Geriatric Medicine - Ipswich and East Suffolk CCG
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Transcript Geriatric Medicine - Ipswich and East Suffolk CCG
Geriatric
Medicine
A VERY, VERY BRIEF UPDATE – WITH A BIT ABOUT INTERFACE
ALI ALSAWAF – CONSULTANT GERIATRICIAN, IHT
What to cover
Polypharmacy
AF in the elderly
Anticoagulation
Constipation
When to investigate
Interface Geriatrics
Hot clinic
1
POLYPHARMACY
Medication is the commonest medical
intervention
80% of over 75s are on prescription medication
36% of which are on four or more
Patients on more medications suffer more side
effects, regardless of age
Most guidelines focus on starting treatment, not
stopping it
Medication review is part of primary care work
Geriatricians review medication at every
occasion
Effects of Polypharmacy
Falls
Increased side effect profile (including
biochemical imbalance)
Cognitive decline/delirium
Increased hospital admissions
Increased pill burden = increased care
Why?
Changes in pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics in
old age, eg renal clearance, 1st pass metabolism
Change in normal physiology, eg autonomic dysfunction
Absence of the initial indication for the prescription (eg
bereavement and antidepressants/sedatives)
Concomitant acute illness (eg D&V with CCF treatment)
Risk of improper adherence and accidental drug errors
At what point do we consider “Polypharmacy”
Appropriate Polypharmacy vs Inappropriate
Independent 80 year old with Diabetes (tablets and
insulin), previous TIA x 2,CAS, IHD, and hypertension
85 year old RH resident with Parkinson’s Disease, CCF,
hypertension and hypercholesterolaemia
Frail 80 year old NH resident with Alzheimer’s
Dementia, Diabetes (tablets and insulin), previous
disabling stroke, CAS, MI, angina, and hypertension
When to stop?
Falls
Delirium
Cognitive impairment
End of Life
Extreme age/frailty
2
EVIDENCE
Most research is around falls, with clear reduction
of risk when medications rationalised
Reducing polypharmacy improved cognition
No research in extreme age/frail nor End of Life
Could be controversial (eg Warfarin, insulin)
Making it Safe and Sound
King’s fund report
Suggests “Rather than attending several diseasespecific clinics, patients could have all their longterm conditions reviewed in one visit by a clinical
team responsible for coordinating their care.
Patients with multi-morbidity admitted to hospital
under one specialty may require access to a
generalist clinician to co-ordinate their overall
care.” “This may require training and
development of more ‘generalists’ skilled in the
complexity of multiple disease alongside training
to manage polypharmacy.”
Develop even more guidelines for multimorbidity
Reduce pill burden
Patient involvement is key (but no mention of
capacity-impaired patients)
Polypharmacy Guidance
NHS Scotland, 2012
Mentions “Geriatricians”
Overall better guidance
British Geriatric Society support
Clear advice
Cochrane Review
Interventions for preventing falls in older people
living in the community
Medication review by primary care physician
reduced risk of falls
What to stop
Is there a valid indication, and is the dose correct? (e.g. long-term
amitryptilline, PPIs, antidepressants, opiates)
Secondary prevention (e.g. statins in extreme age, multiple
antihypertensives)
Consider side effects and interactions (difficult)
Drug effectiveness in that patient group (e.g. bisphosphonates in
extreme old age)
High risk combinations, e.g. warfarin and duel antiplatelets, NSAIDS
Always involve patient/family/carer with decision and its rationale
What NOT to stop
longterm (seek advice)
Essential replacement drugs (eg Thyroxine)
Drugs keeping symptoms under control (e.g. CCF treatment, COPD,
long-term steroids)
Parkinson’s Disease medications
Antiepileptics (if used for epilepsy control)
DMARDs
Antipsychotics/depressants in severe mental illness.
Amiodarone
In Summary
Polypharmacy is not easy
Multiple co-morbidities
Multiple factors to consider
Please contact us for advice (more on how later)
Atrial Fibrillation
Prevalence increases with age
Well-known increased risk of thromboembolic
cerebrovascular disease
Rate vs Rhythm
Rate control acceptable for over 65s
No increase in mortality (from cardiovascular
complications)
Investigate (FBC/U&E/LFT/TFT), CXR
ECHO not required unless murmur clinically or CCF
Rate control if HR > 100
Use betablockers (eg Bisoprolol as highly cardioselective) if patient active (gardening, walking)
Use digoxin if less/not active (eg limited mobility,
house or bed bound)
Digoxin has much less side effect profile than
betablockers
But not good at controlling heart rate in activity
Avoid Calcium-channel blockers (negative
inotropics, reduce BP)
Start low, go slow
Anticoagulation
All types of AF are at higher risk of stroke
Anticoagulation should be considered in all patients
Consider: falls risk (a fall a day!), pros vs cons
(patient engagement with INR, bleeding history and
risk, compliance and risk of mistakes)
Remember NOACs are now available (second line)
Aspirin is better than nothing (if not suitable for AC)
NOACS
Apibaxan, Dabigatran, Rivaroxaban
Do not require INR monitoring
All licensed for thromboembolic prevention in AF
All non-inferior to Warfarin
All have same bleeding risk as Wafarin, except
Dabigatran (increased GI bleed)
Renal function-dependent (unlike Warfarin)
Reversibility unknown yet, but shorter half-life
Rivaroxaban only one suited for MDS and can be
crushed
WHEN TO START?
