| Literature DB >> 22171594 |
Marianne Ulcickas Yood1, Gerald N Delorenze, Charles P Quesenberry, Susan A Oliveria, Ai-Lin Tsai, Edward Kim, Mark J Cziraky, Robert D McQuade, John W Newcomer, Gilbert J L'italien.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The benefits of some second-generation antipsychotics (SGAs) must be weighed against the increased risk for diabetes mellitus. This study examines whether the association between SGAs and diabetes differs by dose.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22171594 PMCID: PMC3264670 DOI: 10.1186/1471-244X-11-197
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Demographic and Clinical Characteristics of Patients Exposed to Atypical Antipsychotics, November 2002-March 2005 (N = 49,946)
| Characteristic | N (%) |
|---|---|
| Male | 19,981 (40.0) |
| 43.9 (19.2) | |
| 2002 | 5,407 (10.8) |
| 2003 | 24,438 (48.9) |
| 2004 | 18,186 (36.4) |
| 2005 | 1,914 (3.8) |
| Aripiprazole | 1,966 (3.9) |
| Clozapine | 60 (0.1) |
| Olanzapine | 13,826 (27.7) |
| Quetiapine | 10,632 (21.3) |
| Risperidone | 11,367 (22.8) |
| Ziprasidone | 1,367 (2.7) |
| First generation antipsychotics (typicals) | 1,714 (3.4) |
| Alpha blockers | 1,975 (4.0) |
| Beta blockers | 9,479 (19.0) |
| Systemic corticosteroids | 12,254 (24.5) |
| Fibrates | 960 (1.9) |
| Lithium | 6,662 (13.3) |
| Nogesterol oral contraceptives | 487 (1.0) |
| Statins | 5,171 (10.4) |
| Thiazide diuretics | 7,561 (15.1) |
| Thiazide-related diuretics | 219 (0.4) |
| Valproate | 10,314 (20.7) |
| Hydantoin anticonvulsants | 1,020 (2.0) |
| Obese | 2531 (5.1) |
a s.d. = standard deviation
b variables included in parent study8
Rate and Hazard Ratios of Treated Diabetes in Patients Exposed to Second-Generation Antipsychoticsa, By Doseb and Drug
| Dose category | Patients exposed (N) | Events (N) | Person-years | Diabetes rate | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| pf = 0.43 | |||||
| ≥15 mg | 1321 | 4 | 371 | 1.1 | 1.3 (0.1, 12.2) |
| 10 - <15 mg | 988 | 1 | 214 | 0.5 | 0.6 (0.04, 9.8) |
| <10 mg | 788 | 1 | 145 | 0.7 | Reference |
| pf = 0.002 | |||||
| ≥10 mg | 5921 | 58 | 2176 | 2.7 | 2.5 (1.4, 4.5) |
| 5 - <10 mg | 6761 | 41 | 2118 | 1.9 | 1.7 (1.0, 3.1) |
| <5 mg | 4398 | 15 | 1361 | 1.1 | Reference |
| pf = 0.007 | |||||
| >150 mg | 4686 | 34 | 1686 | 2.0 | 2.5 (1.3, 4.7) |
| 51 -150 mg | 5525 | 15 | 1610 | 0.9 | 1.2 (0.6, 2.5) |
| ≤50 mg | 6516 | 13 | 1838 | 0.7 | Reference |
| pf = 0.10 | |||||
| ≥ 2 mg | 5103 | 23 | 1852 | 1.2 | 2.1 (1.0, 4.4) |
| 1 - <2 mg | 5187 | 15 | 1649 | 0.9 | 1.4 (0.6, 3.1) |
| <1 mg | 4353 | 10 | 1372 | 0.7 | Reference |
| pf = 0.60 | |||||
| >80 mg | 624 | 1 | 186 | 0.5 | 0.3 (0.03, 3.4) |
| 41 - 80 mg | 671 | 2 | 170 | 1.2 | 0.6 (0.1, 4.0) |
| ≤40 mg | 725 | 3 | 181 | 1.7 | Reference |
aResults from clozapine not included because numbers were insufficient.
bDose per day
cAdjusted for age, sex, study site, year of cohort entry, history of antipsychotic use (>3 months prior to index), exposure to other pharmacotherapy (alpha blockers, beta blockers, statins, corticosteroids, fibrates, lithium, oral contraceptives, thiazide (and related) diuretics, valproate, hydantoin), and obesity
dHR = hazard ratio
eCI = confidence interval
f test for trend