Drug-Induced Diseases
http://www.worstpills.org/
How
Extensive Is the Problem of Specific Adverse Drug Reactions?
Specific
Examples of Patients with Drug-Induced Diseases
Summary
of Adverse Reactions and the Drugs that Cause Them
How
Extensive Is the Problem of Specific Adverse Drug Reactions?
Each year, more than 9.6 million adverse drug reactions occur in
older Americans. One study found that 37 percent of adverse reactions in the
elderly were not reported to the doctor, presumably because patients did not
realize the reactions were due to the drug. This is not too surprising
considering that most doctors admitted they did not explain possible adverse
effects to their patients.1
We based the following national estimates on well-conducted studies, mainly in
the United States:
Each year, in hospitals alone, there are 28,000 cases of life-threatening heart
toxicity from adverse reactions to digoxin, the most commonly used form of
digitalis (drugs that regulate the speed and strength of heart beats) in older
adults.2 Since as many as 40% or more of these people are using this drug
unnecessarily (see discussion on digoxin), many of these injuries are
preventable.
Each year 41,000 older adults are hospitalized—and 3,300 of these die—from ulcers caused by NSAIDs (nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, usually for treatment of arthritis).3 Thousands of younger adults are hospitalized. (See list of drugs that can cause gastrointestinal bleeding.)
At least 16,000 injuries from auto crashes each year
involving older drivers are attributable to the use of psychoactive drugs,
specifically benzodiazepines and tricyclic antidepressants.4 Psychoactive drugs
are those that affect the mind or behavior. (See list of drugs that can cause
automobile accidents.)
Each year 32,000 older adults suffer from hip fractures attributable to
drug-induced falls, resulting in more than 1,500 deaths.5, 6 In one study, the
main categories of drugs responsible for the falls leading to hip fractures were
sleeping pills and minor tranquilizers (30%), antipsychotic drugs (52%), and
antidepressants (17%). All of these categories of drugs are often prescribed
unnecessarily, especially in older adults. (See section on sleeping pills and
tranquilizers, antipsychotic drugs, and antidepressants; see also list of drugs
that can cause hip fractures because of drug-induced falls.)
Approximately 163,000 older Americans suffer from serious mental impairment
(memory loss, dementia) either caused or worsened by drugs.7, 8 In a study in
the state of Washington, in 46% of the patients with drug-induced mental
impairment, the problem was caused by minor tranquilizers or sleeping pills; in
14%, by high blood pressure drugs; and in 11%, by antipsychotic drugs. (See list
of drugs that can cause or worsen dementia.)
Two million older Americans are addicted or at risk of addiction to minor
tranquilizers or sleeping pills because they have used them daily for at least
one year, even though there is no acceptable evidence that the tranquilizers are
effective for more than four months, and the sleeping pills for more than 30
days.9
Drug-induced tardive dyskinesia has developed in 73,000 older adults; this
condition is the most serious and common adverse reaction to antipsychotic
drugs, and it is often irreversible. Tardive dyskinesia is characterized by
involuntary movements of the face, arms and legs. About 80% of older adults
receiving antipsychotic drugs do not have schizophrenia or other conditions that
justify the use of such powerful drugs, so many of these patients have serious
side effects from drugs that were prescribed inappropriately.10 (See list of
drugs that can cause tardive dyskinesia or other movement disorders.)
Drug-induced parkinsonism has developed in 61,000 older adults also due to the
use of antipsychotic drugs such as haloperidol (HALDOL), chlorpromazine
(THORAZINE), thioridazine (MELLARIL), trifluoperazine (STELAZINE), and
fluphenazine (PROLIXIN). There are other parkinsonism-inducing drugs as well,
such as metoclopramide (REGLAN), prochlorperazine (COMPAZINE), and promethazine
(PHENERGAN), prescribed for gastrointestinal problems.11 (See list of drugs that
can cause parkinsonism.)
