4.6 Article

Low-Value Proton Pump Inhibitor Prescriptions Among Older Adults at a Large Academic Health System

期刊

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY
卷 67, 期 12, 页码 2600-2604

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jgs.16117

关键词

deprescribing; geriatrics; high-value care; quality improvement; quality of care

资金

  1. Kaiser Permanente Taking Action on Overuse Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Subaward
  2. National Institutes of Health (NIH)/National Center for Advanced Translational Science Institute (CTSI) award [KL2TR001882]
  3. National Institute on Aging [1K24AG047899-01]
  4. UCLA CTSI NIH/National Center for Advanced Translational Science Grant [L1TR001881]
  5. RAND Center of Excellence on Health System Performance - Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality [1U19HS024067-01]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

BACKGROUND Older adults are particularly vulnerable to complications from proton pump inhibitor (PPI) drugs. We sought to characterize the prevalence of potentially low-value PPI prescriptions among older adults to inform a quality improvement (QI) intervention. METHODS We created a cohort of patients, aged 65 years or older, receiving primary care at a large academic health system in 2018. We identified patients currently prescribed any PPI using the electronic health record (EHR) medication list (current defined as September 1, 2018). A geriatrician, a gastroenterologist, a QI expert, and two primary care physicians (PCPs) created multidisciplinary PPI appropriateness criteria based on evidenced-based guidelines. Supervised by a gastroenterologist and PCP, two internal medicine residents conducted manual chart reviews in a random sample of 399 patients prescribed PPIs. We considered prescriptions potentially low value if they lacked a guideline-based (1) short-term indication (gastroesophageal reflux disease [GERD]/peptic ulcer disease/Helicobacter pylori gastritis/dyspepsia) or (2) long-term (>8 weeks) indication (severe/refractory GERD/erosive esophagitis/Barrett esophagus/esophageal adenocarcinoma/esophageal stricture/high gastrointestinal bleeding risk/Zollinger-Ellison syndrome). We used the Wilson score method to calculate 95% confidence intervals (CIs) on low-value PPI prescription prevalence. RESULTS Among 69 352 older adults, 8729 (12.6%) were prescribed a PPI. In the sample of 399 patients prescribed PPIs, 63.9% were female; their mean age was 76.2 years, and they were seen by 169 PCPs. Of the 399 prescriptions, 143 (35.8%; 95% CI = 31.3%-40.7%) were potentially low value-of which 82% began appropriately (eg, GERD) but then continued long term without a guideline-based indication. Among 169 PCPs, 32 (18.9%) contributed to 59.2% of potentially low-value prescriptions. CONCLUSION One in eight older adults were prescribed a PPI, and over one-third of prescriptions were potentially low-value. Most often, appropriate short-term prescriptions became potentially low value because they lacked long-term indications. With most potentially low-value prescribing concentrated among a small subset of PCPs, interventions targeting them and/or applying EHR-based automatic stopping rules may protect older adults from harm.

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