Title
Deprescribing in older people: A clinical practice guidelines summary.
Link to article in PubMed
Author(s)
Quek, Hui Wen
Reus Perello, Xisco
Lee, Kenneth
Abraham, Atinuke
Adams, Leon
Almeida, Osvaldo
Almutairi, Hend
Armstrong, Bree
Boase, Leanne
Breen, Juanita
Brown, Lauren
Caughey, Gillian
Chan, Lewis
Chen, Roger
Chew, Edward
Clark, Antony
Comans, Tracy
Criddle, Deirdre
Dārziņš, Pēteris
Dawda, Paresh
Doust, Jenny
Edwards, Sue
Gowan, Jennifer
Hart, Kerryn
Hawthorne, Deborah
Heredia, Andrew
Hill, Anne-Marie
Jansen, Jesse
Kalisch Ellett, Lisa
Keen, Helen
Kelty, Erin
Kerse, Ngaire
Kruger, Estie
Kurrle, Susan
Lance, Howard
Livori, Adam
Livori, Rebecca
LoGiudice, Dina
Mangoni, Arduino
Marinucci, Anthony
McKay, Nilufeur
Mckendrick, Allison
McLachlan, Andrew
McGuire, Treasure
Mearns, Stewart
Morgan, Mark
Nabi, Saba
Naganathan, Vasi
Newman, Elaine
Ng, Christopher
Osborne, Maz
Parkin, Ray
Polkinghorne, Kevan
Pond, Constance Dimity
Potter, Kathleen
Rigby, Debbie
Rowett, Debra
Schipp, Amina
Seda, Veronika
Seeto, Jessica
Shakib, Sepehr
Shiu, Angela
Stafford, Andrew
Tan, Irene J
Tennant, Marc
Teoh, Leanne
Tucker, Stephen
Watson, John
Wellins, Donna
Whitmore, Tim
Etherton-Beer, Christopher
Page, Amy
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Older people face higher risks of medicine-related harm due to polypharmacy and the use of potentially inappropriate medicines. Current treatment guidelines rarely specify when to stop medicines, leading to medicines often being continued indefinitely without a clear deprescribing plan. While deprescribing guidelines exist for some medicine classes, limited guidance is a major barrier to deprescribing. These new guidelines address this gap by providing structured recommendations that complement more detailed drug-specific deprescribing guidance, disease-specific therapeutic guidelines and non-pharmacological management resources. These guidelines were developed by a team of 72 experts, including consumer representatives, and were further shaped by feedback from public consultation and independent reviewers.
MAIN RECOMMENDATIONS: The guidelines are intended for all healthcare professionals involved in prescribing, dispensing or administering medicines to older people. The guidelines specifically address polypharmacy and medicines commonly dispensed for regular use in people aged ≥ 65 years, as well as other medicines where there is evidence to consider deprescribing in this cohort. The guidelines provide 185 consensus-based recommendations and 70 good practice statements, covering both specific medicine categories and general deprescribing principles. The guidelines are structured into four areas: (1) when to deprescribe; (2) ongoing treatment needs; (3) how to deprescribe; and (4) monitoring requirements.
CHANGES IN CARE AS A RESULT OF THE GUIDELINE: This guideline emphasises deprescribing as an integral part of the prescribing continuum. Applying a deprescribing approach encourages prescribers to consider the ongoing need for a medicine each time a prescription is re-issued, to balance benefits and harms as they evolve over time, and to ensure treatment decisions reflect an individual's goals through shared decision-making. The guideline was developed based on currently available evidence for deprescribing and expert multidisciplinary and consumer input. It supports health professionals in reviewing regular medicines, minimising harm and planning ongoing treatment or monitoring. The detailed guideline is available at https://deprescribing.com.
MAIN RECOMMENDATIONS: The guidelines are intended for all healthcare professionals involved in prescribing, dispensing or administering medicines to older people. The guidelines specifically address polypharmacy and medicines commonly dispensed for regular use in people aged ≥ 65 years, as well as other medicines where there is evidence to consider deprescribing in this cohort. The guidelines provide 185 consensus-based recommendations and 70 good practice statements, covering both specific medicine categories and general deprescribing principles. The guidelines are structured into four areas: (1) when to deprescribe; (2) ongoing treatment needs; (3) how to deprescribe; and (4) monitoring requirements.
CHANGES IN CARE AS A RESULT OF THE GUIDELINE: This guideline emphasises deprescribing as an integral part of the prescribing continuum. Applying a deprescribing approach encourages prescribers to consider the ongoing need for a medicine each time a prescription is re-issued, to balance benefits and harms as they evolve over time, and to ensure treatment decisions reflect an individual's goals through shared decision-making. The guideline was developed based on currently available evidence for deprescribing and expert multidisciplinary and consumer input. It supports health professionals in reviewing regular medicines, minimising harm and planning ongoing treatment or monitoring. The detailed guideline is available at https://deprescribing.com.
Publication information
Med J Aust . 2026 Apr;224(4):e70174. doi: 10.5694/mja2.70174.
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Deprescribing in Older People.pdf
Description
Re-used under a Creative Commons Attribution License: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Size
1.29 MB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum
(MD5):9b6aad424fc02aacb55eb85965e1c9c7
Date Issued
2026-04-01
Type
Journal Article
Journal Title
The Medical journal of Australia
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