AI Article Synopsis

  • Polypharmacy, the use of multiple medications by older adults, increases the risk of adverse drug events (ADEs), highlighting the need for understanding the risk levels of various drug combinations.
  • The study analyzed data from over 8 million emergency department visits to identify high-risk and alternative low-risk drug combinations, focusing on drugs like anticoagulants, antidiabetic medications, and opioids.
  • The research found over 5,200 high-risk drug combinations and nearly 2,000 corresponding low-risk alternatives, providing valuable insights for safer medication practices among older adults.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Polypharmacy is common and is associated with higher risk of adverse drug event (ADE) among older adults. Knowledge on the ADE risk level of exposure to different drug combinations is critical for safe polypharmacy practice, while approaches for this type of knowledge discovery are limited. The objective of this study was to apply an innovative data mining approach to discover high-risk and alternative low-risk high-order drug combinations (e.g., three- and four-drug combinations).

Methods: A cohort of older adults (≥ 65 years) who visited an emergency department (ED) were identified from Medicare fee-for-service and MarketScan Medicare supplemental data. We used International Classification of Diseases (ICD) codes to identify ADE cases potentially induced by anticoagulants, antidiabetic drugs, and opioids from ED visit records. We assessed drug exposure data during a 30-day window prior to the ED visit dates. We investigated relationships between exposure of drug combinations and ADEs under the case-control setting. We applied the mixture drug-count response model to identify high-order drug combinations associated with an increased risk of ADE. We conducted therapeutic class-based mining to reveal low-risk alternative drug combinations for high-order drug combinations associated with an increased risk of ADE.

Results: We investigated frequent high-order drug combinations from 8.4 million ED visit records (5.1 million from Medicare data and 3.3 million from MarketScan data). We identified 5213 high-order drug combinations associated with an increased risk of ADE by controlling the false discovery rate at 0.01. We identified 1904 high-order, high-risk drug combinations had potential low-risk alternative drug combinations, where each high-order, high-risk drug combination and its corresponding low-risk alternative drug combination(s) have similar therapeutic classes.

Conclusions: We demonstrated the application of a data mining technique to discover high-order drug combinations associated with an increased risk of ADE. We identified high-risk, high-order drug combinations often have low-risk alternative drug combinations in similar therapeutic classes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11256269PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40264-023-01370-9DOI Listing

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