Literature DB >> 30688419

Antidepressants and Atrial Fibrillation: The Importance of Resourceful Statistical Approaches to Address Confounding by Indication.

Chittaranjan Andrade1.   

Abstract

Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common cardiac arrhythmia. Antidepressant drugs are known to influence cardiac conduction, and there are theoretical grounds to suggest that serotonin reuptake inhibition by antidepressants may predispose to AF. A large register-based cohort study found that antidepressant use was associated with an increased risk of AF during the first month following antidepressant initiation. Whereas this may seem alarming, additional analyses found that the risk progressively diminished in succeeding months. Further analysis showed that antidepressant use was associated with an even higher risk of AF in the month before antidepressant initiation; this finding implies that patients who initiate antidepressant drugs are already at increased risk of AF and that the significant association between antidepressant drug use and AF might be because of confounding by indication. In other words, the indication for antidepressant use rather than antidepressant use, itself, may be the risk factor for AF, and this risk is probably state-dependent because it diminishes with the passage of time, during which period the indication for antidepressant use presumably resolves. In another study, which used a nested case-control design, current and recent users of antidepressant drugs were contrasted not with antidepressant nonusers but with past users of antidepressants. The study found that neither current nor recent users were at increased risk of AF. This again indicates that antidepressants are unlikely to directly predispose to AF. In both studies, the possibility of confounding by indication was addressed by resourceful statistical approaches to the research question. Such resourcefulness in analysis is necessary in all observational studies of the association between an exposure and an outcome. In the absence of efforts to address confounding by indication, an identified association between an exposure and an outcome should not be presumed to reflect a cause-effect relationship. © Copyright 2019 Physicians Postgraduate Press, Inc.

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Year:  2019        PMID: 30688419     DOI: 10.4088/JCP.19f12729

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Psychiatry        ISSN: 0160-6689            Impact factor:   4.384


  2 in total

1.  Association of Depression, Antidepressants With Atrial Fibrillation Risk: A Systemic Review and Meta-Analysis.

Authors:  Yonghui Fu; Shenghui Feng; Yingxiang Xu; Yuanjian Yang; Haibo Chen; Wenfeng He; Wengen Zhu; Kang Yin; Zhengbiao Xue; Bo Wei
Journal:  Front Cardiovasc Med       Date:  2022-05-11

2.  Associations of Antidepressants With Atrial Fibrillation and Ventricular Arrhythmias: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.

Authors:  Yalin Cao; Mingyu Zhou; Huaiyun Guo; Wengen Zhu
Journal:  Front Cardiovasc Med       Date:  2022-03-25
  2 in total

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