| Literature DB >> 26062126 |
Sytse U Zuidema1, Alice Johansson2, Geir Selbaek3, Matt Murray4, Alistair Burns5, Clive Ballard6, Raymond T C M Koopmans7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To produce a practice guideline that includes a set of detailed consensus principles regarding the prescription of antipsychotics (APs) amongst people with dementia living in care homes.Entities:
Keywords: dementia; nursing homes; psychopharmacology
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26062126 PMCID: PMC4582430 DOI: 10.1017/S1041610215000745
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Psychogeriatr ISSN: 1041-6102 Impact factor: 3.878
Figure 1.Delphi process.
Response rate and professional division of respondents
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| Total number | |||||
| Geographical coverage | NL, UK | International | NL, N, UK | NL, N, UK | NL, N, UK |
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| (Old Age) Psychiatrist | 10 | 29 | 14 | 13 | 15 |
| Neurologist | – | 2 | – | – | – |
| Geriatrician | – | 3 | 8 | 2 | 8 |
| Elderly care physician | 2 | – | – | 3 | – |
| Nurse | – | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Nurs home doctor/GP | – | 2 | 2 | 1 | 2 |
| Scientist | – | 3 | – | – | – |
| Policy maker | 2 | – | – | – | – |
| Clin Pharmacologist | – | – | 5 | – | 4 |
| Spec fam. medicine | 1 | – | 2 | – | 2 |
| Clinical Psychologist | – | – | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Pharmacist | – | – | 1 | – | – |
aThe focus group of consumer experts was organized in the UK and consists of six former caregivers, two current caregivers and one person with dementia.
Results iteration 2 and 3
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| Median 7–9/consensusa | 119 | 31 |
| Median 4–6/consensus | 24 | 14 |
| Median 1–3/consensus | 8 | 11 |
| Median 7–9/disagreement | 2 | 2 |
| Median 4–6/disagreement | 11 | 11 |
| Median 1–3/disagreement | 0 | 2 |
Note: The statements of iteration 1 were rated dichotomous or on a 1–5 Likert scale and could not be analysed using the RAND/UCLA criteria. Therefore, this iteration has been excluded from this table. aOnly statements with median 7–9/consensus were copied into the guideline.
Figure 2.Origin and refinements process of the statements during Delphi round iteration 2, intermediate focus group, and iteration 3.
Themes and highlights of statements addressed in the practice guideline for antipsychotic prescription in dementia patients residing in long-term care
| 1. General prescription stipulations. |
| • Antipsychotics should never be used as a first-line approach. Non-pharmacological interventions should be tried first. The benefits should be expected to outweigh the adverse events. |
| • APs should only be prescribed in |
| (a) symptoms caused by underlying psychotic disorder that causes severe distress to patient/risk to others, |
| (b) in non-psychotic patients in an extreme and acute situation with risk i.e. severe and harmful physical aggression to oneself or other, severe physical exhaustion, and severe eating/drinking disorders with a risk of malnourishment or dehydration. |
| • The behavior is not caused by another somatic disorder (such as pain, infection, hunger, constipation) or psychiatric disorder (anxiety/depression), |
| • only antipsychotics with proven evidence should be prescribed, |
| • start low, go slow. |
| 2. Assessment prior to prescription. |
| • Investigation of underlying syndromes, neurological, psychiatric, environmental (interaction) factors. |
| • Assessment of medical state and risk (cardiovascular and subtype of dementia (Lewy Body/Parkinson) and symptoms (motor symptoms, cardiac arrhythmias, orthostatic hypotension, urine retention). |
| • ECG should be carried out in patients with history of cardiovascular diseases, cardiac arrhythmia, and combination of medication that prolong QT-interval. |
| 3. Care and treatment plan. |
| • Use APs always in combination with non-pharmacological and preventive measure aimed at increasing carers competence. |
| • Care and treatment plan should draw expertise form multidisciplinary team/with regular consultation. |
| • Family caregiver should be informed and consulted throughout treatment and discontinuation. |
| • Improvement and lack of improvement should be included as a clinical criterion for modifying care and treatment plan. |
| 4. Discontinuation. |
| • Discontinuation should be a standard principle as part of a withdrawal plan. |
| • If APs are prescribed for sedative purposes, drug should be withdrawn when situation has calmed down. |
| • Discontinuation through tapering rather than immediate discontinuation unless Malign Neuroleptic Syndrome, cardiovascular complication, infections, severe side effect at low dose. |
| 5. Long-term treatment (> 12 weeks). |
| • Long-term antipsychotic treatment is only acceptable in patients with |
| ○ long history or high severity of psychotics/concurrent schizophrenia, |
| ○ at least two unsuccessful discontinuation attempts + psychosocial interventions has been shown not to be effective + alternative medication is not available/has been shown ineffective/expected to cause severe adverse events. |
| • Restarting can be acceptable – under supervision of a specialist – in extreme situation in case of |
| ○ recurrence of severe symptoms after withdrawal resulting in risk/distress that had previously improved with AP treatment, |
| ○ recurrence of severe symptoms after withdrawal if withdrawal was before completing a 12-week course, |
| ○ a distinct separate new episode. |