Performance of a trigger tool for detecting drug-related hospital admissions in older people: analysis from the OPERAM trial

Publication date

2022-01-06

Authors

Zerah, Lorène
Henrard, Séverine
Thevelin, Stefanie
Feller, Martin
Meyer-Masseti, Carla
Knol, Wilma
Wilting, IORCID 0000-0001-9173-4840ISNI 0000000392050904
O'Mahony, Denis
Crowley, Erin
Dalleur, Olivia

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Abstract

BACKGROUND: identifying drug-related hospital admissions (DRAs) in older people is difficult. A standardised chart review procedure has recently been developed. It includes an adjudication team (physician and pharmacist) screening using 26 triggers and then performing causality assessment to determine whether an adverse drug event (ADE) occurred (secondary to an adverse drug reaction, overuse, misuse or underuse) and whether the ADE contributed to hospital admission (DRA). OBJECTIVE: to assess the performance of those triggers in detecting DRA. DESIGN: retrospective study using data from the OPERAM (OPtimising thERapy to prevent Avoidable hospital admissions in Multimorbid older people) trial. SETTINGS: four European medical centres. SUBJECTS: multimorbid (≥ 3 chronic medical conditions) older (≥ 70 years) inpatients with polypharmacy (≥ 5 chronic medications) were enrolled in the OPERAM trial (N = 2,008) and followed for 12 months. We included patients with ≥1 adjudicated hospitalisation during the follow-up. METHODS: the positive predictive value (PPV; number of DRAs identified by trigger/number of triggers) was calculated for each trigger and for the tool as a whole. RESULTS: of 1,235 hospitalisations adjudicated for 832 patients, 716 (58%) had at least one trigger; an ADE was identified in 673 (54%) and 518 (42%) were adjudicated as DRAs. The overall PPV of the trigger tool for detecting DRAs was 0.66 [0.62-0.69]. CONCLUSIONS: this tool performs well for identifying DRAs in older people. Based on our results, a revised version of the tool was proposed but will require external validation before it can be incorporated into research and clinical practice.

Keywords

drug-related side effects and adverse reaction, hospital admission, older people, trigger tool, Ageing, Geriatrics and Gerontology

Citation

Zerah, L, Henrard, S, Thevelin, S, Feller, M, Meyer-Masseti, C, Knol, W, Wilting, I, O'Mahony, D, Crowley, E, Dalleur, O & Spinewine, A 2022, 'Performance of a trigger tool for detecting drug-related hospital admissions in older people : analysis from the OPERAM trial', Age and ageing, vol. 51, no. 1, afab196, pp. 1-13. https://doi.org/10.1093/ageing/afab196, https://doi.org/10.1093/ageing/afab196