A considerable number of new drugs were introduced over the last few years. In this
report we analyze to what extent they have come to be used in clinical practice and
what changes in drug use have resulted from the availability of the new compounds.
For this purpose, data on drug use in 1995 and 2001 assessed at two reference days
per year and per hospital within the drug safety program AMSP were compared for 10
hospitals that had been participating in both years. Atypical neuroleptics (NL) were
used in 59.9 % of patients on NLs in 2001 (16.7 % in 1995), most frequently olanzapine,
risperidone, clozapine, and quetiapine, in this order. Thirty-nine percent of patients
still received typical NLs in antipsychotic indication (77.1 % in 1995), and 30.8
% received typical hypnosedative NLs (38.1 % in 1995). SSRIs, other new ADs, and TCAs
were used in similar rates in 2001, i. e., in 40.5 %, 37.9 %, and 34.8 % of AD patients,
respectively (1995 : 24.2 %, 6.2 %, and 72.3 %, respectively). Mirtazapine was the
most common AD in 2001, followed by citalopram, sertraline, and doxepin.
Hypnotics were prescribed more frequently in 2001 (17.6 % vs. 11.7 %), mostly BZD
agonists at that time, whereas overall anxiolytic use (in approximately 30 %) hardly
changed over time. Mood stabilizers and anti-dementia drugs were given comparatively
rarely, even in pertinent diagnoses. Polypharmacy was observed in about three-quarters
of patients on psychotropic drugs, with a trend towards increasing use over time.
Combinations of two NLs, of NL + AD, and of NLs + anxiolytic were most common in both
years. Twenty percent of patients on atypical NLs received typical antipsychotic NLs
additionally; typical hypnosedative NLs were used along with typical antipsychotics
and atypical NLs in 20 % and 22 % of patients, respectively. TCAs and either SSRIs
or other new ADs were still the most common AD combinations in 2001. Data were also
analyzed according to the main diagnostic categories.
References
- 1
Barbui C, Danese A, Guaiana G, Mapelli L, Miele L, Monzani E, Perdudani M.
Prescribing Second-Generation Antipsychotics and the Evolving Standard of Care in
Italy.
Pharmacopsychiatry.
2002;
35
239-243
- 2
Bender S, Grohmann R, Rüther E.
Adverse drug reactions in psychiatric in-patients treated with neuroleptics.
Pharmacopsychiatry.
2004;
37 Suppl 1
S46-53
- 3
Centorrino F, Eakin M, Bahk W -M, Kelleher J P, Pharm J, Salvatore P, Egil S, Baldessarini R.
Inpatient Antipsychotic Drug Use in 1998, 1993, and 1989.
Am J Psychiatry.
2002;
159
1932
- 4
Ereshefsky L, Pharm D.
Pharmacologic and Pharmacokinetic Considerations in Choosing an Antipsychotic.
J Clin Psychiat.
1999;
60 (suppl 10)
20-30
- 5
Freudenreich O, Goff C .
Antipsychotic combination therapy in schizophrenia. A review of efficacy and risks
of current combinations.
Acta Psychiatr Scand.
2002;
106
323-330
- 6
Frye M, Ketter T, Leverich G, Huggins T, Lantz C, Denicoff K, Post R.
The Increasing Use of Polypharmacotherapy for Refractory Mood Disorders: 22 Years
of Study.
J Clin Psychiatry.
2000;
61/1
9-15
- 7 Grohmann R, Rüther E, Schmidt LG [ Ed.]. Unerwünschte Wirkungen von Psychopharmaka.
Ergebnisse der AMÜP-Studie. Springer Berlin, Heidelberg, New York; 1994
- 8
Grohmann R, Rüther E, Engel R R, Hippius H.
Assessment of Adverse Drug Reactions in Psychiatric Inpatients with the AMSP Drug
Safety Program: Methods and First Results for Tricyclic Antidepressants and SSRI.
Pharmacopsychiatry.
1999;
32
21-28
- 9
Grohmann R, Hippius H, Helmchen H, Rüther E, Schmidt L G.
The AMÜP study for drug surveillance in psychiatry - a summary of inpatient data.
Pharmacopsychiatry.
2004;
37 Suppl 1
S16-26
- 10
Italian Collaborative Study Group on the Outcome of Severe Mental D isorders.
