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Recommendations to support deprescribing medications late in life

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TLDR
This commentary presents recommendations that could be incorporated into prescribing processes for all healthcare professionals and used to support the rationalization or deprescribing of medication in diminished life expectancy and uses statin therapy as an illustrative example.
Abstract
It is widely acknowledged that patients—particularly those late in life—are frequently exposed to the harms of medication. To minimize these harms, several frameworks have been developed by which prescribing can be optimized. In the context of diminishing life expectancy, these frameworks can be used to reduce medications that are no longer necessary, but appear to fall short of actual guidelines that incorporate a consideration of stopping medications. In this commentary, we present recommendations that could be incorporated into prescribing processes for all healthcare professionals and, ultimately, used to support the rationalization or deprescribing of medication in diminished life expectancy. We frame these recommendations in the same context as guidance for the initiation and discontinuation of implantable cardiac devices and argue that the two processes—with regards to decision-making—should be the same. We present our recommendations with preventive medication use in mind, and use statin therapy as an illustrative example.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Deprescribing: a primary care perspective

TL;DR: The issue of deprescribing from the perspective of primary care, the process of supervised withdrawal of an inappropriate medication and the potential to reduce some of the problems associated with polypharmacy is examined.
Journal ArticleDOI

The deprescribing rainbow: a conceptual framework highlighting the importance of patient context when stopping medication in older people.

TL;DR: A conceptual framework in the form of a rainbow is developed and place the person at the center of the deprescribing process and how this approach could be adopted by those working in clinical practice.
Journal ArticleDOI

An Ecological Approach to Reducing Potentially Inappropriate Medication Use: Canadian Deprescribing Network

TL;DR: The justification, theoretical foundation, and process for developing a Canadian Deprescribing Network (CaDeN), a network of individuals, organizations, and decision-makers committed to promoting the appropriate use of medications and non-pharmacological approaches to care, especially among older people in Canada are described.
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'I don't think I'd be frightened if the statins went': A phenomenological qualitative study exploring medicines use in palliative care patients, carers and healthcare professionals.

TL;DR: There is a need to develop deprescribing strategies for patients with life-limiting illness that seek to establish patient expectations, consider the timing of the discussion about ceasing treatment and encourage the involvement of other stakeholders in the decision-making progress.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

American Geriatrics Society updated Beers Criteria for potentially inappropriate medication use in older adults

TL;DR: This update has much strength, including the use of an evidence-based approach using the Institute of Medicine standards and the development of a partnership to regularly update the Criteria.
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STOPP (Screening Tool of Older Person's Prescriptions) and START (Screening Tool to Alert doctors to Right Treatment). Consensus validation.

TL;DR: StopP/START as discussed by the authors is a screening tool of older persons' prescriptions incorporating criteria for potentially inappropriate drugs called STOPP (Screening Tool of Older Persons' Prescriptions).
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Interventions to improve the appropriate use of polypharmacy for older people

TL;DR: It is unclear whether interventions to improve appropriate polypharmacy, such as pharmaceutical care, resulted in clinically significant improvement; however, they appear beneficial in terms of reducing inappropriate prescribing.
Journal ArticleDOI

Decision Making in Advanced Heart Failure A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association

TL;DR: Shared decision making for advanced heart failure has become both more challenging and more crucial as duration of disease and treatment options have increased as mentioned in this paper, and the ethical and legal mandate to involve patients in medical decisions has become more and more challenging.
Journal ArticleDOI

Application of New Cholesterol Guidelines to a Population-Based Sample

TL;DR: The number, and the risk-factor profile, of persons for whom statin therapy would be recommended under the new ACC–AHA guidelines, as compared with the guidelines of the Third Adult Treatment Panel (ATP III) of the National Cholesterol Education Program, are estimated.
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