A serious problem exists because both doctors and patients do not realize that
practically any symptom in older adults and in many younger adults can be caused
or worsened by drugs.12 Some doctors and patients assume that what are actually
adverse drug reactions are simply signs of aging. As a result, many serious
adverse reactions are entirely overlooked or not recognized until they have
caused significant harm.
The drugs responsible for the most serious adverse reactions in older adults are
tranquilizers, sleeping pills, and other mind-affecting drugs; cardiovascular
drugs such as high blood pressure drugs, digoxin, and drugs for abnormal heart
rhythms;13 and drugs for treating intestinal problems.
Mental Adverse Drug Reactions: depression,
hallucinations, confusion, delirium, memory loss, impaired thinking Nervous System Adverse Drug Reactions: parkinsonism, involuntary movements of the face, arms, legs (tardive dyskinesia), sexual dysfunction Gastrointestinal Adverse Drug Reactions: loss of appetite, constipation Urinary Problems: difficulty urinating, leaking of urine Dizziness on Standing Falls Sometimes Resulting in Hip Fractures Automobile Accidents Resulting in Injury |
Specific
Examples of Patients with Drug-Induced Diseases
Woman homebound due to a misprescribed heart drug
Liz, a 54-year old woman, was prescribed the heart drug amiodarone (CORDARONE)
to treat a common heart condition. She was not told that the drug was not
approved by the FDA for her condition. The pharmacy leaflet mentioned nausea and
dizziness as side effects, but not lung toxicity. She is now dependent on an
oxygen tank to breathe and does not have the strength to clean her house.
Man develops parkinsonism from antipsychotics prescribed for “irritable bowel
syndrome”
Larry was an otherwise healthy 58-year-old man with diarrhea believed to be due
to “irritable bowel syndrome.” He was given trifluoperazine (STELAZINE), a
powerful antipsychotic, to “calm down” his intestinal tract. STELAZINE is not
even approved for treating such medical problems. Six months after starting
STELAZINE, Larry developed severe parkinsonism, a neurological condition
characterized by tremor, limited movements, rigidity and postural instability.
To correct this, Larry was started on L-dopa (also known as levodopa), a drug to
treat Parkinson’s disease. Presumably, the doctor did not realize the
parkinsonism was drug-induced, and the STELAZINE was continued. For seven years,
Larry took both drugs until seeing a Parkinson’s specialist. The specialist
recognized the real cause of his problem, stopped the STELAZINE, and slowly
withdrew the L-dopa over a six-month period. Larry’s severe, disabling
parkinsonism cleared completely.
The same Parkinson’s specialist who “cured” Larry of his drug-induced
parkinsonism saw, in just three years, 38 other patients with drug-induced
parkinsonism and 28 with drug-induced tardive dyskinesia, a syndrome of
involuntary movements.
None of these patients were psychotic, the one condition for which antipsychotic
medications are approved. Rather, the most common reasons for using the
parkinsonism-inducing drugs were chronic anxiety and gastrointestinal
complaints. The most frequent culprit (in 19 of these 39 patients) was REGLAN,
usually prescribed for heartburn or for nausea and vomiting. Doctors often
prescribe REGLAN before trying other more conservative and safer methods. Other
drugs that brought on parkinsonism included prochlorperazine (COMPAZINE),
haloperidol (HALDOL) and chlorpromazine (THORAZINE).14
Did You Know? Drug-Induced Parkinsonism Each year, 61,000 older adults develop drug-induced parkinsonism. At least 80 percent of them, like Larry, should never have been put on the drugs causing the parkinsonism in the first place. Also, as in Larry’s situation, a large proportion of these people have doctors who think that their patients’ parkinsonism developed spontaneously. |
The problem is two-fold. Doctors fail to suspect that
the condition is caused by a drug such as STELAZINE or other drugs such as
metoclopramide (REGLAN), prochlorperazine (COMPAZINE) or promethazine (PHENERGAN).
