Researchers
from the University of Michigan indicate that use of antipsychotic
medications like Risperdal and Seroquel among patients with dementia may
be even more dangerous than previously believed, increasing the risk of
death over the subsequent months.
A study published this month in the medical journal JAMA Psychiatry
indicates that the dementia antipsychotics death risk appears to
increase with dose, particularly men newer medications and those that
include the same active ingredient as the antiseizure drug Depakote are
used.
Although there has been a known risk of death associated with
antipsychotic use among the elderly, the medications continue to be used
as a form of chemical restraint in nursing homes, sedating dementia residents that are difficult to manage.
In this latest study, researchers looked at data on nearly 91,000
veterans age 65 and older with dementia from October 1, 1998 to
September 30, 2009. The study looked at the effects on subjects given
the drugs Risperdal, Seroquel, Haldol, Zyprexa, and drugs that are based
on valproic acid, such as Depakote, Depacon, Depakene and Stavzor.
Researchers examined the risk of death over the next 180 days after
the elderly individuals were prescribed the drugs, finding that use of
the medications were associated with an overall 3.5% increased risk of
mortality. That risk was dose-specific, meaning the higher the dose, the
higher the risk of death. Antidepressants also appeared to increase the
risk of death, but not to as strong a degree as antidepressants and
valproic acid.
The FDA has previously warned against the use of antipsychotics with
dementia patients, indicating that the medications provide no benefits
and may increase the risk of death. Given what is known about the
potential side effects of antipsychotics, use of the medications is
often considered a form of elderly abuse when the purpose is to sedate the individual, rather than treat.
The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), in conjunction
with other federal agencies and private groups, is already battling
antipsychotic drug use in nursing homes through the National Partnership
to Improve Dementia Care and other efforts.
In September 2014, the National Partnership to Improve Dementia Care announced that it has set a goal of reducing the use of antipsychotics in long-term care facilities by 25% before the end of 2015. The group hopes to see reductions of 30% by the end of 2016.
“The harms associated with using these drugs in dementia patients are
clear, yet clinicians continue to use them,” lead study author Dr.
Donovan Maust, a University of Michigan and Veterans Affairs
psychiatrist said in a press release. “That’s likely because the symptoms are so distressing. These results should raise the threshold for prescribing further.”
Researchers called for clinicians to look at non-pharmacological
strategies first when treating dementia symptoms. However, they said the
approach takes more time than writing a prescription and that whether
doctors go that route will depend on reimbursement strategies and the
actions of policy-makers.
The findings come days after a report by the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO),
which found that too many elderly patients both in nursing homes and
being treated at home are still being prescribed antipsychotics despite
the FDA’s warnings that they do little to help and increase the risk of
death.
The GAO report found that patient agitation, delusions, and certain
setting-specific characteristics led to the use of antipsychotics as
chemical restraints. The report found that the lower nursing home staff levels are, the higher the likelihood of unnecessary antipsychotic prescriptions to dementia patients.
The Department of Justice (DOJ) has previously accused Johnson &
Johnson of engaging in kickback schemes designed to convince doctors to
prescribe their antipsychotic medication Risperdal to elderly nursing
home patients, knowing that the drug was being used abusively and
potentially placing patients’ at risk of death.
In November 2013, Johnson & Johnson agreed to pay $2.2 billion to the federal government to settle its Risperdal illegal marketing claims.
Full Article & Source:
Dementia Antipsychotics Death Risk Higher Than Previously Thought: Study
We've known it for years. What we don't know is if those truly responsible (doctors) for these deaths are ever prosecuted.
ReplyDeleteHow long will this go on? We've known for years that antipsychotics can kill the elderly yet they are prescribed in facilities all over the country and nothing is done. Nothing. How many have died? How many are suffering now? When, when, WHEN is it ever going to end?
ReplyDelete