Abstract
Little is known about multiple medicines and initial therapy among people with dementia. To examine the effect of multiple medicines on the initiation of anti-dementia therapy in patients diagnosed with cognitive impairment (CI), a retrospective study with 2742 CI patients was conducted based on the outpatients’ medical records. The dementias receiving 1–2 drugs were more likely to be prescribed with anti-dementia (one drug: OR = 1.877; two drugs: OR = 1.770) and psychotropic (one drug: OR = 1.980) treatment, whereas had lower chances of receiving psychotropic medication with the combinations of more than three drugs (Alzheimer’s disease: OR =.365; vascular dementia: OR =.940; frontotemporal lobe degeneration: OR =.957; and dementia with Lewy bodies/Parkinson’s disease dementia: OR =.952). Multiple medicines can affect anti-dementia therapy initiation in dementia patients and should be paid extreme caution.
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Gan, J., Liu, S., Chen, Z., Wang, X. D., & Ji, Y. (2021). Effect of Multiple Medicines on Dementia Initial Treatment: Experience and Thinking. American Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease and Other Dementias, 36. https://doi.org/10.1177/15333175211053134
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