OBJECTIVE: In 2003, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued a public health advisory about the risk of suicidality in pediatric patients taking selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) for depression, and in 2005, the agency mandated a black box warning and medication guide indicating that pediatric and adult patients may be at risk. The authors examine the effects of this pediatric policy on treatment of adult depression in the community. METHOD: An adult cohort with newly diagnosed episodes of depression was created from a large national integrated claims database of managed care plans from October 1998 to September 2005 (N=475,838 unique episodes). Time-series analyses were used to compare the post-FDA advisory trends to the trends during the 5 years preceding the advisory. RESULTS: The rate of diagnosed depression was significantly lower after the advisory than would have been expected on the basis of the preadvisory historical trend. The average percentage of adults with new (versus recurrent) depressive episodes was 88.6% in the preadvisory period (declining at an annual rate of 1.69%), and it decreased significantly to 77.5% (declining more rapidly, at an annual rate of 7.70%). The percentage of adults with depression who did not receive an antidepressant increased from an average of 20% (declining at 0.45% annually) before the policy action to an average of 30% (increasing at an annual rate of 20.6%). The data did not show any compensatory increases in psychotherapy or prescription of atypical antipsychotics or anxiolytics. CONCLUSIONS: The FDA advisory had a significant spillover effect into community treatment for adults with depression, despite the focus of the policy on pediatric patients.
OBJECTIVE: In 2003, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued a public health advisory about the risk of suicidality in pediatric patients taking selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) for depression, and in 2005, the agency mandated a black box warning and medication guide indicating that pediatric and adult patients may be at risk. The authors examine the effects of this pediatric policy on treatment of adult depression in the community. METHOD: An adult cohort with newly diagnosed episodes of depression was created from a large national integrated claims database of managed care plans from October 1998 to September 2005 (N=475,838 unique episodes). Time-series analyses were used to compare the post-FDA advisory trends to the trends during the 5 years preceding the advisory. RESULTS: The rate of diagnosed depression was significantly lower after the advisory than would have been expected on the basis of the preadvisory historical trend. The average percentage of adults with new (versus recurrent) depressive episodes was 88.6% in the preadvisory period (declining at an annual rate of 1.69%), and it decreased significantly to 77.5% (declining more rapidly, at an annual rate of 7.70%). The percentage of adults with depression who did not receive an antidepressant increased from an average of 20% (declining at 0.45% annually) before the policy action to an average of 30% (increasing at an annual rate of 20.6%). The data did not show any compensatory increases in psychotherapy or prescription of atypical antipsychotics or anxiolytics. CONCLUSIONS: The FDA advisory had a significant spillover effect into community treatment for adults with depression, despite the focus of the policy on pediatric patients.
Authors: Sigrid Piening; Flora M Haaijer-Ruskamp; Jonie T N de Vries; Menno E van der Elst; Pieter A de Graeff; Sabine M J M Straus; Peter G M Mol Journal: Drug Saf Date: 2012-05-01 Impact factor: 5.606
Authors: Iva Dincheva; Jianmin Yang; Anfei Li; Tina Marinic; Helena Freilingsdorf; Chienchun Huang; B J Casey; Barbara Hempstead; Charles E Glatt; Francis S Lee; Kevin G Bath; Deqiang Jing Journal: Am J Psychiatry Date: 2017-10-31 Impact factor: 18.112
Authors: Helen Bergen; Keith Hawton; Elizabeth Murphy; Jayne Cooper; Navneet Kapur; Carol Stalker; Keith Waters Journal: Br J Clin Pharmacol Date: 2009-10 Impact factor: 4.335
Authors: Sigrid Piening; Flora M Haaijer-Ruskamp; Pieter A de Graeff; Sabine M J M Straus; Peter G M Mol Journal: Drug Saf Date: 2012-11-01 Impact factor: 5.606
Authors: Nader Perroud; Rudolf Uher; Andrej Marusic; Marcella Rietschel; Ole Mors; Neven Henigsberg; Joanna Hauser; Wolfgang Maier; Daniel Souery; Anna Placentino; Aleksandra Szczepankiewicz; Lisbeth Jorgensen; Jana Strohmaier; Astrid Zobel; Caterina Giovannini; Amanda Elkin; Cerisse Gunasinghe; Joanna Gray; Desmond Campbell; Bhanu Gupta; Anne E Farmer; Peter McGuffin; Katherine J Aitchison Journal: BMC Med Date: 2009-10-15 Impact factor: 8.775