Warfarin remains first-line treatment
Consider NOAC if Warfarin not tolerated (mostly
INR monitoring, or dose compliance)
Bleeding risk maybe less
Follow local guidelines (checklists for GP
available)
CONSTIPATION
Infrequent bowel emptying
Hard stools
Difficulty passing motion (straining)
Feeling of incomplete evacuation
Slow transit…
Reduced physical activity
Poor oral intake
Medications (opiates, anti-cholinergics, and many
more)
Many secondary causes (neurological,
obstruction, metabolic etc)
In the elderly
40% of older people in the community
60-80% of those in long-term care
More than 50% of nursing home residents are on
regular laxatives
Common cause of medical admissions
Usually because of secondary effects:
Delirium Falls
Urinary Retention
Abdominal pain/vomiting
Overflow diarrhoea
CAN BE FATAL!
Vomiting + aspiration pneumonia
Perforation
Delirium Falls Fractures
HISTORY
Bowel / stool history
Urinary symptoms
Daily fluid intake
Caffeine intake
Diet / Fibre
Red flag symptoms
RED FLAGS
Anaemia
Rectal bleeding
Positive faecal occult blood test
Family history of bowel cancer or IBD
Tenesmus
Weight loss
Investigations
Bloods: FBC, U&E, Bone Profile, TSH
Urine dipstick
Refer for endoscopy if red flag symptoms
Digital Rectal Examination
MUST be done if possible
Both constipation and diarrhoea/incontinence
Looking for:
Fistulas
Resting and active tone
Mass
Faecal loading and its consistency (hard/soft)
Stool consistency
If it’s hard – soften it
If it’s soft – stimulate it
TREATMENT
Treat cause if possible (polypharmacy?)
Initially: education, diet and lifestyle measures
Softeners: Movicol, Lactulose, Phosphate
Stimulants: Senna, Docusate, Bisacodyl, Glycerine
INVESTIGATIONS IN THE
ELDERLY
Common question to department
Main principles:
Can the patient tolerate the proposed investigation?
Will it make a difference to their management?
Will it make a difference to their wellbeing?
OR
Will it help with prognostication/future planning
Any other benefit (eg financial, insurance)
Points to consider
General state of health (co-morbidities)
Frailty
Functional baseline
Mental baseline
Patient and family engagement essential
Both in decisions to actively investigate or not
Clear explanation of implications of decision
Can be revisited in future
If patient lacks capacity, best interest decision
Must involve next of kin
Difficult decisions
Please contact us for advice
INTERFACE GERIATRICS
Many definitions, BGS “Harmonious combination
of hospital and community geriatric care”
Core idea: break down the barrier between
Hospital and the rest of the community
Older person in crisis
Various “rescue” plans: crisis teams (self-referral,
GP), community matrons, GPs, emergency
placement, community “step-up” hospitals, IHT.
A patient can move between a number of this
during one episode
Lots of assessments (mainly therapy)
Duplication of work
Delayed (or no) specialist medical assessment
which can delay correct diagnosis and
management
Potential crisis avoidance ideally, or at least
anticipation
CGA
Ideally, a Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment
should be performed as soon as possible
Geriatrician involved throughout, not just when
too late
Requires full team, not just a doctor
Borders
Lots of imaginary borders exist
Example: Hospital and GP. GP and community
team. Hospital and community team. Acute and
Rehab hospitals
Paperwork is varied, doesn’t capture everything
Patient at the centre of all this
Aims
Interface Geriatricians aim to smooth this process
Break down borders
Improve patient’s care and journey from primary
to secondary care and back
Assess promptly, utilising available community and
hospital services/expertise
Admission avoidance
What we currently provide
MDT leadership across all three community
hospitals
Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment of
in-patients. Both “step up” and “step down”
Liaison with IHT to improve patient care and
“solve problems”
Access to IHT IT system (eVolve, Pathlab) to
improve patient’s care
Community Team Reviews
Working with community and crisis teams
Discussing patients, identifying those that may
benefit from a CGA
Reviewing patients in a community setting (clinic,
domiciliary or care home visit)
HOT CLINIC
2 hours a day of instant access to Consultant
Geriatrician and diagnostics
Set up as part of first Interface Geriatrician
appointment
GP can refer patients directly via EAU consultant
(bleep 620)
Service started November 2013
Still running
No direct GP referrals received to date
REINVETING THE HOT
CLINIC
We will provide 9-5 access to Consultant
Geriatrician directly
Mobile phone
Available to all GPs, Community Matrons,
Community Therapy Teams
TO PROVIDE…
Verbal advice and support
Urgent review of patients (same or next day), i.e.
Hot Clinic
Less urgent review at all the locations we visit:
Ipswich
Aldeburgh
Stowmarket
Hadleigh
Hartismere (Eye)
WHICH PATIENTS
No age limit
Not acutely unwell (requiring hospital admission),
but need urgent advice that cannot wait for
routine clinic
Any patients with complex medical problems
Including movement disorders
Details currently being finalised
GP Briefing will be sent out with details on how to
refer
Including clear guidance on the reverse for your
office
Aiming to start first of July
REFERENCES
Polypharmacy Guidance (1)
http://www.central.knowledge.scot.nhs.uk/upload/Polyph
armacy%20full%20guidance%20v2.pdf
AF
http://cks.nice.org.uk/atrial-fibrillation
2
http://britishgeriatricssociety.wordpress.com/2014/03/17/w
hich-drugs-to-stop-in-which-older-patients/
Safe and sound
http://www.kingsfund.org.uk/publications/polypharmacyand-medicines-optimisation
THANK YOU!
[email protected]
01473 704134 (secretary)