Abstract
ImportanceRandomized controlled trials have demonstrated increased all-cause mortality in elderly patients with dementia treated with newer antipsychotics. It is unknown whether this risk generalizes to non-elderly adults using newer antipsychotics as augmentation treatment for depression.ObjectiveThis study examined all-cause mortality risk of newer antipsychotic augmentation for adult depression.DesignPopulation-based new-user/active comparator cohort study.SettingNational healthcare claims data from the US Medicaid program from 2001–2010 linked to the National Death Index.ParticipantsNon-elderly adults (25–64 years) diagnosed with depression who after ≥3 months of antidepressant monotherapy initiated either augmentation with a newer antipsychotic or with a second antidepressant. Patients with alternative indications for antipsychotic medications, such as schizophrenia, psychotic depression, or bipolar disorder, were excluded.ExposureAugmentation treatment for depression with a newer antipsychotic or with a second antidepressant.Main outcomeAll-cause mortality during study follow-up ascertained from the National Death Index.ResultsThe analytic cohort included 39,582 patients (female = 78.5%, mean age = 44.5 years) who initiated augmentation with a newer antipsychotic (n = 22,410; 40% = quetiapine, 21% = risperidone, 17% = aripiprazole, 16% = olanzapine) or with a second antidepressant (n = 17,172). The median chlorpromazine equivalent starting dose for all newer antipsychotics was 68mg/d, increasing to 100 mg/d during follow-up. Altogether, 153 patients died during 13,328 person-years of follow-up (newer antipsychotic augmentation: n = 105, follow-up = 7,601 person-years, mortality rate = 138.1/10,000 person-years; antidepressant augmentation: n = 48, follow-up = 5,727 person-years, mortality rate = 83.8/10,000 person-years). An adjusted hazard ratio of 1.45 (95% confidence interval, 1.02 to 2.06) indicated increased all-cause mortality risk for newer antipsychotic augmentation compared to antidepressant augmentation (risk difference = 37.7 (95%CI, 1.7 to 88.8) per 10,000 person-years). Results were robust across several sensitivity analyses.ConclusionAugmentation with newer antipsychotics in non-elderly patients with depression was associated with increased mortality risk compared with adding a second antidepressant. Though these findings require replication and cannot prove causality, physicians managing adults with depression should be aware of this potential for increased mortality associated with newer antipsychotic augmentation.
Highlights
Depressive disorders are a leading cause of disability and emotional, physical, and economic burden [1]
153 patients died during 13,328 person-years of follow-up
An adjusted hazard ratio of 1.45 (95% confidence interval, 1.02 to 2.06) indicated increased allcause mortality risk for newer antipsychotic augmentation compared to antidepressant augmentation (risk difference = 37.7 (95%CI, 1.7 to 88.8) per 10,000 person-years)
Summary
Depressive disorders are a leading cause of disability and emotional, physical, and economic burden [1]. Antidepressants are the first-line pharmacological treatment option for major depressive disorder, but inadequate response is common, with more than half of patients not achieving remission from their first antidepressant trial [2]. Not widely supported by treatment guidelines, augmentation with concomitant antidepressants is common in US practice and has some empirical support [5,6,7,8]. Augmentation with newer antipsychotics was at the time of the study the only treatment option approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (aripiprazole, quetiapine, olanzapine/fluoxetine). Randomized controlled trials of augmentation with newer antipsychotics have demonstrated efficacy in reducing observer-rated depressive symptoms [9,10], but have been criticized for their methodology and lack of demonstration of benefit on quality of life and functional outcomes [11, 12]
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