PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

4 common antipsychotic drugs found to lack safety and effectiveness in older adults

2012-11-28
(Press-News.org) In older adults, antipsychotic drugs are commonly prescribed off-label for a number of disorders outside of their Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved indications – schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. The largest number of antipsychotic prescriptions in older adults is for behavioral disturbances associated with dementia, some of which carry FDA warnings on prescription information for these drugs.

In a new study – led by researchers at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine, Stanford University and the University of Iowa, and funded by the National Institute of Mental Health – four of the antipsychotics most commonly prescribed off label for use in patients over 40 were found to lack both safety and effectiveness. The results will be published November 27 in The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry.

The study looked at four atypical antipsychotics (AAPs) – aripiprazole (Abilify), olanzapine (Zyprexa), quetiapine (Seroquel), and risperidone (Risperdal) – in 332 patients over the age of 40 diagnosed with psychosis associated with schizophrenia, mood disorders, PTSD, or dementia.

"Our study suggests that off-label use of these drugs in older people should be short-term, and undertaken with caution," said Dilip V. Jeste, MD, Estelle and Edgar Levi Chair in Aging, Distinguished Professor of Psychiatry and Neurosciences, and director of the Stein Institute for Research on Aging at UC San Diego.

Results of the five-year study led by Jeste, who is also current president of the American Psychiatric Association (which was not involved in this research), showed that within one year of treatment, one-third of the patients enrolled in the study developed metabolic syndrome (medical disorders that can increase the risk of cardiovascular disease or diabetes). Within two years, nearly a quarter of the patients developed serious adverse effects and just over half developed non-serious adverse effects.

Because the patients enrolled in the study were all diagnosed with conditions with psychotic symptoms that required antipsychotic drug treatment according to their treating physicians, no placebo was used in the trial. Instead, the researchers used a technique called "equipoise stratified randomization" which is a hybrid of complete randomization and a clinician's choice method.

"Our goal was to ensure clinical relevance," said Jeste. Patients had to agree to be randomized to 2, 3 or 4 of the study drugs, as they or their physicians were allowed to exclude one or two of the study AAPs, due to past experience or anticipated risk of the particular drug. Treating clinicians could determine the optimal dosage. "We attempted to make the study as 'user-friendly' as possible, to allow the drugs the best chance of success, while seeking to minimize the amount of bias," he explained.

While the researchers' intent was to continue the patients on the randomized medications for two years, the average length turned out to be only six months, after which the medications were halted or switched because they didn't work and/or had side effects.

Because of a notably high incidence of serious adverse events, quetiapine had to be discontinued midway through the trial. The researchers found that there were significant differences among patients willing to be randomized to different AAPs – thus, treating clinicians tended to exclude olanzapine and prefer aripiprazole as one of the possible choices in patients with existing metabolic problems. Yet, the different AAP groups did not appreciably differ in most outcome measures.

Using a common scale called the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS), to measure symptoms such as delusions, hallucinations, unusual behavior, depression, and anxiety, assessments were made at 6 weeks, 12 weeks, and then every 12 weeks. Results using "blind" raters showed no significant improvement in BPRS over a six-month period.

"While there were a few significant differences among the four drugs, the overall risk-benefit ratio for the AAPs in patients over age 40 was not favorable, irrespective of diagnosis and drug," said Jeste.

Jeste points out that clinicians, patients, and caregivers are often left with difficult and unclear choices for treatment for older persons with psychosis, such as that associated with dementia. Not only are psychosis and agitation common in persons with dementia but they also frequently cause considerable caregiver distress and hasten institutionalization of patients. At the same time, there are no FDA-approved alternatives to antipsychotics for this population, and the high cost of newer AAPs also makes their use problematic.

While the researchers say their findings do not suggest that these AAPs should be banned in older patients with psychiatric disorders, they do indicate that considerable caution is warranted in off-label, long-term use of the drugs in older persons.

"When these medications are used off-label, they should be given in low dosages and for short durations, and their side effects monitored closely," said Jeste. "Clearly, there is also a critical need to develop and test new interventions that are safe and effective in older people with psychotic disorders."

