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Dementia patients have greater anti-cholinergic drug burden on discharge from hospital: A multicentre cross-sectional study

INTRODUCTION: Anticholinergic medications block cholinergic transmission. The central effects of anticholinergic drugs can be particularly marked in patients with dementia. Furthermore, anticholinergics antagonise the effects of cholinesterase inhibitors, the main dementia treatment. OBJECTIVES: Thi...

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Autores principales: Randall, J., Hook, A., Grubb, C-M., Ellis, N., Wellington, J., Hemmad, A., Zerdelis, A., Geers, B., Sykes, B., Auty, C., Vinchenzo, C., Thorburn, C., Asogbon, D., Granger, E., Boagey, H., Raphael, J., Patel, K., Bhargava, K., Dolley, M.-K., Maden, M., Shah, M., Lee, Q., Vaidya, R., Sehdev, S., Barai, S., Roche, S., Khalid, U., Harrison, J., Codling, D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9476103/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/j.eurpsy.2021.1127
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author Randall, J.
Hook, A.
Grubb, C-M.
Ellis, N.
Wellington, J.
Hemmad, A.
Zerdelis, A.
Geers, B.
Sykes, B.
Auty, C.
Vinchenzo, C.
Thorburn, C.
Asogbon, D.
Granger, E.
Boagey, H.
Raphael, J.
Patel, K.
Bhargava, K.
Dolley, M.-K.
Maden, M.
Shah, M.
Lee, Q.
Vaidya, R.
Sehdev, S.
Barai, S.
Roche, S.
Khalid, U.
Harrison, J.
Codling, D.
author_facet Randall, J.
Hook, A.
Grubb, C-M.
Ellis, N.
Wellington, J.
Hemmad, A.
Zerdelis, A.
Geers, B.
Sykes, B.
Auty, C.
Vinchenzo, C.
Thorburn, C.
Asogbon, D.
Granger, E.
Boagey, H.
Raphael, J.
Patel, K.
Bhargava, K.
Dolley, M.-K.
Maden, M.
Shah, M.
Lee, Q.
Vaidya, R.
Sehdev, S.
Barai, S.
Roche, S.
Khalid, U.
Harrison, J.
Codling, D.
author_sort Randall, J.
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Anticholinergic medications block cholinergic transmission. The central effects of anticholinergic drugs can be particularly marked in patients with dementia. Furthermore, anticholinergics antagonise the effects of cholinesterase inhibitors, the main dementia treatment. OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to assess anticholinergic drug prescribing among dementia patients before and after admission to UK acute hospitals. METHODS: 352 patients with dementia were included from 17 hospitals in the UK. All were admitted to surgical, medical or Care of the Elderly wards in 2019. Information about patients’ prescriptions were recorded on a standardised form. An evidence-based online calculator was used to calculate the anticholinergic drug burden of each patient. The correlation between two subgroups upon admission and discharge was tested with Spearman’s Rank Correlation. RESULTS: Table 1 shows patient demographics. On admission, 37.8% of patients had an anticholinergic burden score ≥1 and 5.68% ≥3. At discharge, 43.2% of patients had an anticholinergic burden score ≥1 and 9.1% ≥3. The increase was statistically significant (rho 0.688; p=2.2x10(-16)). The most common group of anticholinergic medications prescribed at discharge were psychotropics (see Figure 1). Among patients prescribed cholinesterase inhibitors, 44.9% were also taking anticholinergic medications. [Figure: see text] [Figure: see text] CONCLUSIONS: This multicentre cross-sectional study found that people with dementia are frequently prescribed anticholinergic drugs, even if also taking cholinesterase inhibitors, and are significantly more likely to be discharged with a higher anticholinergic drug burden than on admission to hospital. CONFLICT OF INTEREST: This project was planned and executed by the authors on behalf of SPARC (Student Psychiatry Audit and Research Collaborative). We thank the National Student Association of Medical Research for allowing us use of the Enketo platform. Judith Harrison was su