Then they add a second drug to treat the disease that has actually been caused
by the first drug.
Confusion and hallucinations caused by ulcer drugs
Leticia wrote to Public Citizen about her 80-year-old father, saying that she
had to repeatedly ask his doctor about the possible role of her dad’s ulcer
drugs in causing confusion and hallucinations before the doctor listened. Her
father had tried three different drugs – cimetidine (TAGAMET), ranitidine
(ZANTAC) and famotidine (PEPCID) – for his ulcers, and each had caused these
side effects. When the doctor finally switched Leticia’s father to an antacid –
aluminum hydroxide and magnesium hydroxide (MAALOX) – his mind completely
cleared and he was his old self, no longer confused or hallucinating.
Woman develops reversible mental impairment from tranquilizer
The first time 79-year-old Sally saw her physician son-in-law after several
months, he noted that she had suffered severe impairment of her otherwise sharp
mind. She was acting confused and, for the first time in her life, was unable to
balance her checkbook. When he questioned her, she was able to remember that her
problem had started around the time she was put on the tranquilizer lorazepam (ATIVAN).
After this link was discovered, the drug was slowly discontinued and the mental
impairment disappeared.
Man has auto accident after one dose of tranquilizer
Ben, a 64-year-old, was scheduled to have a biopsy done at a local hospital one
morning. The doctor gave him a free sample of a tranquilizer, alprazolam (XANAX),
to take an hour or so before the procedure so that he would be relaxed for the
biopsy. Ben was not told that he should not use the drug if he was going to
drive. While driving to the hospital for the biopsy, he blacked out. The car
went over a fence and sustained $6,000 worth of damage, but fortunately Ben was
unhurt. (See drugs that can cause automobile accidents.)
Dangerously slow heart rate with propranolol use in the elderly
Shara, a 60-year-old assistant at a senior citizens’ center, was started on
propranolol (INDERAL, INDERAL LA) to treat her high blood pressure.
Unfortunately, her doctor did not realize that the dose of this sometimes useful
drug must be reduced in older adults, and the dose she was prescribed was too
high for her. Two days after she started taking the drug, she began feeling very
weak. The side effect was so bad that by the third day on the drug, she went to
a hospital emergency room, where her pulse rate was found to be 36 beats per
minute. This dangerously low rate fully explained her weakness. The drug was
stopped, and Shara’s heart rate returned to normal. Later a low dose of a
different drug was prescribed and produced no side effects.
Child dies from drug prescribed for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
Jamal, a bright 7-year-old boy, was prescribed an antidepressant, imipramine (TOFRANIL),
to treat attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. His parents were not provided
with complete, accurate information about the drug. As a result, they were
unaware that the drug can cause life-threatening heartbeat irregularities
(called arrhythmias), that the dose prescribed to Jamal was too high and that
the tremor and convulsions that Jamal began to have were actually side effects
from the TOFRANIL. Treatment with the drug was continued, and one day, while at
school, he collapsed and died of an arrhythmia. If his parents had been
adequately warned about this drug, Jamal might still be alive today.
Poor prescribing is often the cause of symptoms
The World Health Organization, in discussing the problem of side
effects in the elderly, has stated some principles applicable to people of all
ages:
Quite often, the history and clinical examination of patients with side effects
reveal that no valid indication [purpose] for the offending drug has been
present ... Adverse reactions can to a large extent be avoided in the elderly by
choosing safe and effective drugs and applying sound therapeutic principles in
prescribing, such as starting with a small dose, observing the patient
frequently, and avoiding excessive polypharmacy [the use of multiple drugs at
the same time].15
In other words, patients who suffer adverse drug reactions are very often
victims of drugs that they should not have been taking that way in the first
place.