###

Other authors of this paper are Hua Jin, MD, Pei-an Betty Shih, PhD, Shahrokh Golshan, PhD, Sunder Mudaliar, MD, Robert Henry, MD, and Danielle K. Glorioso, MSW, from University of California, San Diego; Helena C. Kraemer, PhD, emerita professor of biostatistics in psychiatry at Stanford University, and Stephan Arndt, PhD, professor of psychiatry and biostatistics at the University of Iowa.

The study was supported in part by National Institutes of Health grants MH071536, P30 MH080002-01, 1K01DK087813-01, NCRS UL1RR031980 and by the Department of Veteran Affairs.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

The hungry caterpillar: Beware your enemy's enemy's enemy

2012-11-28
When herbivores such as caterpillars feed, plants may "call for help" by emitting volatiles, which can indirectly help defend the plants. The volatiles recruit parasitoids that infect, consume and kill the herbivores, to the benefit of the plant. However, such induced plant odours can also be detected by other organisms. A new study published November 27 in the open access journal PLOS Biology shows how secondary parasitoids ('hyperparasitoids') can take advantage of these plant signals to identify parasitoid-infected caterpillars, and duly infect the primary parasitoid, ...

Studies examine whether therapies for heart failure are associated with improved survival

2012-11-28
CHICAGO – An analysis of two heart failure therapies finds differing outcomes regarding improvement in survival, according to two studies appearing in the November 28 issue of JAMA. In one study, Adrian F. Hernandez, M.D., M.H.S., of the Duke Clinical Research Institute, Durham, N.C., and colleagues examined the clinical effectiveness of aldosterone antagonist therapy and associations with long-term outcomes of older patients discharged from a hospitalization for heart failure. "Aldosterone antagonist therapy [a diuretic drug] for heart failure and reduced ejection ...

Heart failure drug less effective in real world

2012-11-28
DURHAM, N.C. – A large study addressing the effectiveness and safety of aldosterone antagonist therapy for older heart failure patients has found notable differences between the drug's results in clinical trial vs. what occurs in actual practice, according to researchers at Duke Medicine. Those differences have been noted anecdotally by doctors, and likely contributed to the slow adoption of aldosterone antagonists in clinical practice, but they had not been confirmed in a large study examining the drugs in real-world situations. The Duke-led research, published Nov. ...

Risk of pertussis increases as time since last dose of DTaP vaccine lengthens

2012-11-28
CHICAGO – In an examination of cases of childhood pertussis in California, researchers found that children with pertussis had lower odds of having received all 5 doses of the diphtheria, tetanus, and acellular pertussis vaccine (DTaP) vaccine series; however the odds increased as the time since last DTaP dose lengthened, which is consistent with a progressive decrease in estimated vaccine effectiveness each year after the final dose of DTaP vaccine, according to a study in the November 28 issue of JAMA. "Pertussis remains a poorly controlled vaccine-preventable disease ...

Study examines anticoagulation treatment following aortic valve replacement

2012-11-28
CHICAGO – Although current guidelines recommend 3 months of anticoagulation treatment after bioprosthetic aortic valve replacement surgery, a study that included more than 4,000 patients found that patients who had warfarin therapy continued between 3 and 6 months after surgery had a lower rate of cardiovascular death, according to a study in the November 28 issue of JAMA. "Biological prostheses are preferred to mechanical valves for aortic valve replacement (AVR) surgery in elderly patients older than 65 years because of shorter life expectancy and lack of a need to ...

How infidelity helps nieces and nephews

How infidelity helps nieces and nephews
2012-11-28
SALT LAKE CITY, Nov. 27, 2012 – A University of Utah study produced new mathematical support for a theory that explains why men in some cultures often feed and care for their sisters' children: where extramarital sex is common and accepted, a man's genes are more likely to be passed on by their sister's kids than by their wife's kids. The theory previously was believed valid only if a man was likely to be the biological father of less than one in four of his wife's children – a number that anthropologists found improbably low. But in the new study, University of ...

