The is one of the more commonly used resources to identify inappropriate prescribing.12 The 2015 American Geriatrics Society’s (AGS’s) Beers Criteria includes a list of potentially inappropriate medications that should be avoided in older people, each to their various levels of evidence (refer to Table 2 in reference 10). The criteria include medicines that should be avoided, or have their dose adjusted, based on the patient’s kidney function and select drug–drug interactions documented to be associated with harms in older people.12 This criteria was further updated in 2019.13
Other common criteria that could be considered include:
- 14
- 15
- 16
- , plus the MATCH-D for people with dementia.9
All prescribing criteria have limitations and do not substitute for good clinical decision making; however, they are an alert to potentially inappropriate prescribing.
Box 2 lists some of the medicines where caution must be exercised when prescribed to older people. This information is based on the Beers and McLeod revised criteria, and has been further revised to ensure its relevance to medicines available in Australia.
Box 2. Medicines to be used with caution in older people
2,9,12,13
- Amiodarone
- Anticholinergic agents
- Antihistamines (first generation)
- Antipsychotics for behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia
- Aspirin for primary prevention for those aged >80 years
- Benzodiazepines
- Diuretics
- Fluoxetine
- Methyldopa
- Nitrofurantoin
- Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), including cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) inhibitors
- Tricyclic antidepressants
Medication review
While the traditional medicine review process typically involved cross-referencing medicines used with current diagnoses, a more sophisticated version of this process critically reviews the medicines and associated diagnosis, giving less emphasis to diagnoses that are no longer relevant (refer to Part A. Medication management). Known as undiagnosis, this process facilitates the withdrawal of corresponding medicines used to manage those conditions. Systematically reviewing diagnoses regularly and the associated medicine management strategies could reduce prescribing. The novel ERASE mnemonic can help clinicians:17
- Evaluate diagnoses to consider
- Resolved conditions
- Ageing normally
- Selecting appropriate targets to
- Eliminate unnecessary diagnoses and their corresponding medicines
Regular medication review in older people is important to identify those at high risk of harm from polypharmacy, monitor efficacy, and reassess the need for specific medicines (refer to Part A. Medication management). The review should consider ongoing treatments in terms of current goals of care, patient preferences and life expectancy.
The assessment should:4
- obtain an accurate and current history
- review all medications prescribed, including over-the-counter and complementary medicines
- consider indication, therapeutic aims, dose, efficacy, safety and (where appropriate) ability to use devices
- calculate renal function and consider hepatic impairment
- check for drug interactions, side effects and adverse drug reactions
- match the medicines to medical conditions and treatment goals. These will change with ageing and may involve undiagnosis. Identify discrepancies between medicines being taken and those prescribed, including pro re nata (PRN) medicines
- assess physical and cognitive function
- evaluate any medicines-related problems, monitoring required, and untreated conditions
- reassess goals of care.
In the residential aged care facility (RACF) setting, the list of medicines being taken by the patient must be written on the medication chart, even if the medicines are being self-administered. Complementary and alternative medicines must be approved, checked for safety and written up by the treating general practitioner (GP). Consider a Residential Medication Management Review (RMMR; Medicare Benefits Schedule [MBS] item number 903),18 which may be helpful. A Home Medicines Review (HMR; MBS item number 900)19 should be considered in the home environment to ensure a correct current list of all medications being taken, adherence, and to identify medication-related problems.