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spelling pubmed-94761032022-09-29 Dementia patients have greater anti-cholinergic drug burden on discharge from hospital: A multicentre cross-sectional study Randall, J. Hook, A. Grubb, C-M. Ellis, N. Wellington, J. Hemmad, A. Zerdelis, A. Geers, B. Sykes, B. Auty, C. Vinchenzo, C. Thorburn, C. Asogbon, D. Granger, E. Boagey, H. Raphael, J. Patel, K. Bhargava, K. Dolley, M.-K. Maden, M. Shah, M. Lee, Q. Vaidya, R. Sehdev, S. Barai, S. Roche, S. Khalid, U. Harrison, J. Codling, D. Eur Psychiatry Abstract INTRODUCTION: Anticholinergic medications block cholinergic transmission. The central effects of anticholinergic drugs can be particularly marked in patients with dementia. Furthermore, anticholinergics antagonise the effects of cholinesterase inhibitors, the main dementia treatment. OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to assess anticholinergic drug prescribing among dementia patients before and after admission to UK acute hospitals. METHODS: 352 patients with dementia were included from 17 hospitals in the UK. All were admitted to surgical, medical or Care of the Elderly wards in 2019. Information about patients’ prescriptions were recorded on a standardised form. An evidence-based online calculator was used to calculate the anticholinergic drug burden of each patient. The correlation between two subgroups upon admission and discharge was tested with Spearman’s Rank Correlation. RESULTS: Table 1 shows patient demographics. On admission, 37.8% of patients had an anticholinergic burden score ≥1 and 5.68% ≥3. At discharge, 43.2% of patients had an anticholinergic burden score ≥1 and 9.1% ≥3. The increase was statistically significant (rho 0.688; p=2.2x10(-16)). The most common group of anticholinergic medications prescribed at discharge were psychotropics (see Figure 1). Among patients prescribed cholinesterase inhibitors, 44.9% were also taking anticholinergic medications. [Figure: see text] [Figure: see text] CONCLUSIONS: This multicentre cross-sectional study found that people with dementia are frequently prescribed anticholinergic drugs, even if also taking cholinesterase inhibitors, and are significantly more likely to be discharged with a higher anticholinergic drug burden than on admission to hospital. CONFLICT OF INTEREST: This project was planned and executed by the authors on behalf of SPARC (Student Psychiatry Audit and Research Collaborative). We thank the National Student Association of Medical Research for allowing us use of the Enketo platform. Judith Harrison was su Cambridge University Press 2021-08-13 /pmc/articles/PMC9476103/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/j.eurpsy.2021.1127 Text en © The Author(s) 2021 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstract
Randall, J.
Hook, A.
Grubb, C-M.
Ellis, N.
Wellington, J.
Hemmad, A.
Zerdelis, A.
Geers, B.
Sykes, B.
Auty, C.
Vinchenzo, C.
Thorburn, C.
Asogbon, D.
Granger, E.
Boagey, H.
Raphael, J.
Patel, K.
Bhargava, K.
Dolley, M.-K.
Maden, M.
Shah, M.
Lee, Q.
Vaidya, R.
Sehdev, S.
Barai, S.
Roche, S.
Khalid, U.
Harrison, J.
Codling, D.
Dementia patients have greater anti-cholinergic drug burden on discharge from hospital: A multicentre cross-sectional study
title Dementia patients have greater anti-cholinergic drug burden on discharge from hospital: A multicentre cross-sectional study
title_full Dementia patients have greater anti-cholinergic drug burden on discharge from hospital: A multicentre cross-sectional study
title_fullStr Dementia patients have greater anti-cholinergic drug burden on discharge from hospital: A multicentre cross-sectional study
title_full_unstemmed Dementia patients have greater anti-cholinergic drug burden on discharge from hospital: A multicentre cross-sectional study
title_short Dementia patients have greater anti-cholinergic drug burden on discharge from hospital: A multicentre cross-sectional study
title_sort dementia patients have greater anti-cholinergic drug burden on discharge from hospital: a multicentre cross-sectional study
topic Abstract
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9476103/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/j.eurpsy.2021.1127
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