# Trends and Characteristics of Medication Use Among U.S. Older Adults by Frailty: A 20-Year NHANES Analysis

**Authors:** Maryanne Kim, Michael Steinman, Matthew Growdon

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.4036 · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This study analyzed 21 years of U.S. health data to show how medication use increases with frailty in older adults, especially for heart, metabolic, and mental health drugs.

## Contribution

The study provides the first long-term population-based analysis linking frailty status to medication trends in older adults using NHANES data.

## Key findings

- Medication counts increased over 21 years in all frailty groups, with severe frailty showing the largest rise.
- Severe frailty individuals used over twice as many cardiovascular and metabolic drugs compared to robust older adults by 2017–2020.
- Use of psychotherapeutic agents nearly quadrupled in severe frailty individuals from 1999 to 2020.

## Abstract

Frailty, a syndrome of reduced physiologic reserve, is associated with higher medication burden and vulnerability to adverse drug events. Reducing this burden requires understanding which therapeutic classes predominate and how their distribution varies by frailty status; however, long-term, population-based data remain limited. We analyzed data from the U.S. National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES), 1999–March 2020, including 12,766 adults aged ≥65 years with ≥80% of frailty index (FI) components available, categorizing participants as robust, frail or severe frailty. Trends in therapeutic class use were examined across survey years. Mean medication counts rose from 2.60 to 3.52 in robust, 4.23 to 5.66 in frail, and 6.08 to 7.87 in severe frailty. Cardiovascular and metabolic agents predominated in all frailty groups, with higher counts in more frail groups. By 2017–2020, older adults with severe frailty used more than twice as many drugs from cardiovascular (2.59 vs 1.02) and metabolic (1.88 vs 0.81) classes as robust individuals. Over the 21-year period, the use of psychotherapeutic agents rose in all groups, nearly quadrupling in people with severe frailty (0.09 to 0.38), while central nervous system agents use increased minimally in robust and frail groups but meaningfully in severe frailty group (0.66 to 0.90). Medication burden increased across all frailty strata, with severe frailty showing higher use of cardio-metabolic agents and larger increase in psychotherapeutic and central nervous system agents. Medication optimization strategies for older adults should be tailored to frailty status, with attention to therapeutic classes most likely to drive polypharmacy.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12762587