Conference Coverage

VIDEO: Withdrawing antipsychotics is safe and feasible in long-term care


 

EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM AAIC 2016

Of the original group, 125 entered the deprescribing protocol. Of these, 26 (21%) have since resumed their medications, but 79% have done well and are without a relapse of their symptoms or problematic behaviors. An ongoing medication review suggests there has been no concomitant upswing in other psychotropic medications, including benzodiazepines.

Neuropsychiatric symptoms remained stable from baseline. The mean total group score on the Neuropsychiatric Index (NPI) has not changed from its baseline of 30. The mean agitation/aggression NPI subscale has remained about 6, and the mean group score on the Cohen-Mansfield Agitation Inventory about 56. The NPI delusion subscale increased, but the change was nonsignificant, Dr. Brodaty said. The NPI hallucinations subscale decreased slightly, but again the change was nonsignificant.

“Look, we all know antipsychotics are bad for old people, and we all know they are overprescribed,” he said. “Inappropriate use of these medications is an old story, yet we’re still talking about it. Why is this? We have the knowledge now, and we have to build on this knowledge so that we can change practice.”

The Canadian experience

Ms. Didic shared a year-long quality improvement process at 24 long-term care facilities that wanted to improve antipsychotic prescribing for their dementia patients.

The program, which was sponsored by the Canadian Foundation for Healthcare Improvement, used a “train-the-trainer” approach to spread support for antipsychotic deprescribing.

Selma Didic

Selma Didic

The foundation deployed 15 interdisciplinary teams, which comprised 180 members, including physicians, nurses, pharmacists, recreational therapists, and “clinical champions” who took the methodology directly into participating facilities. Interactive webinars on patient-centered care and deprescribing protocols were part of the process, Ms. Didic said.

In all, 416 patients were included in the outcomes report. Within 12 months, antipsychotics were eliminated in 74 patients (18%) and in 148 (36%), the dosage was reduced.

The benefits of these changes were striking, Ms. Didic said. There were fewer falls and reductions in verbal abuse, care resistance, and socially inappropriate behaviors. These issues either remained the same or got worse in patients who did not decrease antipsychotics. Again, there was no concomitant increase in other psychotropic medications.

The results show that changing the focus from medication-first to behavior-first care is institutionally feasible, Ms. Didic said.

Staff members’ assessments of the program and its personal and institutional impact were positive:

• 91% said they instituted regular medication reviews for every resident.

• 92% said old ways of doing things were adjusted to accommodate the new type of care.

• 94% said the new person-centered care was now a standard way of working.

• 84% said the project improved their ability to lead.

• 80% said it improved their ability to communicate.

“Currently, our teams are now spreading and sharing these resources and tools, serving as advisers, and organizing clinical training and workshops,” for other Canadian nursing homes that want to adopt the strategy.

Dr. Richard Caselli, professor of neurology at the Mayo Clinic, Scottsdale, Ariz., commented on the issues surrounding antipsychotic prescribing in long-term care facilities in a video interview.

Neither Ms. Didic nor Dr. Brodaty had any financial declarations.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel.

msullivan@frontlinemedcom.com

On Twitter @alz_gal

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