Polypharmacy, Severe Mental Illness And Impaired Mobility In Multiple Long-term Health Conditions: A Scoping Review

Abstract ID
3838
Authors' names
Lucas Mannion1, Kate Best2, Linda Birt1, Firoza Davies3, Helen Dawes4, Emma L. Giles5, Matthew Jones6, Suzy Ker7, Naomi Launders8, Thomas Payne9, Emma Proctor5, Sion Scott1, Thomas Woodcock10, Bethan Hickey1, Sian Jenkins1, Jasmine Mankoo6, Lucy Beishon1
Author's provenances
1University of Leicester, 2University of Leeds, 3Leicestershire Partnership NHS Trust, 4University of Exeter, 5Teesside University, 6University of Bath, 7Tees, Esk and Wear Valleys NHS Foundation Trust, 8UCL, 9University of Sheffield, 10Imperial College
Abstract category
Abstract sub-category
Conditions

Abstract

Introduction 

Multiple long-term health conditions and multimorbidity (MLTC-M) disproportionally impact older people. Literature highlights associations between polypharmacy, mobility issues, and severe mental illness and MLTC-M. Co-existence of polypharmacy, mobility issues, and severe mental illness with MLTC-M may impact on older people’s health outcomes, however the extent to which these have been explored is unclear.

Aim

This scoping review aimed to describe the evidence regarding interventions and outcomes associated with the intersection of polypharmacy, mobility issues, and severe mental illness with MLTC-M. 

Methods 

Medline, Embase, Scopus, Psychinfo and CINAHL were searched for evidence sources that discuss at least two of polypharmacy, mobility issues, and severe mental illness with MLTC-M. Two reviewers independently screened titles and abstracts and full texts against the inclusion and exclusion criteria. Data pertaining to people’s interventions and outcomes were extracted and synthesised narratively.

Results

6540 studies were included in the title and abstract screening and 1237 proceeded to full text screening. Research exploring the interaction between polypharmacy, severe mental illness and mobility collectively accounts for 5% of evidence sources progressing to full text screening. Roughly a third of included papers are concerned with polypharmacy and mobility, such as higher drug burden increasing the risk of falls. Papers reporting on polypharmacy and severe mental illness also make up roughly a third, such as tardive dyskinesia and kinesia. Just under a third of papers discuss the relationship between severe mental illness and mobility, such as high prevalence of metabolic syndrome in schizophrenia causing mobility limitations. 

Conclusions

The results of the review suggest that there could be a bidirectional relationship between severe mental illness and impaired mobility, mediated by polypharmacy. Drug-drug interactions could increase the risk of mobility problems in older people with severe mental illness and increase psychiatric problems in older people with impaired mobility.  

Comments

Really interesting poster - probably an underappreciated/underresearched area given that most hospital medics are very wary to deprescribe mental health medications started in psychiatry. Do you think think that it comes down to only certain drug groups as the problem (a lot of what you mentioned relates to typical/atypical antipsychotics) or is it all psychiatric medications that have potential for this? Thank you!

Submitted by lucy.g.rimmer_29554 on

Permalink

Good question! As the review is ongoing it is difficult to say at the moment whether certain drug groups are the problem. We are looking at regimes of 5 or more medications, but this is not limited to psychiatric medications. Some papers have specifically referenced antipsychotics in association with falls, but others have looked more broadly at potentially inappropriate medications and optimal pharmacology.