Pharmacoepidemiology of psychotropic drugs in patients with severe mental disorders
in Italy.
Eur J Clin Pharmacol.
1999;
55
685-690
- 11
Kropp S, Ziegenbein M, Grohmann R, Degner D.
Galactorrhea Due to Psychotropic Drugs.
Pharmacopsychiatry.
2004;
37 Suppl 1
S84-88
- 12
Leslie D, Rosenheck R.
From conventional to atypical antipsychotics and back: dynamic processes in the diffusion
of new medications.
Am J Psychiatry.
2002;
159/9
1534-1540
- 13
Levine J, Chengappa K NR, Brar J S, Gershon S, Yablonsky E, Stapf D, Kupfer D J.
Psychotropic drug prescription patterns among patients with bipolar I disorder.
Bipolar Disord.
2000;
2
120-130
- 14
Linden M, Thiels C.
Epidemiology of prescriptions for neuroleptic drugs: tranquilizers rather than antipsychotics.
Pharmacopsychiatry.
2001;
34
150-154
- 15
Lippert E, Aigner J M, Grohmann R, Klein H E, Schmauß M, Rüther E.
Anwendungshäufigkeiten und Dosierungen von Psychopharmaka an psychiatrischen Versorgungskrankenhäusern.
Ergebnisse aus dem Arzneimittelüberwachungsprojekt Bayern.
Psychopharmakotherapie.
1996;
3
178-183
- 16
McManus P, Mant A, Mitchell P B, Montgomery W S, Marley J, Auland M E.
Recent trends in the use of antidepressant drugs in Australia, 1990 - 1998.
Med J Aust.
2000;
173
458-461
- 17
McManus P, Mant A, Mitchell P, Birkett D, Dudley J.
Co-prescribing of SSRI’s and TCAs in Australia: how often does it occur and who is
doing it?.
Br J Clin Pharmacol.
2001;
51
93-98
- 18
Nelson C.
Combined Treatment strategies in psychiatry.
J Clin Psychiatry.
1993;
54 (Suppl. 9)
42-49
- 19
Pincus H A, Tanielian T L, Marcus S C, Olfson M, Zarin D A, Thompson J, Magno Zito J.
Prescribing trends in psychotropic medications: primary care, psychiatry, and other
medical specialties.
J Am Med Assoc.
1998;
279
526-531
- 20
Rittmannsberger H, Meise U, Schauflinger K, Horvath E, Donat H, Hinterhuber H.
Polypharmacy in psychiatric treatment. Patterns of psychotropic drug use in Austrian
psychiatric clinics.
Eur Psychiatry.
1999;
14
33-40
- 21
Stahl S M.
Selecting an atypical antipsychotic by combining clinical experience with guidelines
from clinical trials.
J Clin Psychiatry.
1999;
60 (Suppl. 10)
31-41
- 22
Stahl S M.
Antipsychotic polypharmacy, Part 2: tips on use and misuse.
J Clin Psychiatry.
1999;
60
506-507
- 23
Stahl S M.
Antipsychotic polypharmacy: squandering precious resources?.
J Clin Psychiatry.
2002;
63
93-94
- 24
Stübner S, Rustenbeck E, Grohmann R, Wagner G, Engel R R, Neundörfer G, Möller H -J,
Hippius H, Rüther E.
Severe and Uncommon Involuntary Movement Disorders due to Psychotropic Drugs.
Pharmacopsychiatry.
2004;
37 Suppl 1
S54-64
- 25
Takei N, Inagaki A.
JPSS-2 research group, Polypharmacy for psychiatric treatments in Japan.
Lancet.
2002;
360
647
- 26
Taylor D, Mace S, Mir S, Kerwin R.
A prescription survey of the use of atypical antipsychotics for hospital inpatients
in the United Kingdom.
Int J Psychiatry in Clin Practice.
2000;
4
41-46
- 27
Voirol P, Robert P -A, Meister P, Oros L, Baumann P.
Psychotropic drug prescription in a psychiatric university hospital.
Pharmacopsychiatry.
1999;
32
29-37
Dr. Renate Grohmann
Psychiatric Department
Ludwig-Maximilians-University
Nussbaumstr. 7
D-80336 München
Germany
Email: Renate.Grohmann@med.uni-muenchen.de