Antipsychotic medications that are
commonly being used to help control behaviors in elderly people with dementia
seem to be causing premature deaths at higher rates than previously thought,
according to a study in JAMA Psychiatry.
The University of Michigan-led team
examined records for nearly 91,000 elderly veterans with dementia between 1998
and 2009, who had been treated with either of several psychiatric drugs or had
received no psychiatric drugs at all. They then calculated the "number
needed to harm" (NNH), or the number of people who had to be taking a
particular class of psychotropics in order for one of them to die within six
months.
"The results, published this
week in JAMA Psychiatry, showed that mortality risks statistically
increased in patients taking antipsychotics to reduce symptoms of dementia,
compared with individuals not being treated," reported Psychiatric
News.
"Haloperidol was observed to be the riskiest -- with one death per every
26 individuals taking the drug. Risperidone had a NNH of 27, followed by less
risky olanzapine and quetiapine with NNHs of, respectively, 40 and 50. The
researchers also observed the mortality risk for older adults with dementia who
took antidepressants. The mortality risks were lower -- with one person dying
for every 166 individuals taking the medication."
The researchers concluded in their
abstract, "The absolute effect of antipsychotics on mortality in elderly
patients with dementia may be higher than previously reported and increases
with dose."
"We hope this creates a dialogue
about the advantages and disadvantages of antipsychotic and other psychotropic
use as first-line treatment strategies for behavioral symptoms," one of
the researchers told Psychiatric News.
"These risks are two to four
times higher than previously cited in the medical literature," reported MinnPost. "Another
troubling finding was that people prescribed haloperidol — the riskiest of the
drugs — were more likely to be unmarried, African-American or living in
facilities with fewer beds for patients."
Maust DT, Kim H, Seyfried LS, et al.
Antipsychotics, Other Psychotropics, and the Risk of Death in Patients With
Dementia: Number Needed to Harm. JAMA Psychiatry. Published online March 18,
2015. doi:10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2014.3018. (Abstract)
Are
antipsychotic drugs more dangerous to dementia patients than we think?
(University of Michigan Health System press release on ScienceDaily, March 18,
2015)
Antipsychotic
drugs are riskier for older dementia patients than previously thought, study
finds (MinnPost, March 19, 2015)
Mortality Risk
High for Dementia Patients Taking Antipsychotics, Study Finds
(Psychiatric News Alert, March 20, 2015)
--Rob Wipond,
News Editor
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Thank You Mr Wipond and MIA.
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