Ecologists shed new light on effects of light pollution on wildlife

Ecologists shed new light on effects of light pollution on wildlife
2012-11-28
Coasts and estuaries are among the most rapidly developing areas on Earth. Night-time satellite images of the planet show that except Antarctica, continents are ringed with halos of brightly-lit human development. But coasts are also key wildlife sites. Every year, millions of waterbirds arrive from the Arctic to overwinter on UK coasts, yet scientists remain largely in the dark about how these birds respond to the bright lights of coastal cities and industry. To shed light on the issue, Dr Ross Dwyer and colleagues from the University of Exeter investigated how artificial ...

Sea-levels rising faster than IPCC projections

2012-11-28
Sea-levels are rising 60 per cent faster than the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's (IPCC) central projections, new research suggests. While temperature rises appear to be consistent with the projections made in the IPCC's fourth assessment report (AR4), satellite measurements show that sea-levels are actually rising at a rate of 3.2 mm a year compared to the best estimate of 2 mm a year in the report. The researchers, from the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, Tempo Analytics and Laboratoire d'Etudes en Géophysique et Océanographie Spatiales, ...

Most women who have double mastectomy don't need it, U-M study finds

Most women who have double mastectomy dont need it, U-M study finds
2012-11-28
ANN ARBOR, Mich. — About 70 percent of women who have both breasts removed following a breast cancer diagnosis do so despite a very low risk of facing cancer in the healthy breast, new research from the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center finds. Recent studies have shown an increase in women with breast cancer choosing this more aggressive surgery, called contralateral prophylactic mastectomy, which raises the question of potential overtreatment among these patients. The study found that 90 percent of women who had surgery to remove both breasts reported ...

Common heart failure drugs could benefit more patients

2012-11-28
Heart failure affects 3 per cent of the overall population, and exists in two forms: reduced ability to contract the heart and reduced ability to relax the heart. The former affects younger patients, mostly men, and is treatable. The latter, called HFPEF (heart failure with preserved ejection fraction), affects older patients and women, and until now there has not been any treatment available against the disease. In the present study, a team comprising researchers at Karolinska Institutet, Linköping University, Stockholm South General Hospital and Karolinska University ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

How AI could speed the development of RNA vaccines and other RNA therapies

Scientists reveal how senses work together in the brain

Antarctica’s changing threat landscape underscores the need for coordinated action

Intergalactic experiment: Researchers hunt for mysterious dark matter particle with clever new trick

Using bacteria to sneak viruses into tumors

Large community heart health checks can identify risk for heart disease

Past Arctic climate secrets to be revealed during i2B “Into The Blue” Arctic Ocean Expedition 2025

Teaching the immune system a new trick could one day level the organ transplant playing field

Can green technologies resolve the “dilemma” in wheat production?

Green high-yield and high-efficiency technology: a new path balancing yield and ecology

How can science and technology solve the problem of increasing grain yield per unit area?

New CRISPR technique could rewrite future of genetic disease treatment

he new tech that could improve care for Parkinson's patients

Sharing is power: do the neighbourly thing when it comes to solar

Sparring saigas win 2025 BMC journals Image Competition

Researchers discover dementia-like behaviour in pre-cancer cells

Medical pros of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) exaggerated while cons downplayed, survey findings suggest

Experts recommend SGLT-2 and GLP-1 diabetes drugs only for adults at moderate to higher risk of heart and kidney problems

Global study finds heart failure drug spironolactone fails to lower cardiovascular risk in dialysis patients

Deprivation and transport density linked to increased suicide risk in England

Flatworms can replace rats for breakthrough brain studies

Plastic from plants: FAMU-FSU College of Engineering professor uses material in plant cell walls to make versatile polymer

Leaders at Huntsman Cancer Institute drive theranostics expansion to transform cancer care

Thin films, big science: FSU chemists expand imaging possibilities with new X-ray material

66th Supplement to the Check-list of North American Birds publishes today in Ornithology

Canadian crops beat global emissions—even after 17 trips across the Atlantic

ORC2 regulation of human gene expression shows unexpected breadth and scale

Researchers track how iron deficiency disrupts photosynthesis in crucial ocean algae

A Mount Sinai-Led team creates model for understanding how the brain’s decision-making is impacted in psychiatric disorders

A new way to study omega fatty acids

[Press-News.org] 4 common antipsychotic drugs found to lack safety and effectiveness in older adults