Effect of Anticholinergic Medications on Falls, Fracture Risk, and Bone Mineral Density Over a 10-Year Period

The Annals of pharmacotherapy, 48(8), 954-961

DOI 10.1177/1060028014535363 PMID 24816210 Source

Abstract

Background

Many medications used in older adults have strong anticholinergic (ACH) properties, which may increase the risk of falls and fractures. Use of these medications was identified in a population-based Canadian cohort.

Objective

To identify the fall and fracture risk associated with ACH medication use.

Methods

Data collection and analysis were conducted at baseline, year 5, and year 10. Cross-sectional analyses were performed to examine associations between ACH medication use and falls. Time-dependent Cox regression was used to examine time to first nontraumatic fracture. Finally, change in bone mineral density (BMD) over 10 years was compared in ACH medication users versus nonusers.

Results

Strongly ACH medications were used by 618 of 7753 participants (8.0%) at study baseline, 592 (9.5%) at year 5, and 334 (7.7%) at year 10. Unadjusted ACH medication use was associated with falls at baseline (odds ratio = 1.50; 95% CI = 1.14-1.98; P = 0.004), but the association was no longer significant after covariate adjustment. Similar results occurred at years 5 and 10. ACH medication use was associated with increased incident fracture risk before (hazard ratio = 1.22; CI = 1.13-1.32; P < 0.001) but not after covariate adjustment. Mean (SD) change in femoral neck BMD T-score over 10 years, in those using ACH medications at both years 0 and 5, was -0.60 (0.63) in ACH users versus -0.49 (0.45) in nonusers (P = 0.041), but this was not significant after covariate adjustment.

Conclusions

ACH medications were not found to be independently associated with an increased risk of falling, fractures, or BMD loss. Rather, factors associated with ACH medication use explained the apparent associations.

Topics

anticholinergic medications fall risk elderly, bone mineral density older adults medications, fracture risk anticholinergic drugs, geriatric pharmacology bone health

Cite this article

Lisa-Ann Fraser, Jonathan D Adachi, William D Leslie, David Goltzman, Robert Josse, Jerilynn Prior, Stephanie Kaiser, Nancy Kreiger, Christopher S Kovacs, Tassos P Anastassiades, & Alexandra Papaioannou (1900). Effect of Anticholinergic Medications on Falls, Fracture Risk, and Bone Mineral Density Over a 10-Year Period. *The Annals of pharmacotherapy*, *48*(8), 954-961. https://doi.org/10.1177/1060028014535363

Related articles