Trials / Unknown
UnknownNCT04805151
Polypharmacy and Associated Risk Factors and Clinical Outcomes for Surgical Patients Discharged From Hospital
Polypharmacy, Medication Appropriateness, Risk Factors, Clinical Outcomes and Predication on Medication Related Harm Post- Discharge From a Hospital for Surgical Patients
- Status
- Unknown
- Phase
- —
- Study type
- Observational
- Enrollment
- 56,000 (actual)
- Sponsor
- University of Iceland · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 18 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- —
Summary
The World Health Organisation Patient Safety Challenge: Medication Without Harm has brought our attention to the importance of medication-related harm as a global public health issue. One of the major contributing factors is polypharmacy, the usage of multiple medicines at the same time. People are getting older and living longer with chronic diseases; they need more medications, which frequently leads to polypharmacy. Subsequently, they are at more risk of medication-related harm. The planned project is an epidemiological study on polypharmacy, medication appropriateness, risk factors, and clinical outcomes post-discharge from a hospital for surgical patients. The study group hypothesise that pre-and post-operative polypharmacy and potentially inappropriate prescribing is common, especially among older patients, patients with a high comorbidity and frailty burden, and patients undergoing more complicated surgery. Our hypothesis is additionally that preoperative polypharmacy and potentially inappropriate prescribing is associated with a higher short- and long-term mortality, a longer primary hospitalization length of stay, and a higher risk of readmission.
Detailed description
This is an observational, retrospective, single centered study, using clinical data from the patient's medical record from the hospital, the national prescription database of the Directorate of Health, and the and ICD-10 codes from primary care records. For this analysis, medicines will be classified into drug classes based on the first five characters of their WHO Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical (ATC) code. The prevalence (pre) and incidence (post) of polypharmacy (≥5 or more regular medicines) and hyper-polypharmacy (≥10 regular medicines) will be calculated. Potentially inappropriate prescribing will be assessed in individuals ≥65 years applying Beers 2019, Start and Stopp 2014, explicit prescribing criteria. The analysis will be restricted to older individuals, as Beers criteria have not been validated in younger age groups. The anticholinergic burden will be assessed for all individuals ≥18 years will be assessed by applying the anticholinergic burden scale This stratification is important in order to deliver targeted interventions in resource-limited healthcare settings
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| OTHER | No intervention | No intervention |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2021-01-02
- Primary completion
- 2024-06-02
- Completion
- 2025-01-02
- First posted
- 2021-03-18
- Last updated
- 2024-02-09
Locations
1 site across 1 country: Iceland
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04805151. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.