The general practitioner (GP) is confronted, for a part of his clientele, with the management of patients suffering from multimorbidity, leading most often to a polypharmacy. It has five major consequences: increasing the number of inappropriate treatments, increasing the risk of potentially dangerous drug interactions, increasing the risk of contraindications associated with several concomitant pathologies, decreasing adherence to treatments by patients and the increased cost of care. Drug misuse in the elderly is particularly common, due to the age-related physiological changes and physiological alterations, with the consequent increase in the risk of adverse events, particularly hospitalizations. Several tools have been proposed to decrease morbimortality in elderly patients with polypharmacy. The studies concluded that the STOPP/START tool was the most structured, sensitive and had the most appropriate use format for clinical practice. However, there are currently no ambulatory studies demonstrating the impact of prescription revision with STOPP/START on the morbimortality of persons aged 75 years and over. This study aims to assess the effectiveness of an intervention targeting GPs to decrease morbimortality in elderly patients with polypharmacy. Volunteer GPs will be randomly assigned to either the intervention group or to usual care (control group) and they will be followed one year. The intervention consists in systematic medication review by GP with STOPP/START. In both groups, patient morbimortality will be measured at the end of the study.
STOPP/START criteria for potential inappropriate prescribing in older people recognise the dual nature of inappropriate prescribing by including a list of potentially inappropriate medications (STOPP criteria) and potential prescribing omissions (START criteria).
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
3,032
The STOPP / START tool includes a list of 42 substances / drug classes whose prescription could be discontinued based on specific criteria (81 STOPP criteria: Screening Tool of Older Person's Prescriptions) and a list of 34 clinical situations involving consideration of the usefulness of a new prescription (START criteria: Screening Tool to Action the Right Treatment).
Clinical Epidemiology and Ageing (CEpiA) EA7376 Faculté de Médecine, Université Paris Est Créteil (UPEC)
Créteil, France
A composite criterion: - percentage of unplanned hospitalization - percentage of death regardless of cause, - percentage of emergency department visit - percentage of institutionalization
The primary outcome measure will be a composite criterion comprising unplanned hospitalization, death regardless of cause, emergency department visits and institutionalization after 12 months of follow-up. Unplanned hospitalization is defined as either hospitalization decided after a visit to the emergency department (whether the patient was sent by a doctor or not) or hospitalization decided on the same day by the general practitioner.
Time frame: at 12 months
Percentage of unplanned hospitalization
Time frame: at 12 months
Percentage of death regardless of cause
Time frame: at 12 months
Percentage of emergency department visits
Time frame: at 12 months
Percentage of institutionalization
Time frame: at 12 months
Percentage of loss of autonomy
The loss of autonomy at 12 months defined by the loss of at least one activity of the daily living (ADL) between the intervention and 12 months of follow-up.
Time frame: at 12 months
Decrease in the number of drugs on the prescription (%)
The decrease in the number of drugs on the prescription (Polypharmacy decrease) between baseline and 12 months of follow-up
Time frame: at 12 months
Percentage of falls
Time frame: at 12 months
Percentage of recommendations followed
Time frame: at 12 months
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