A 1992 study published in Medical Care examined prescriptions given to people
being discharged from a community hospital. It focused on those who were
prescribed three or more drugs to treat chronic illnesses.16
The results of this study are quite disturbing, both in what they say about the
doctors’ prescribing practices and as evidence of the potential damage that
these prescribing practices can do to older adults. Of the 236 people
intensively studied:
81 percent had one or more prescribing problems with the prescriptions they were
given, including inappropriate drugs, doses or schedule;
60 percent had been given one or more prescriptions for a drug that was an
inappropriate choice of therapy because it was either “less than optimal
medication given the patient’s diagnosis” or there was no established indication
for it;
50 percent were given either too high or too low a dose of the drug;
44 percent of the patients were given a combination of drugs that can result in
harmful drug interactions;
20 percent were given drugs that unnecessarily duplicated the therapeutic effect
of another drug they were taking.
Fortunately, a consultant pharmacist involved in the care of more than half of
the people was able to reduce the risks to the patients by making
recommendations to the prescribing physicians.
Available on the web site are lists of the most common drug-induced adverse
effects along with the drugs that can cause them. In the box below are some of
the symptoms that, although they are frequently caused by drugs, are the kinds
of problems that you or many doctors might first attribute simply to “growing
old” or “getting nervous” instead of to a drug.
Which Adverse Effects Can Be Caused by Which Drugs?
The drug-induced disease lists on this web site are to be used by patients who
have any of a variety of medical problems (or by doctors) to find out which
drugs, especially ones they are using or are considering using, can cause
specific adverse reactions. The lists are compiled from a variety of sources.17,
18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23
Although some of these adverse effects occur most commonly in older adults, all
of them have also been documented in younger people, although sometimes not as
often.
Summary
of Adverse Reactions and the Drugs That Cause Them
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 Of the 42.34 million Americans 60 and older (Statistical Abstracts of the
United States 1992, 1991 population data) approximately 90% are taking one or
more medications for a total of 37.83 million older people. According to a study
of verified adverse drug reactions (German PS, Klein LE. Adverse drug experience
among the elderly. Pharmaceuticals for the Elderly. Pharmaceutical Manufacturers
Association, November 1986), 25.4% of the elderly patients 60 and older had at
least one adverse drug reaction during the six-month interval that the study
encompassed. Twenty-five and four-tenths percent of 37.83 million people is 9.61
million adverse reactions for the six-month period. The number of adverse
reactions in a year would certainly be higher. The actual number of adverse
reactions is also much higher since this calculation assumes all patients were
being seen outside of the hospital or nursing home. Because the use of drugs in
nursing homes and hospitals is much higher than in clinics, the number of
adverse reactions is also higher.
2 Using the basis for estimating the number of admissions to medical wards of
hospitals of 6.05 million in 1990 (see reference 1 in the previous chapter for
the basis of this estimate), and the estimate that in 22.4% of medical
admissions the patients are using digoxin and that 2.06% of these suffer life
threatening heart toxicity from digoxin (both are from Miller RR, Greenblatt DJ.
Drug Effects in Hospitalized Patients. New York: John Wiley and Sons, 1976),
this amounts to 6.05 million times 22.4% times 2.06% or 27,917 older adults in
hospitals who suffer from life-threatening heart toxicity from digoxin. This
estimate understates the magnitude of the problem because the proportion of
patients in the Miller/Greenblatt book using digoxin and experiencing
life-threatening heart toxicity is based on all patients of all ages, whereas
the rate of digoxin use and therefore the rate of life-threatening reactions is
higher in older adults. The estimate is also lower because it does not include
cases of digoxin toxicity that occur in surgical patients.
3 Ray WA, Griffin MR, Shorr RI. Adverse drug reactions and the elderly. Health
Affairs 1990; 9: 114 - 122.
4 Ray WA, Fought RL, Decker MD. Psychoactive drugs and the risk of injurious
motor vehicle crashes in elderly drivers. American Journal of Epidemiology Oct
1, 1992; 136: 873 - 883.
5 The estimate of 32,000 hip fractures in older adults is based on projecting
the findings of this study of drug-induced hip fractures in older Michigan
Medicaid patients to the entire country.
