Renal Insufficiency and Medication in Nursing Home Residents. A Cross-Sectional Study (IMREN)
- PMID: 26931625
- PMCID: PMC4782265
- DOI: 10.3238/arztebl.2016.0092
Renal Insufficiency and Medication in Nursing Home Residents. A Cross-Sectional Study (IMREN)
Abstract
Background: Nursing home residents often suffer from a multiplicity of medical conditions and take many different drugs. Many drugs are eliminated via the kidneys and thus require dose adjustment in patients with renal insufficiency. This is the first study to address the prevalence of renal insufficiency among nursing home residents in Germany, and the extent to which such persons take drugs that are contraindicated or incorrectly dosed because of renal insufficiency.
Methods: We carried out a cross-sectional study in nursing homes in the German regions of Bremen and Lower Saxony. Data were collected by nursing staff and given to us anonymously. Whenever the nursing home data did not include a current creatinine value, the patient's general practitioner was asked to supply this value. The estimated creatinine clearance (eCCr) was calculated with the Cockcroft-Gault formula.
Results: 852 residents of 21 nursing homes were included in the study; eCCr values were obtainable for 685 (80.4%) of them (average age, 83.3 years; 75.2% female). 48.2% of these patients (95% confidence interval [CI] 41.8-54.5) had moderate renal insufficiency (eCCr 59-30 mL/min), and 15.5% (95% CI 12.4-18.6) had severe renal insufficiency (eCCr <30 mL/min). 19.7% were regularly taking at least one medication that was contraindicated or incorrectly dosed in the light of renal insufficiency. Predictors for such inappropriate drug use were advanced age, female sex, arterial hypertension, and polypharmacy. The drugs that were most often inappropriately used were metformin, ramipril, and potassium chloride.
Conclusion: Nursing home residents often suffer from renal insufficiency and should therefore have their creatinine levels measured regularly. A knowledge of the creatinine level is a prerequisite for the proper adjustment of drug doses (if necessary). A practical and compact summary of dose-adjustment recommendations for patients with renal insufficiency would be desirable but is not yet available.
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Comment in
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Chronic Kidney Disease (Not) on the Agenda.Dtsch Arztebl Int. 2016 Feb 12;113(6):83-4. doi: 10.3238/arztebl.2016.0083. Dtsch Arztebl Int. 2016. PMID: 26931623 Free PMC article. No abstract available.
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