint was occurrence of probable or certain ADRs within 14 days of randomization. Secondary endpoints were primary endpoint derivatives; tertiary endpoints included all-cause mortality, re-hospitalization, composite healthcare utilization and health-related quality of life. Results For the primary endpoint, there was no difference between the intervention and control groups (24.5 vs. 24.8%; OR 0.98; 95% CI 0.77–1.24; P = 0.88). Similarly, with secondary and tertiary endpoints, there were no significant differences. Among attending clinicians in the intervention group, implementation of SENATOR software-generated medication advice points was poor (~15%). Conclusions In this trial, uptake of software-generated medication advice to minimize ADRs was poor and did not reduce ADR incidence during index hospitalization.

Funder

European Commission Seventh Framework Programme

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Ageing,General Medicine

Reference44 articles.

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