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Samenvatting

Background & aim: Malnutrition adversely influences a broad range of physical and psychological
symptoms. Although polypharmacy is often mentioned to be associated with malnutrition, especially in
older people it is unclear to what extent. The aim of this systematic review was to investigate the extent
of the association between polypharmacy and malnutrition in older people.
Methods: The methodology followed the guidelines of the Cochrane Collaboration. Literature search was
performed in PubMed, CINAHL and Embase. The population of interest for this systematic review were
people of 65 years and older with polypharmacy. Because there is ambiguity with regard to the actual
definition of malnutrition and polypharmacy, in this systematic review all articles describing malnutrition
prevalence rates were included, regardless of the criteria used. Both observational and intervention
studies were screened for eligibility. Selection and quality assessment of the included full text
studies was assessed by two reviewers independently. A level of evidence and methodological quality
score was adjudged to each article based on this assessment.
Results: A total of 3126 studies were retrieved by the literature search, of which seven studies were
included in this systematic review. There was considerable variation in the definition of polypharmacy
between studies. Two studies defined polypharmacy as the use of five or more drugs, two studies as the
use of six or more drugs, two studies provided a mean and standard deviation that corresponded to the
minimum of five drugs, and one study distinguished between polypharmacy (five or more drugs) and
excessive polypharmacy (ten or more drugs). However, all studies showed a statistically significant association
between (the risk) of becoming malnourished and polypharmacy regardless the instrument or
criterion used to define risk of malnutrition. Studies presented the associations respectively as OR
1.177, p-value 0.028, b 0.62 and r 0.31.
Conclusion: This review demonstrated a statistically significant association between polypharmacy and
malnutrition. Further research is required to determine the magnitude of the effect by increased number
of drugs in combination with the type of drugs, on the risk of malnutrition.

Toon meer
OrganisatieHogeschool Utrecht
AfdelingKenniscentrum Gezond en Duurzaam Leven
LectoraatInnovaties in de Preventieve Zorg
Gepubliceerd inClinical Nutrition ESPEN Vol. 49, Pagina's: 163-171
Jaar2022
TypeArtikel
DOI10.1016/j.clnesp.2022.03.007
TaalEngels

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