TOP-PIC: a new tool to optimize pharmacotherapy and reduce polypharmacy in patients with incurable cancer.

J Cancer Res Clin Oncol

Division of Hematology With Stem Cell Transplantation, Hemostaseology and Medical Oncology, Department of Internal Medicine I, Ordensklinikum Linz, Fadingerstrasse 1, 4020 Linz and Seilerstätte 4, 4010, Linz, Austria.

Published: August 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Polypharmacy is a critical issue for patients with incurable cancer, prompting the development of a drug optimization tool called TOP-PIC to enhance medication management for this group.
  • TOP-PIC involves a five-step process where healthcare professionals assess medication history, check for appropriateness and interactions, evaluate benefits versus risks, and engage in shared decision-making with patients.
  • Pilot testing showed that oncologists found TOP-PIC helpful, requiring only a median of 2 minutes per patient, leading to a change in decisions for 17.4% of medications and reducing uncertainty in medication changes.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Polypharmacy is a significant problem in patients with incurable cancer and a method to optimize pharmacotherapy in this patient group is lacking. Therefore, a drug optimization tool was developed and tested in a pilot test.

Methods: A multidisciplinary team of health professionals developed a "Tool to Optimize Pharmacotherapy in Patients with Incurable Cancer" (TOP-PIC) for patients with a limited life expectancy. The tool consists of five sequential steps to optimize medications, including medication history, screening for medication appropriateness and drug interactions, a benefit-risk assessment using the TOP-PIC Disease-based list, and shared decision-making with the patient. For pilot testing of the tool, 8 patient cases with polypharmacy were analyzed by 11 oncologists before and after training with the TOP-PIC tool.

Results: TOP-PIC was considered helpful by all oncologists during the pilot test. The median additional time required to administer the tool was 2 min per patient (P < 0.001). For 17.4% of all medications, different decisions were made by using TOP-PIC. Among possible treatment decisions (discontinuation, reduction, increase, replacement, or addition of a drug), discontinuation of medications was the most common. Without TOP-PIC, physicians were uncertain in 9.3% of medication changes, compared with only 4.8% after using TOP-PIC (P = 0.001). The TOP-PIC Disease-based list was considered helpful by 94.5% of oncologists.

Conclusions: TOP-PIC provides a detailed, disease-based benefit-risk assessment with recommendations specific for cancer patients with limited life expectancy. Based on the results of the pilot study, the tool seems practicable for day-to-day clinical decision-making and provides evidence-based facts to optimize pharmacotherapy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10374723PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00432-023-04671-9DOI Listing

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