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Medication Complexity Among Older Adults with HF: How Can We Assess Better?

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Abstract

Medical management of heart failure (HF) has evolved and has achieved significant survival benefits, resulting in highly complex medication regimens. Complex medication regimens create challenges for older adults, including nonadherence and increased adverse drug events, especially associated with cognitive impairment, physical limitations, or lack of social support. However, the association between medication complexity and patients’ health outcomes among older adults with HF is unclear. The purpose of this review is to address how the complexity of HF medications has been assessed in the literature and what clinical outcomes are associated with medication regimen complexity in HF. Further, we aimed to explore how older adults were represented in those studies. The Medication Regimen Complexity Index was the most commonly used tool for assessment of medication regimen complexity. Rehospitalization was most frequently assessed as the clinical outcome, and other studies used medication adherence, quality of life, healthcare utilization, healthcare cost, or side effect. However, the studies showed inconsistent results in the association between the medication regimen complexity and clinical outcomes. We also identified an extremely small number of studies that focused on older adults. Notably, current medication regimen complexity tools did not consider a complicated clinical condition of an older adult with multimorbidity, therapeutic competition, drug interactions, or altered tolerance to the usual dose strength of the medications. Furthermore, the outcomes that studies assessed were rarely comprehensive or patient centered. More studies are required to fill the knowledge gap identifying more comprehensive and accurate medication regimen complexity tools and more patient-centered outcome assessment.

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Correspondence to Min Ji Kwak.

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Conflict of interest

Dr. Kwak receives funding from National Institute on Aging 1R24AG064025 and receives consult fee from the Endocrine & Diabetes Plus Clinic of Houston and Institute for Healthcare Improvement. Dr. Goyal is supported by American Heart Association grant 20CDA35310455, National Institute on Aging grant K76AG064428, and Loan Repayment Program award L30AG060521; Dr. Goyal receives personal fees for medicolegal consulting related to heart failure; and has received honoraria from Akcea inc. and Bionest inc. Dr. Hummel is the PI or co-I for studies funded by Pfizer, Novartis, Corvia and Axon, and has funding from National Institute on Aging, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, and Veterans Affairs Clinical Science Research and Development. Dr. Hummel also had previously received research funding from PurFoods, LLC. Dr. Kim receives personal fees from Alosa Health and research funding from the National Institute of Health for projects unrelated to the current work. Dr. Holly Holmes received research funding from Healthcare Services Corporation, which is a foundation of Blue Cross Blue Shield, for a study of deprescribing. The funding is unrelated to the manuscript under consideration. Dr. Dhoble is a consultant and proctor for Abbott Vascular. Dr. Aparasu receives research funding from Astellas Inc., Incyte Corp., Gilead, and Novartis Inc. for projects unrelated to the current work.

Funding

This work was supported by the National Institutes on Aging R24AG064025. The funding agency did not have any involvement in study design, data collection, analysis, or interpretation of the data, writing of the manuscript or decision to submit the article for publication.

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MJK: conceptualization, data curation, investigation, resources, writing—original draft; MC: data curation, investigation, resources; PG and SH: conceptualization, validation, supervision, writing—review and editing; AD, AD and DHK: validation, supervision, writing—review and editing; RA and HH: conceptualization, supervision, writing—review and editing.

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Kwak, M., Cheng, M., Goyal, P. et al. Medication Complexity Among Older Adults with HF: How Can We Assess Better?. Drugs Aging 39, 851–861 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1007/s40266-022-00979-2

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