6 Ray WA, Griffin MR, Schaffner W, Baugh DK, Melton LJ. Psychotropic drug use
and the risk of hip fracture. New England Journal of Medicine Feb 12, 1987; 316:
363 - 369.
7 This estimate is based on projecting the findings of the Larson study on the
1.43 million Americans 65 and older who have dementia. See discussion on
sleeping pills and tranquilizers (p. xxx) for more details about this serious
problem.
8 Larson EB, Kukull WA, Buchner D, Reifler BV. Adverse drug reactions associated
with global cognitive impairment in elderly persons. Annals of Internal Medicine
Aug 1987; 107: 169 - 173.
9 See discussion on sleeping pills and tranquilizers (p. xxx) for more details
on this estimate.
10 See discussion on antipsychotic drugs (p. xxx) for more details about
drug-induced tardive dyskinesia and misprescribing of antipsychotic drugs.
11 The estimate of 61,000 older adults suffering from drug-induced parkinsonism
is derived as follows: As described in detail in the chapter on antipsychotic
drugs (see p. xxx), there are an estimated 750,000 people 65 and older in
nursing homes or living in the community who are regularly (for three or four
months or longer) being prescribed antipsychotic drugs. According to a survey in
1981 of 5,000 patients being treated with antipsychotic drugs, 13.2% had
parkinsonism (see reference 15 below and p. xxx in the Mind Drugs section for
further discussion of this problem). Another study by the same researchers found
that 62% became better (no longer had parkinsonism) within 30 days of
discontinuing the drug. Thus, at least 62% of the 13.2% of patients getting
antipsychotic drugs or 7.92% of all patients getting these drugs suffer from
drug-induced parkinsonism. Calculating 7.92% of 750,000 patients getting these
drugs for at least several months yields 61,380 patients with drug-induced
parkinsonism. This is a very conservative estimate because it does not include
either those patients using antipsychotic drugs for less than three to four
months (an additional 1.16 million people) who are also at risk for drug-induced
parkinsonism (because 90% of the cases occur within 72 days after beginning the
drug) or those who get drug-induced parkinsonism from the related drugs
metoclopramide/REGLAN, prochlorperazine/COMPAZINE and promethazine/PHENERGAN
usually prescribed for nausea.
12 Vestal RE;, ed. Drug Treatment in the Elderly. Sydney, Australia: ADIS Health
Science Press, 1984.
13 Ouslander JG. Drug therapy in the elderly. Annals of Internal Medicine Dec
1981; 95: 711 - 722.
14 Grimes JD. Drug-induced parkinsonism and tardive dyskinesia in nonpsychiatric
patients. Canadian Medical Association Journal Mar 1, 1982; 126: 468.
15 Drugs for the Elderly. 2nd edition. Copenhagen, Denmark: World Health
Organization, 1997: 28.
16 Lipton HL, Bero LA, Bird JA, McPhee SJ. The impact of clinical pharmacists'
consultations on physicians' geriatric drug prescribing: A randomized controlled
trial. Medical Care Jul 1992; 30: 646 - 658.
17 Davies DM;, ed. Textbook of Adverse Drug Reactions. New York: Oxford
University Press, 1977.
18 Aronson JK;Van Boxtel C;, ed. Side Effects of Drugs Annual 18. Amsterdam:
Elsevier, 1995.
19 Drugs for the Elderly. 2nd edition. Copenhagen, Denmark: World Health
Organization, 1997: 28.
20 Aronson JK;, ed. Side Effects of Drugs Annual 24. Amsterdam: Elsevier, 2001.
21 Drugs that may cause psychiatric symptoms. Medical Letter on Drugs and
Therapeutics Jul 8, 2002; 44: 59 - 62.
22 Aronson JK;, ed. Side Effects of Drugs Annual 25. Amsterdam: Elsevier, 2002.
23 Other sources included the Physicians' Desk Reference and outside
consultants.