A coordinated medication review involving hospital teams and general practitioners reduced the average number of prescribed medications from 7.86 at admission to 7.16 at 45 days post-discharge.
Does a coordinated medication optimization pathway involving general practitioners reduce polypharmacy and inappropriate medications in elderly surgical patients?
Patients aged ≥ 65 years, taking ≥ 3 medications for ≥ 3 months, with a surgical stay of ≥ 1 day and eligible for discharge to home
Medication reconciliation at admission and discharge, therapeutic review based on STOPP/START and BEERS criteria involving general practitioners, and post-discharge follow-up at Day 3 and Day 45
Treatment continuity 45 days post-discharge (assessed by average number of medications)surrogate
A coordinated medication review involving hospital teams and general practitioners significantly reduced polypharmacy and inappropriate medications in elderly surgical patients, with effects sustained 45 days post-discharge.
Studies show that the medications patients take after being discharged from the hospital often do not match the prescriptions provided at discharge due to inappropriate changes made by patients or community healthcare professionals. To involve a clinical medico-pharmaceutical team during the hospital stay of polymedicated surgical patients in reviewing chronic treatments in collaboration with general practitioners; to support patients post-discharge and ensure information is transmitted to community pharmacists and general practitioners; to assess the impact of this coordinated approach on treatment continuity 45 days post-discharge. This is a prospective multicenter study. Included patients were aged ≥ 65 years, taking ≥ 3 medications for ≥ 3 months, and had a surgical stay of ≥ 1 day. Upon admission, medication reconciliation was performed, followed by a therapeutic review based on STOPP/START criteria, scientific society recommendations, and BEERS criteria. General practitioners were involved in this review process. At discharge, patients underwent medication reconciliation followed by phone calls (Day3, Day45). General practitioners and community pharmacists were informed of follow-up Discharge = Day0, Day3 (pharmacists) and Day45. Fifty-one patients completed the study mean age 74.2 years ± 6.27 (standard deviation). Treatment reviews were performed in 39 patients (76.5%), with general practitioner involvement in 36 cases. Prescription re-evaluations applied 36 STOPP criteria, 13 START criteria, 9 scientific society recommendations, 9 internal hospital guidelines, and 28 clinical-pharmacological considerations. Average number of medications: Admission = 7.86 (3.05); Day0 = 7.12 (3.04); Day45 = 7.16 (3.04) significant decreases between Admission and Day0 (p = 0.0011) and between Admission and Day45 (p = 0.0021) and no significant changes between Day0 and Day45. BEERS medications: Admission = 1.69 (1.22); Day0 = 1.35 (1.16); Day45 = 1.35 (1.20) significant decreases between Admission and Day0/Day45 (p = 0.0014), and no significant changes between Day0 and Day45. This coordination model between hospital and community care, involving general practitioners during hospitalization, represents an innovative approach. It reaffirms the importance of interprofessional collaboration to ensure continuity of care from hospital admission to return home and through post-hospitalization follow-up.
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Gabrielle De Guio
Claire Wolf
Emilie Petit-Jean
European Journal of Clinical Pharmacology
Université de Strasbourg
Hôpital Civil, Strasbourg
Saint Vincent Hospital
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Guio et al. (Tue,) conducted a other in Polymedicated elderly surgical patients (n=51). Coordinated therapeutic review by a medico-pharmaceutical team and general practitioners vs. Baseline (Admission) was evaluated on Average number of prescribed medications (p=0.0021). A coordinated medication review involving hospital teams and general practitioners reduced the average number of prescribed medications from 7.86 at admission to 7.16 at 45 days post-discharge.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69c4cc75fdc3bde448917bea — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00228-026-04026-6
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