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Obstacles to Deprescribing Among French Patients Over 75 Years of Age Treated in the Geriatric Hospital Network

Description of the Obstacles to Deprescribing Among French Patients Over 75 Years of Age Treated in the Geriatric Hospital Network

Status
Completed
Phases
Unknown
Study type
Observational
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT05327634
Acronym
OUTMEDIC-FR
Enrollment
120
Registered
2022-04-14
Start date
2022-04-01
Completion date
2023-01-25
Last updated
2024-09-19

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Medication Abuse

Keywords

Elderly patient, Inappropriate drugs, Deprescribing, Obstacles, French

Brief summary

The aim of this study is to highlight action guidelines to encourage acceptance of deprescribing in people over 75 years of age: training, therapeutic education, post-prescription follow-up, specific patient pathways, specific consultations or even the integration of an advanced practice nurse in this process.

Detailed description

For several years now, the proportion of senior citizens in our country has been rising steadily. There are now 6.4 million people over the age of 75 in France. It is therefore important to take into account the needs and specificities of this part of the population. One of its particularities is polypathology. Indeed, from the age of 70 onwards, 93% of elderly subjects have at least 2 diseases and 85% have at least 3. This polypathology will lead to a large number of different prescribers with an increased risk of having more than 5 molecules in their personal treatment. This is known as polypharmacy. In the elderly, polypharmacy is harmful. It increases the risk of adverse effects and drug interactions. In France, 20% of patients over 75 years old and 25% of those over 85 years old consult the emergency room because of adverse drug reactions. The literature shows that we can act on these adverse events by deprescribing. De-prescribing is defined as intentionally stopping the prescription of an unnecessary or potentially dangerous drug for a patient. The expected benefit for the patient is to reduce the iatrogenic risks induced by treatments that would no longer be useful for him/her or that have a negative benefit/risk balance. To achieve this objective, the patient must understand this risk, understand the benefit he or she can derive from it and be an actor in this process. For carers, the expected benefit is greater involvement of the patient in the process, better adherence to the approach, which can be organised and carried out in a safer way.

Interventions

Prospective study on patients aged 75 and over, hospitalised in geriatric short stay or geriatric rehabilitation units

Sponsors

Hôpital NOVO
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Observational model
COHORT
Time perspective
PROSPECTIVE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
75 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Patients aged 75 years and over * Hospitalized in geriatric short-stay or geriatric rehabilitation units * Patients who did not object to participation in the study

Exclusion criteria

* Patient refusal * Patients not able to understand and fill in the questionnaire: Cognitive disorders, Confusion, Unstable clinical state, Sensory disorders, not speaking French. * Patient under protective supervision (guardianship or curatorship)

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Description of the obstacles to the withdrawal of medication in patients over 75 years of age in the geriatric sectorBaselineThe main evaluation criterion will be measured using the self-questionnaire: a revised form of the 5-point Likert-type Revised Patients' Attitude Toward Deprescribing (rPATD), validated in French. Discouragement will be assessed on the basis of the overall score of questions 1 to 20 of the self-questionnaire, with regard to questions 21 and 22.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Assessment of the relationship between patient burden and acceptance (or refusal) of deprescribing.BaselineThey will be measured using the self-questionnaire given to patients. Responses to the burden (questions 1-5) and acceptance (question 21) questions will be measured using the revised 5-point Likert-type Revised Patients' Attitude Toward Deprescribing (rPATD) scale, validated in French. A correlation will be made between the two items. They will be measured using the self-questionnaire given to patients. Responses to the burden (questions 1-5) and acceptance (question 21) questions will be measured using the revised 5-point Likert-type Revised Patients' Attitude Toward Deprescribing (rPATD) scale, validated in French. A correlation will be made between the two items.
Assessment of the relationship between the benefit of the treatment experienced by the patient and the acceptance (or refusal) of the deprescribingBaselineThey will be measured using the self-questionnaire given to patients. Responses to the questions concerning the perceived benefit of treatment (questions 6 to 10) and acceptance (question 21) will be measured using the revised Patients' Attitude Toward Deprescribing (rPATD) 5-point Likert scale. A correlation will be made between the two items
Assessment of the relationship between concern about possible negative effects of discontinuing treatment and acceptance (or refusal) of deprescribingBaselineThey will be measured using the self-questionnaire given to patients. Responses to questions concerning concern about possible negative effects of stopping treatment (questions 11 to 15) and acceptance (question 21) will be measured using the revised Patients' Attitude Toward Deprescribing (rPATD) 5-point Likert scale. A correlation will be made between the two items.
Assessment of the relationship between the patient's good knowledge of their treatments and acceptance (or refusal) of the deprescribing.BaselineThey will be measured using the self-questionnaire given to patients. The answers to the questions concerning the patient's good knowledge of their treatments (questions 16 to 20) and acceptance (question 21) will be measured using the revised Patients' Attitude Toward Deprescribing (rPATD) 5-point Likert scale. A correlation will be made between the two items..
Assessment of the relationship between certain families of treatments and acceptance (or refusal) of deprescribingBaselineThey will be measured using the self-questionnaire given to patients. Responses concerning the acceptance of deprescribing according to the different treatment families will be measured using simple questions 26 to 29 of the self-questionnaire

Countries

France

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026