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J Am Coll Clin Pharm ; 5(10): 1039-1047, 2022 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36620097

ABSTRACT

Background: Deprescribing interventions delivered through the electronic medical record have not significantly reduced the use of high-risk anticholinergics in prior trials. Pharmacists have been identified as ideal practitioners to conduct deprescribing; however, little experience beyond collaborative consult models has been published. Objective: To evaluate the impact of two pilot pharmacist-based advanced practice models nested within primary care. Methods: Pilot studies of a collaborative clinic-based pharmacist deprescribing intervention and a telephone-based pharmacist deprescribing intervention were conducted. Patients receiving the clinic-based pharmacy model were aged 55 years and older and referred for deprescribing at a specialty clinic. Patients receiving the telephone-based pharmacy model were aged 65 years and older and called by a clinical pharmacist for deprescribing without referral. Deprescribing was defined as a discontinuation or dose reduction reported either in clinical records or through self-reporting. Results: The 18 patients receiving clinic-based deprescribing had a mean age of 68 years and 78% were female. Among 24 medications deemed eligible for deprescribing, 23 (96%) were deprescribed. The clinic-based deprescribing model resulted in a 93% reduction in median annualized total standardized dose (TSD), 56% lowered their annualized exposure below a cognitive risk threshold, and 4 (17%) of medications were represcribed within 6 months. The 24 patients receiving telephone-based deprescribing had a mean age of 73 years and 92% were female. Among 24 medications deemed eligible for deprescribing, 12 (50%) were deprescribed. There was no change in the median annualized TSD, the annualized TSD was lowered below a cognitive risk threshold in 46%, and no medications were represcribed within 6 months. Few withdrawal symptoms or adverse events were reported in both groups. Conclusions: Pharmacist-based deprescribing successfully reduced exposure to high-risk anticholinergics in primary care older adults, yet further work is needed to understand the impact on clinical outcomes.

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