Centrally Acting Anticholinergic Drugs Used for Urinary Conditions Associated with Worse Outcomes in Dementia

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Centrally Acting Anticholinergic Drugs Used for Urinary Conditions Associated with Worse Outcomes in Dementia
المؤلفون: Justin Sauer, David Taylor, Nicola Funnell, Christoph Mueller, Delia Bishara, Robert Stewart, Gayan Perera, Daniel Harwood
المصدر: Journal of the American Medical Directors Association. 22(12)
سنة النشر: 2021
مصطلحات موضوعية: medicine.medical_specialty, medicine.drug_class, Anticholinergic agents, Muscarinic Antagonists, Cholinergic Antagonists, Internal medicine, Anticholinergic, medicine, Darifenacin, Dementia, Humans, Cognitive decline, Oxybutynin, General Nursing, Retrospective Studies, Solifenacin, business.industry, Health Policy, General Medicine, medicine.disease, Pharmaceutical Preparations, Geriatrics and Gerontology, Mirabegron, business, medicine.drug
الوصف: Objectives To investigate the associations between central anticholinergic burden and mortality, hospitalization, and cognitive impairment in people with dementia prescribed anticholinergic drugs for urinary symptoms. Design Retrospective cohort study. Setting and Participants Patients diagnosed with dementia receiving anticholinergic medication for bladder conditions (N = 540), assembled from a large healthcare database. Methods Central anticholinergic burden related to bladder drugs was estimated using the anticholinergic effect on cognition scale. Data were linked to national mortality and hospitalization data sources, and serially recorded Mini-Mental State Examination scores were used to investigate cognitive decline. Results Patients had a median survival of 4.1 years. Urinary drugs with a high anticholinergic effect on cognition score (tolterodine, oxybutynin) were associated with a 55% increased mortality risk (hazard ratio 1.55; 95% confidence interval 1.19‒2.01; P = .001) compared with drugs with low or no central anticholinergic burden (darifenacin, fesoterodine, trospium, mirabegron, solifenacin). Cognitive decline over a 24-month period around diagnosis was only detectable in the high central anticholinergic group, but there was no significant difference in cognitive trajectories between the high and low/no anticholinergic bladder drug groups. No increase of emergency hospitalization risk was seen in relation to central anticholinergic burden. Conclusions and Implications Urinary drugs with high central anticholinergic burden cause more harm than those acting peripherally and should be avoided in people with dementia. Further research is needed to test whether centrally acting anticholinergic agents in general cause worse outcomes in dementia.
تدمد: 1538-9375
الوصول الحر: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::c55c68ffe907e6969c416bf4ed90ccd3Test
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34473960Test
حقوق: CLOSED
رقم الانضمام: edsair.doi.dedup.....c55c68ffe907e6969c416bf4ed90ccd3
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE