Home Cardiology Statin Use Among Nursing Home Residents Varies Significantly

Statin Use Among Nursing Home Residents Varies Significantly

Between-physician variability accounted for 9.1 percent of unexplained variation in statin use

MONDAY, Aug. 14, 2017 (HealthDay News) — Statin prescribing is considerable among nursing home residents, with significant variation in prescribing seen across physicians, according to a study published online Aug. 9 in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

Michael A. Campitelli, M.P.H., from the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences in Toronto, and colleagues conducted a population-based cross-sectional analysis involving 631 nursing home facilities to examine the variability of statin use among adults age 66 years and older residing in a nursing home facility.

The researchers found that 33.6 percent of the 76,226 nursing home residents assigned to 1,919 physicians were statin users. Among the 44,290 residents categorized as frail, 30.1 percent were statin users. Compared with non-frail residents, frail residents were significantly less likely to be statin users in an adjusted model (adjusted odds ratio, 0.62; 95 percent confidence interval, 0.58 to 0.65). Between-physician variability accounted for 9.1 percent of the residual unexplained variation in statin use (P < 0.001), after adjustment for resident characteristics. More low-outlying and high-outlying prescribers of statins were seen than expected by chance (17.4 and 12.0 percent, respectively) among the 894 physicians assigned 20 or more residents. High-outlying prescribing physicians had higher historical rates of statin prescribing.

“Further studies are required to evaluate the risks and benefits of statin use, and discontinuation, among nursing home residents to better inform clinical practice in this setting,” the authors write.

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