Assessing causality in deprescribing studies: A focus on adverse drug events and adverse drug withdrawal events

被引:0
|
作者
Li, Xiaojuan [1 ,2 ]
Bayliss, Elizabeth A. [3 ,4 ]
Brookhart, M. Alan [5 ]
Maciejewski, Matthew L. [5 ,6 ,7 ]
机构
[1] Harvard Med Sch, Dept Populat Med, Boston, MA USA
[2] Harvard Pilgrim Hlth Care Inst, Boston, MA USA
[3] Kaiser Permanente Colorado, Inst Hlth Res, Aurora, CO USA
[4] Univ Colorado, Sch Med, Dept Family Med, Aurora, CO USA
[5] Duke Univ, Dept Populat Hlth Sci, Durham, NC USA
[6] Durham VA Med Ctr, Ctr Innovat Accelerate Discovery & Practice Transf, Durham, NC USA
[7] Duke Univ, Dept Med, Div Gen Internal Med, Durham, NC USA
关键词
adverse drug effects; adverse drug withdrawal effects; deprescribing; medication management; OLDER-ADULTS; MEDICATION; ADHERENCE; RISK; PRESCRIPTIONS; POLYPHARMACY; INFERENCE; THERAPY; TRIALS;
D O I
10.1111/jgs.19241
中图分类号
R592 [老年病学]; C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ; 100203 ;
摘要
Generating real-world evidence about the effect of medication discontinuation or dose reduction on outcomes, such as reduction of adverse drug effects (ADE; intended benefit) and occurrence of adverse drug withdrawal events (ADWE; unintended harm), is crucial to informing deprescribing decisions. Determining the causal effects of deprescribing is difficult for many reasons, including lack of randomization in real-world study designs and other design and measurement issues that pose threats to internal validity. The inherent challenge is how to identify the effects, both intended benefits and unintended harms, of a new medication stoppage or reduction when implemented in patients with many potential clinical and social risks that may influence the likelihood of deprescribing as well as outcomes. We discuss methodological issues of estimating the effect of medication discontinuation or reduction on risk of ADEs and ADWEs considering: (1) sampling study populations of sufficient size with the potential to demonstrate clinically meaningful and quantifiable outcomes, (2) accurate and appropriately timed measurement of covariates, outcomes, and discontinuation, and (3) statistical approaches to managing confounding and other biases inherent in long-term medication use by individuals with multiple morbidities. Designing rigorous deprescribing studies that address internal validity threats will support evidence generation by improving the ability to assess benefits and harms when the exposure of interest is the absence of a medication. Iterative learnings about data quality, variable definition, variable measurement, and exposure-outcome associations will inform strategies to improve the causal inferences possible in real-world deprescribing studies.
引用
收藏
页码:697 / 706
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Adverse Drug Events in Older Adults: Review of Adjudication Methods in Deprescribing Studies
    Ross, Sydney B.
    Wu, Peter E.
    Atique, Anika
    Papillon-Ferland, Louise
    Tamblyn, Robyn
    Lee, Todd C.
    McDonald, Emily G.
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY, 2020, 68 (07) : 1594 - 1602
  • [2] Criteria to Report Adverse Drug Withdrawal Events in Clinical Trials: A Systematic Review
    Lee, Jimin J.
    Bortolussi-Courval, Emilie
    Filosa, Eva
    Rej, Soham
    Godard-Sebillote, Claire
    Tamblyn, Robyn
    Lee, Todd C.
    Mcdonald, Emily G.
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY, 2025,
  • [3] Antipsychotic Polypharmacy Is Associated With Adverse Drug Events in Psychiatric Inpatients The Japan Adverse Drug Events Study
    Ayani, Nobutaka
    Morimoto, Takeshi
    Sakuma, Mio
    Kikuchi, Toshiaki
    Watanabe, Koichiro
    Narumoto, Jin
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY, 2021, 41 (04) : 397 - 402
  • [4] Pharmacist surveillance of adverse drug events
    Forster, AJ
    Halil, RB
    Tierney, MG
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HEALTH-SYSTEM PHARMACY, 2004, 61 (14) : 1466 - 1472
  • [5] Epidemiology of adverse drug events and medication errors in four nursing homes in Japan: the Japan Adverse Drug Events (JADE) Study
    Ayani, Nobutaka
    Oya, Nozomu
    Kitaoka, Riki
    Kuwahara, Akiko
    Morimoto, Takeshi
    Sakuma, Mio
    Narumoto, Jin
    BMJ QUALITY & SAFETY, 2022, 31 (12) : 878 - 887
  • [6] Adverse drug events reported by rural older adults
    Shade, Marcia Y.
    Berger, Ann M.
    Chaperon, Claudia
    Haynatzki, Gleb
    Sobeski, Linda
    GERIATRIC NURSING, 2017, 38 (06) : 584 - 588
  • [7] Categorisation of Pharmaceutical Adverse Events Using the Japanese Adverse Drug Event Report Database: Characteristic Adverse Drug Events of the Elderly Treated with Polypharmacy
    Negishi, Akio
    Oshima, Shinji
    Horii, Norimitsu
    Mutoh, Mizue
    Inoue, Naoko
    Numajiri, Sachihiko
    Ohshima, Shigeru
    Kobayashi, Daisuke
    DRUGS-REAL WORLD OUTCOMES, 2021, 8 (01) : 49 - 61
  • [8] Anticoagulation-associated Adverse Drug Events
    Piazza, Gregory
    Thanh Nha Nguyen
    Cios, Deborah
    Labreche, Matthew
    Hohlfelder, Benjamin
    Fanikos, John
    Fiumara, Karen
    Goldhaber, Samuel Z.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 2011, 124 (12) : 1136 - 1142
  • [9] Adverse Drug Events in the Elderly: An Ongoing Problem
    Gray, Charnelda L.
    Gardner, Carole
    JOURNAL OF MANAGED CARE PHARMACY, 2009, 15 (07): : 568 - 571
  • [10] Evaluation of the Direct Costs of Managing Adverse Drug Events in all Ages and of Avoidable Adverse Drug Events in Older Adults in Japan
    Katsuno, Hayato
    Tachi, Tomoya
    Matsuyama, Takuya
    Sugioka, Mayuko
    Aoyama, Satoshi
    Osawa, Tomohiro
    Noguchi, Yoshihiro
    Yasuda, Masahiro
    Goto, Chitoshi
    Mizui, Takashi
    Teramachi, Hitomi
    FRONTIERS IN PHARMACOLOGY, 2021, 12