Association between Anticholinergic Burden and Constipation: A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Information Sources
2.2. Search
2.3. Study Eligibility Criteria
2.3.1. Studies Inclusion Criteria
2.3.2. Exclusion Criteria
- The full text was not available.
- Constipation as a composite variable.
- Narrative reviews, letters to the editor, and conference summaries.
- Articles that measured only acute constipation.
- The association magnitude was not disclosed.
2.4. Study Selection
2.5. Assessment of Articles Quality
2.6. Data Collection
- Study characteristics: Study design (Interventional, observational, cross-sectional studies), country, the number of patients included, study duration.
- Patient characteristics: the setting of the population included (hospital, home-dwelling patients, nursing facilities inmates, community group homes, or patients from health insurance databases), average age or age limits for inclusion on each study, sex.
- Variables related to constipation: constipation diagnostic methods, number and percentage of patients diagnosed with constipation, patient’s physical activity, patient´s fluid and fiber intakes, polypharmacy rates, opioids use prevalence and patient´s diagnoses that may contribute to constipation: obstructive digestive diseases, mechanical causes of constipation, neurologic disorders such as Parkinson’s disease and multiple sclerosis, myogenic disorders, and enteric neuropathies.
- Anticholinergic activity data: number and percentage of patients treated with anticholinergic drugs and the anticholinergic scale used.
- Data about the association between constipation and anticholinergic burden: positive (significant data) or negative association (non-significant data) according to association measure (OR, p-value, RR, Hazard ratio, etc.), anticholinergic drugs that most frequently were associated with constipation.
3. Results
3.1. General Characteristics of the Included Studies
3.2. Constipation Prevalence and Anticholinergic Exposure
3.3. Alternative Causes of Constipation
3.4. Methods for Measuring Anticholinergic Burden
3.5. Association between Anticholinergic Burden and Constipation
3.6. Association Results by Anticholinergic Scale
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Study Year | Study Design | Population Setting (N) | Country | Age (Y) | Patients (N) | Duration (M) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Agar M. 2009 | Post-hoc analysis of a randomized controlled trial | Home-dwelling: 89.0% (410) Nursing homes 6.5% (30) | Australia | 71 ± 12 † | 461 § | 24 |
Wawruch M. 2011 | Retrospective cohort study | Hospital | Slovakia | 78 ± 7 † | 1636 | 24 |
Kuang-Hua H.2012 | Retrospective cohort study | National Health Insurance database | Taiwan | >65 | 72,556 | 12 |
Allen C. 2017 | Retrospective cohort study | Nursing homes | United States | >18 | 6556 | 24 |
Hwang S. 2019 | Retrospective cohort study | National Health Insurance database | Korea | 75 ± 7 † | 118,750 | 3 |
O’Dwyer M. 2016 | Cross-sectional study | Home-dwelling: 16.6% (122) Nursing homes: 83.4% (614) | Ireland | 54 ± 9 † | 736 | - |
Briet J. 2017 | Cross-sectional study | Psychiatric facility | France | 50 ‡ | 7278 | - |
Mayer T. 2017 | Cross-sectional study | Home-dwelling | Germany | 73 ± 6 † | 2761 | - |
De Vreese L. P. 2018 | Cross-sectional study | Nursing homes 57.6% (159) Home-dwelling 42.4% (117) | Italy | 55 ± 8 † | 276 | - |
O’Connell J. 2018 | Cross-sectional study | Nursing homes: 84.9% (574) Home-dwelling: 15.1% (102) | Ireland | >40 | 676 | - |
Sevilla-Sánchez D. 2018 | Cross-sectional study | Hospital | Spain | 87 ± 5 † | 235 | - |
Study Year | Patients (N) | Assessment Method for Constipation | Constipation Prevalence (N) | Anticholinergic Exposure (N) | Most Prescribed Drugs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Agar M. 2009 | 461 | Clinical assessment | No Data | No Data | Opioids |
Wawruch M. 2011 | 1636 | Clinical assessment | 8.0% (131) | Admission: 10.5% (172) ‡ Discharge: 13.6% (223) ‡ | Opioids |
Sevilla-Sánchez D. 2018 | 235 | Clinical assessment | 62.1% (146) | ADS: 93.6% (220) DBI: 82.1% (193) | No Data |
O’Dwyer M. 2016 | 736 | Clinical assessment and laxative prescriptions | No Data | 70.1% (516) | Antipsychotics |
Allen C. 2017 | 6556 | Clinical charts andlaxative prescriptions | 8.9% † | 73.4% (4811) | Opioids |
Briet J. 2017 | 7278 | Laxative prescriptions | 48.2% (3509) | 97.2% (7077) | Antipsychotics |
Mayer T. 2017 | 2761 | Laxative prescriptions | 1.5% (41) | 45.6% (1258) | No Data |
De Vreese L. P. 2018 | 276 | Laxative prescriptions | 10.5% (29) | 35.5% (98) | Antipsychotics |
Kuang-Hua H. 2012 | 72,556 | Laxative prescriptions | 7.9% (5742) | 75.7% (54,888) | No Data |
