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Am Fam Physician. 2019;99(1):7-9

See related articles from FPM: Deprescribing Unnecessary Medications: A Four-Part Process and What Needs to Change to Make Deprescribing Doable

Author disclosure: No relevant financial affiliations.

Nearly one-half of older adults take five or more medications,1 and as many as one in five of these prescriptions is potentially inappropriate.2 Older adults prescribed more medications are more likely to be hospitalized for an adverse drug reaction.3 Moreover, adverse drug reactions account for more morbidity and mortality than most chronic diseases,4,5 with death rates higher than many common cancers.6,7

Polypharmacy is a clinical challenge because the health care system is geared toward starting medications, not reducing or stopping them, and guidelines typically include recommendations for initiating medications, but not stopping them. Although any medication may offer potential benefit, each also has potential harm. When combined, the risk of interactions with other medications or conditions or cumulative harms can outweigh the benefits. This means prioritization for ongoing treatment is an essential skill for clinicians. One component of good prescribing is deprescribing, which is defined as adjusting medications down to the minimum effective dosage or stopping them when a patient's health status changes in a way that medication burden or potential for harm outweighs the benefit of the medication.

Discussions about deprescribing with patients and families provide a prime opportunity for person-focused care and shared decision making. There are four important medication issues to discuss with patients as they get older: (1) the way older bodies respond to and process medication changes,8 which often results in different surrogate targets9 and lower medication dosages to avoid adverse effects while achieving the same benefit; (2) the weaker evidence regarding medication effectiveness, especially in patients who have multiple comorbidities and who are frail10,11; (3) the additive adverse effects from medication burden12; and (4) the possible evolving goals of treatment as patients near the end of life.13 These issues can introduce patients to the idea of choice regarding continuing or deprescribing medications, which facilitates a discussion of options and naturally leads to an exploration of preferences.14

Patients would like to take fewer medications if they could, but often rely on clinicians to take the initiative to start the conversation.15 These conversations should be focused on helping patients understand that reducing or stopping medications maintains the best quality of life possible while still maximizing the benefit of medications in the areas important to the patient, where there is good evidence for ongoing benefit in this age group.

The five steps to individualize deprescribing practices to each patient are (1) to identify potentially inappropriate medications; (2) to determine if the medication dosage can be reduced or the medication stopped; (3) to plan tapering; (4) to monitor (for discontinuation symptoms or the need to restart) and support the patient; and (5) to document outcomes16,17 (Table 1). This process seems fairly straightforward; however, each step requires time, careful thought, preparation, and conversation. It is not necessary, nor always possible, to take all these steps at once; leveraging the longitudinal relationship of family medicine and iterative monitoring can have a big effect. Some simple ways to start include:

  • Assessing one particular adverse effect across all medications (e.g., additive anticholinergic effects affecting cognition).12

  • Routinely asking if a patient's problem is caused by his or her medication (e.g., falls, cognitive impairment).

  • Looking at “legacy prescribing,”16 which is when medications are initially prescribed for an intermediate duration, but continued indefinitely (e.g., proton pump inhibitors, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, benzodiazepines); for example, modifying the prescribing system to flag when the course of intended treatment is complete.

  • Choosing specific medications on which to focus; for example, target medications known to have significant changes in metabolism or excretion or effects in older persons (e.g., beta blockers).

  • Choosing one or two patients per day with whom to start deprescribing conversations.

StepConsiderResources
Identify potentially inappropriate medicationsContinued necessity, benefit, contribution to or cause of an adverse reaction, future risk of adverse reaction, medication or food interactions, adherence, patient preference, goals of care, life expectancyAmerican Geriatrics Society Beers Criteria Anticholinergic burden scales Medstopper STOPP/START Criteria (screening tool of older persons' prescriptions)
Determine if the dosage can be reduced or the medication stopped
Plan tapering and withdrawal steps
Monitor (for adverse withdrawal events and against criteria for restarting) and support patient
How to best engage the patient in a conversation about deprescribing, determine options, and provide monitoring and supportAdverse medication withdrawal events information Deprescribing guidelines and algorithms Deprescribing information pamphlets Prescribing information (product monographs with information on dosing in older patients, renal dysfunction, or dosing and monitoring for discontinuation symptoms)
Shared decision-making steps for deprescribing
Document outcomesDocumenting reasons for changes and positive and negative outcomes to facilitate future care and prescribing decision making

Communication and collaboration with patients, families (when appropriate), and other prescribers are essential. Shared decision making about deprescribing can inform the conversation with patients (Table 2). As a possible precursor to discontinuation, a “pause and monitor”17 (drug holiday) approach can be an appealing choice for patients and other prescribers, but it should be combined with a clear plan for dosage changes, monitoring and follow-up, and agreed criteria for restarting.

Introducing choice
You are on a number of medications now. I would like to regularly review these to make sure each of them is still benefiting you, as well as check for side effects.
Medication side effects can add up. I'm worried that “x,” “y,” and “z” might all contribute to memory challenges.
Several of your medications might be contributing to this growing issue you are having with falls. I would like to tell you about different options to reduce risks from these medications. We can try reducing the dose or stopping one or more of these medications. What do you think?
As we get older, medications that worked well may no longer have the same benefit; in particular, I'm thinking that “x” may no longer be needed.
A “course” for this medication is usually eight weeks. Because you have been taking it for longer than “x” weeks, we can reduce the dose slowly and stop it.
Benefits and risks
If we reduce the dose or stop your sleeping pill(s), there is a risk you might have difficulty sleeping for a few nights. We will need to focus on how you can get a good night's sleep without medication. On the plus side, if the sleeping pill is reduced or stopped, you may feel less tired in the morning and have fewer falls.
Exploring options and making decisions
From your point of view, what matters most to you? How do you feel about these options? Is this something you would consider?
What medications are important for you to keep taking?
Are you ready to decide? Do you need more time?
Would you like to try a “pause and monitor” approach, in which we stop the medication, monitor you carefully, and restart the medication if needed?

To maximize a life worth living for older patients, the focus should be as much on when and how to stop medications as on starting them. Family medicine is ideally placed to rise to this challenge.

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