Overtreatment for blood
pressure & blood sugar can be dangerous for some
Newswise, October 27, 2015— Anyone who takes medicine to get
their blood sugar or blood pressure down – or both – knows their doctor
prescribed it to help them.
But what if stopping, or at least cutting back on, such drugs
could help even more?
In some older people, that may be the safer route. But two new
studies published in JAMA Internal Medicine suggest doctors and patients should
work together to backpedal such treatment more often.
In people in their 70s and older, very low blood pressures and
sugar levels can actually raise the risk of dizzy spells, confusion, falls and
even death. The consequences can be dangerous.
In recent years, experts have started to suggest that doctors
ease up on how aggressively they treat such patients for high blood pressure or
diabetes -- especially if they have other conditions that limit their life
expectancy.
Dialing back
To see if such efforts to encourage doctors to de-intensify
treatment are working, a team of researchers from the University of Michigan
Medical School and VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System studied the issue from two
sides: patient records and a survey of primary care providers. They focused on
patients over 70 with diabetes who had their blood sugar and pressure well
under control using medication.
In all, only one in four of nearly 400,000 older patients who
could have been eligible to ease up on their multiple blood pressure or blood
sugar medicines actually had their dosage changed.
Even those with the lowest
readings, or the fewest years left to live, had only a slightly greater chance
as other patients of having their treatment de-intensified.
Meanwhile, only about half of the nearly 600 doctors, nurse
practitioners and physician assistants surveyed said they would de-intensify
the treatment of a hypothetical 77-year-old man with diabetes and ultra-low
sugar levels that put him at risk of a low-sugar crisis called hypoglycemia.
Many providers said they worried that decreasing medications
for a patient like this might lead to harm, and that decreasing medications
might make their clinical “report cards” look worse. Some even worried about
their legal liability.
“As physicians, we want to make sure patients get the care
they need, but we should also avoid care that might harm them,” says Eve Kerr,
M.D., MPH, an author on both studies and director of the VA Center for Clinical
Management Research. “If something is not likely to benefit them, but is likely
to cause other problems, then we should pull back,” she adds.
“We were
surprised to find that this is not yet happening despite guidelines to aid
providers in determining who qualifies for de-intensification.”
In both cases, the researchers looked at care in the VA system
– which is actively trying to encourage de-intensification of blood
sugar-reducing treatment in its oldest patients nationwide.
Kerr and her colleagues, based at the VA CCMR and the U-M
Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation, note that their study data come
from just before the VA’s efforts to reduce overtreatment started.
They’re
already doing follow-up studies to see if things change over time, and to study
how often de-intensification happens in the non-VA senior population.
But in the meantime, they note, older patients with diabetes
and high blood pressure – and the adult children who often assist with their
care – should talk to their care teams about whether de-intensification is
right for them.
Long-term gain, short-term pain
Jeremy Sussman, M.D., M.S., lead author of the study that used
medical records, notes that the reasons why doctors prescribe medication to
help people get their blood pressure and diabetes under control mostly focus on
the long term.
Controlling these factors for years can help people cut their
risk of problems that result from too-high blood pressure or sugar levels, like
stroke, heart attack, blindness, nerve damage, amputation and kidney failure.
“Every guideline for physicians has detailed guidance for
prescribing and stepping up or adding drugs to control these risk factors, and
somewhere toward the end it says ‘personalize treatment for older people’,”
says Sussman, an assistant professor of general internal medicine.
“But nowhere
do they say actually stop medication in the oldest patients to avoid
hypoglycemia or too-low blood pressure.”
If a patient has been on medication for diabetes or blood
pressure for many years, and is now in their late 70s or older, they may have
gotten many long-term benefits from keeping their levels in control.
But
because their chance of a dangerous blood sugar or blood pressure dip goes up
with age, the short-term risk starts to balance out any long-term gain they
could still get.
“Physicians are used to thinking about when to start medications, and if a patient isn’t complaining and appears to be doing fine, stopping medications may not be first thing on their mind,” says Tanner Caverly, M.D., MPH, clinical lecturer and lead author on the survey of primary care providers.
“Physicians are used to thinking about when to start medications, and if a patient isn’t complaining and appears to be doing fine, stopping medications may not be first thing on their mind,” says Tanner Caverly, M.D., MPH, clinical lecturer and lead author on the survey of primary care providers.
“As we get
more precise evidence about the degree of benefit and harm from using these
medications, it’s showing us that we need to dial back in some patients.”
It can be hard for an older person to recognize the signs of
too-low blood sugar, such as confusion and combativeness, or of too-low blood
pressure, such as dizziness. Meanwhile, keeping up with taking multiple
medications, and checking blood sugar daily or even more often, can be a
struggle for the oldest patients.
De-intensifying their treatment can often be
a relief.
In addition to Sussman and Kerr, the medical records study’s
authors include senior author Timothy Hofer, M.D., M.S., Sameer Saini, M.D.,
MS, Rob Holleman, MPH, Mandi Klamerus, MPH, Lillian Min, M.D., and Sandeep
Vijan, M.D., M.S. In addition to Caverly and Kerr, the survey research was
conducted by Angela Fagerlin, Ph.D., Brian Zikmund-Fisher, Ph.D., Susan Kirsh,
M.D., MPH, Jeffrey Kullgren, M.D., M.S., MPH and Katherine Prenovost, Ph.D.
Funding for the work came from the Veterans Health Administration. REFERENCES:
JAMA Internal Medicine, doi:10.1001/jamainternmed.2015.5110 and
doi:10.1001/jamainternmed.2015.5950
No comments:
Post a Comment