1. Detection of potentially inappropriate prescribing in older patients with the GheOP³S-tool: completeness and clinical relevance
- Author
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Eline Tommelein, Ellen Van Leeuwen, Annemie Somers, Celine Kympers, Mirko Petrovic, Koen Boussery, Pharmaceutical and Pharmacological Sciences, and Faculty of Arts and Philosophy
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pharmacist ,Beers Criteria ,Inappropriate Prescribing ,03 medical and health sciences ,Drug Utilization Review ,0302 clinical medicine ,Drug Utilization Review/methods ,Older patients ,Completeness (order theory) ,Screening method ,Humans ,Medicine ,Clinical significance ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Medical prescription ,Aged, 80 and over ,Polypharmacy ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Hospitalization ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Family medicine ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Female ,business - Abstract
Objectives: The Ghent Older People’s Prescriptions community Pharmacy Screening (GheOP3S-) tool was recently developed as an explicit screening method to detect Potentially Inappropriate Prescribing (PIP) in the community pharmacy. We aimed to validate the GheOP3S-tool as an effective screening method for PIP.Methods: All patients admitted to the acute geriatric ward of the Sint-Vincentius hospital (Belgium) were consecutively screened for inclusion (≥70 years,≥5 drugs chronically). PIP prevalence was evaluated by applying the GheOP3S-tool on the complete medication history. For each PIP-item, clinical relevance of the detected item, relevance of proposed alternative and subsequent acceptance by the treating geriatrician and a general practitioner were evaluated. Additionally, contribution to the current admission and preventability was assessed by the geriatrician. The completeness of a PIP-screening with the GheOP3S-tool was evaluated through comparison with the adapted Medication Appropriateness Index (aMAI).Results: We detected 250 GheOP3S-items in 57 of 60 included patients (95%) (median: four PIP-items per patient; IQR: 3–5). Both the geriatrician and the general practitioners scored the clinical relevance of the detected items ‘serious’ or ‘significant’ in over 70% of cases. Proposed alternative treatment plans were accepted for 79% of the PIP-items (n = 198). The aMAI detected 536 items, of which 145 were also detected by the GheOP3S-tool. A total of 119 PIP-items were additionally detected by the GheOP3S-tool.Conclusion: The clinical relevance of the PIP-items detected with the GheOP3S-tool is high, likewise the acceptance rate of proposed alternatives.
- Published
- 2019
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