What is Polypharmacy in Patients with Chronic Kidney Disease? A Systematic Review

Clin Ther. 2023 Nov;45(11):e217-e221. doi: 10.1016/j.clinthera.2023.08.007. Epub 2023 Sep 16.

Abstract

Purpose: Polypharmacy presents an increasing therapeutic challenge for physicians managing patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD). However, there is a lack of consensus regarding the specific medication count threshold that defines polypharmacy in this population. The objective of this review is to establish a unified definition of polypharmacy in the CKD population by examining the diverse definitions used in previously published studies.

Methods: A comprehensive search was conducted in relevant databases (PubMed, SCOPUS, Cochrane, and disease-specific databases) from 2000 to May 2022 to identify studies with polypharmacy threshold definitions in patients with CKD. Studies meeting the inclusion criteria were included in this review, and their methodologic quality was assessed.

Findings: Following the screening of the search results, duplicate records and studies that did not meet the inclusion criteria were removed, resulting in a total of 18 studies included in this review. Among these, 61.1% specified the polypharmacy definition to be a threshold of ≥5 medications. In addition, 22.2% specified a high polypharmacy definition at a threshold of ≥10 medications. However, none of the studies reported on the dichotomy between kidney-related and non-kidney-related polypharmacy.

Implications: This review indicates that a numerical threshold of ≥5 medications is commonly used to define polypharmacy in patients with CKD. Nevertheless, it remains uncertain whether a kidney-related polypharmacy definition or a high polypharmacy definition would better identify patients with CKD at risk for polypharmacy-related complications.

Keywords: Adverse medication reactions; Chronic kidney disease; Medication; Medication interactions; Polypharmacy.

Publication types

  • Systematic Review

MeSH terms

  • Databases, Factual
  • Humans
  • Polypharmacy*
  • Renal Insufficiency, Chronic* / drug therapy