Publication

Polypharmacy is Associated with an Increased Risk of Bleeding in Elderly Patients with Venous Thromboembolism

Journal Paper/Review - Aug 21, 2014

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Keywords
Polypharmacy, elderly Patients, Venous Thromboembolism
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Citation
Osterwalder J. Polypharmacy is Associated with an Increased Risk of Bleeding in Elderly Patients with Venous Thromboembolism. J Gen Intern Med 2014; 2014, 21. Aug (Epub ahead of print)
Type
Journal Paper/Review (Deutsch)
Journal
J Gen Intern Med 2014; 2014, 21. Aug (Epub ahead of print)
Publication Date
Aug 21, 2014
Issn Print
0884-8734
Issn Electronic
1525-1497
Brief description/objective

BACKGROUND:

Polypharmacy, defined as the concomitant use of multiple medications, is very common in the elderly and may trigger drug-drug interactions and increase the risk of falls in patients receiving vitamin K antagonists.

OBJECTIVE:

To examine whether polypharmacy increases the risk of bleeding in elderly patients who receive vitamin K antagonists for acute venous thromboembolism (VTE).

DESIGN:

We used a prospective cohort study.

PARTICIPANTS:

In a multicenter Swiss cohort, we studied 830 patients aged ≥ 65 years with VTE.

MAIN MEASURES:

We defined polypharmacy as the prescription of more than four different drugs. We assessed the association between polypharmacy and the time to a first major and clinically relevant non-major bleeding, accounting for the competing risk of death. We adjusted for known bleeding risk factors (age, gender, pulmonary embolism, active cancer, arterial hypertension, cardiac disease, cerebrovascular disease, chronic liver and renal disease, diabetes mellitus, history of major bleeding, recent surgery, anemia, thrombocytopenia) and periods of vitamin K antagonist treatment as a time-varying covariate.

KEY RESULTS:

Overall, 413 (49.8 %) patients had polypharmacy. The mean follow-up duration was 17.8 months. Patients with polypharmacy had a significantly higher incidence of major (9.0 vs. 4.1 events/100 patient-years; incidence rate ratio [IRR] 2.18, 95 % confidence interval [CI] 1.32-3.68) and clinically relevant non-major bleeding (14.8 vs. 8.0 events/100 patient-years; IRR 1.85, 95 % CI 1.27-2.71) than patients without polypharmacy. After adjustment, polypharmacy was significantly associated with major (sub-hazard ratio [SHR] 1.83, 95 % CI 1.03-3.25) and clinically relevant non-major bleeding (SHR 1.60, 95 % CI 1.06-2.42).

CONCLUSIONS:

Polypharmacy is associated with an increased risk of both major and clinically relevant non-major bleeding in elderly patients receiving vitamin K antagonists for VTE.