O’Connell J. 2018 | 676 | Patient´s self-reports | 38.4% (257) | 78.6% (532) | Antiepileptics |
Hwang S. 2019 | 118,750 | Diagnostic codes in emergency department visit claims | 0.5% (567) | 36.5% † | No Data |
Study Year | Patient’s Groups Compared When Looking for a Correlation | Anticholinergic Scale | Association § | Association Magnitude § |
---|---|---|---|---|
Wawruch M. 2011 | Anticholinergic burden; 0 vs. >0 * | Anticholinergic Risk Scale † | + | OR: 1.91 (1.18–3.11) |
Clinician-Rated Anticholinergic Scale † | ||||
Kuang-Hua H. 2012 | Anticholinergic burden; 0 vs. >0 * | Anticholinergic Risk Scale | + | OR: 1.87 (1.72–2.03) |
Hwang S. 2019 | Anticholinergic burden; 0 vs. ≥2 | Anticholinergic Risk Scale † | + | HR: 1.65 (1.35–2.02) |
Mayer T. 2017 | Anticholinergic burden; 0 vs. >0 * | Anticholinergic Risk Scale | + | OR: 1.47 (p = 0.02) |
Anticholinergic Burden Classification | + | OR: 1.58 (p < 0.001) | ||
Cancelli’s Anticholinergic Burden Scale | + | OR: 1.58 (p < 0.001) | ||
Chew’s list | + | OR: 1.57 (p = 0.002) | ||
Anticholinergic Drug Scale | - | OR: 1.24 (p = 0.17) | ||
Clinician-Rated Anticholinergic Scale | - | OR: 1.47 (p = 0.08) | ||
Drug Burden Index | - | OR: 1.14 (p = 0.45) | ||
Anticholinergic Loading scale | - | OR: 1.14 (p = 0.45) | ||
Anticholinergic Cognitive Burden Scale | - | OR: 1.06 (p = 0.77) | ||
‘O’Dwyer M. 2016 | Anticholinergic burden; 0 vs. 1–4 vs. >5 | Anticholinergic Cognitive Burden Scale † | + | χ2: p < 0.001 |
Allen C. 2017 | Patients with and without constipation | Anticholinergic Cognitive Burden Scale | + | χ2: p < 0.001 |
De Vreese L. P. 2018 | Anticholinergic burden; 0 vs. >3 | Anticholinergic Cognitive Burden Scale | + | χ2: p = 0.003 |
O’Connell J. 2018 | Anticholinergic burden; 0 vs. (0–1) ‡ | Drug Burden Index | - | OR: 1.28 (0.64–2.53) |
Anticholinergic burden; 0 vs. ≥1 | - | OR: 1.68 (0.90–3.12) | ||
Sevilla-Sánchez D. 2018 | Anticholinergic burden; 0 vs. >0 * | Drug Burden Index | + | χ2: p = 0.03 |
Anticholinergic burden; 0 vs. 1–2 vs. >2 | - | χ2: p = 0.11 | ||
Anticholinergic burden; 0 vs. >0 * | Anticholinergic Drug Scale | - | χ2: p = 0.46 | |
Anticholinergic burden; < 3 vs. ≥3 | - | χ2: p = 0.92 | ||
Agar M. 2009 | Anticholinergic burden; 0 vs. >0 | Clinician-Rated Anticholinergic Scale † | - | OR: 1.05 (0.98–1.12) |
Briet J. 2017 | Anticholinergic burden; ≤5 vs.>5 | Anticholinergic impregnation scale | + | OR: 2.03 (1.81–2.28) |
Anticholinergic Scale | Studies | Association Assessments | Association Present (+) | Association Absent (-) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Association Assessments | Patients Involved | Association Assessments | Patients Involved | |||
Anticholinergic Risk Scale † | 4 | 4 | 4 | 195,703 | 0 | 0 |
Anticholinergic Cognitive Burden Scale | 4 | 4 | 3 | 7568 | 1 | 2761 |
Clinician-Rated Anticholinergic Scale † | 3 | 3 | 1 | 1636 | 2 | 3222 |
Drug Burden Index | 3 | 5 | 1 | 235 | 4 | 4113 |
Anticholinergic Drug Scale | 2 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 2555 |
Anticholinergic impregnation scale | 1 | 1 | 1 | 7278 | 0 | 0 |
Cancelli’s Anticholinergic Burden Scale | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2761 | 0 | 0 |
Chew’s list | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2761 | 0 | 0 |
Anticholinergic Burden Classification | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2761 | 0 | 0 |
Anticholinergic Loading scale | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 2761 |
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Rodríguez-Ramallo, H.; Báez-Gutiérrez, N.; Prado-Mel, E.; Alfaro-Lara, E.R.; Santos-Ramos, B.; Sánchez-Fidalgo, S. Association between Anticholinergic Burden and Constipation: A Systematic Review. Healthcare 2021, 9, 581. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9050581
Rodríguez-Ramallo H, Báez-Gutiérrez N, Prado-Mel E, Alfaro-Lara ER, Santos-Ramos B, Sánchez-Fidalgo S. Association between Anticholinergic Burden and Constipation: A Systematic Review. Healthcare. 2021; 9(5):581. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9050581
Chicago/Turabian StyleRodríguez-Ramallo, Héctor, Nerea Báez-Gutiérrez, Elena Prado-Mel, Eva Rocío Alfaro-Lara, Bernardo Santos-Ramos, and Susana Sánchez-Fidalgo. 2021. "Association between Anticholinergic Burden and Constipation: A Systematic Review" Healthcare 9, no. 5: 581. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9050581
APA StyleRodríguez-Ramallo, H., Báez-Gutiérrez, N., Prado-Mel, E., Alfaro-Lara, E. R., Santos-Ramos, B., & Sánchez-Fidalgo, S. (2021). Association between Anticholinergic Burden and Constipation: A Systematic Review. Healthcare, 9(5), 581. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9050581