| Literature DB >> 31422644 |
Ahmed B Bayoumi1,2, Oyku Ikizgul3, Ceren Nur Karaali3, Selma Bozkurt4, Deniz Konya1, Zafer Orkun Toktas1.
Abstract
Antidepressant drugs can be advantageous in treating psychiatric and non-psychiatric illnesses, including spinal disorders. However, spine surgeons remain unfamiliar with the advantages and disadvantages of the use of antidepressant drugs as a part of the medical management of diseases of the spine. Our review article describes a systematic method using the PubMed/Medline database with a specific set of keywords to identify such benefits and drawbacks based on 17 original relevant articles published between January 2000 and February 2018; this provides the community of spine surgeons with available cumulative evidence contained within two tables illustrating both observational (10 studies; three cross-sectional, three case-control, and four cohort studies) and interventional (seven randomized clinical trials) studies. While tricyclic antidepressants (e.g., amitriptyline) and duloxetine can be effective in the treatment of neuropathic pain caused by root compression, venlafaxine may be more appropriate for patients with spinal cord injury presenting with depression and/or nociceptive pain. Despite the potential associated consequences of a prolonged hospital stay, higher cost, and controversial reports regarding the lowering of bone mineral density in the elderly, antidepressants may improve patient satisfaction and quality of life following surgery, and reduce postoperative pain and risk of delirium. The preoperative treatment of preexisting psychiatric diseases, such as anxiety and depression, can improve outcomes for patients with spinal cord injury-related disabilities; however, a preoperative platelet function assay is advocated prior to major spine surgical procedures to protect against significant intraoperative blood loss, as serotonergic antidepressants (e.g., selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors) and bupropion can increase the likelihood of bleeding intraoperatively due to drug-induced platelet dysfunction. This comprehensive review of this evolving topic can assist spine surgeons in better understanding the benefits and risks of antidepressant drugs to optimize outcomes and avoid potential hazards in a spine surgical setting.Entities:
Keywords: Antidepressive agents; Clinical outcomes; Spine surgery; Systematic review
Year: 2019 PMID: 31422644 PMCID: PMC6894961 DOI: 10.31616/asj.2018.0237
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Asian Spine J ISSN: 1976-1902
Interventional studies
| Author (year) | Drug(s) examined | Objective | Relevant result/conclusion | Type of study | Level of evidence | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Farrokhi et al. [ | Methylene blue | To examine the effects of MB on postoperative pain and QOL after posterior pedicle screw fixation for thoracolumbar fractures, | - | Significantly lower VAS in the MB group at 2 months ( | HCT | Level 1 |
| - | Significantly lower mean ODI score in the MB group at 2 months ( | |||||
| Farrokhi et al. [ | Methylene blue | To examine the effects of MB on postoperative LBP and QOL after lumbar open discectomy. | - | Significantly lower VAS scores for LBP in the MB group 24 hours ( | RCT | Level 1 |
| - | No significant difference on radicular pain scores in both MB and placebo groups (p=0.64). | |||||
| - | Greater reduction in LBP in the MB group ( | |||||
| - | Significantly improved functional QOL postoperative 3 months in both groups ( | |||||
| Konno et al. [ | Duloxetine (SNHi) | To evaluate the effectiveness and tolerability of duloxetine monotherapy in Japanese patients with CLBP. | - | Duloxetine monotherapy reduced the BPI score of 2 points at week 14 ( | HCT | Level 1 |
| - | No meaningful changes in vital signs, laboratory studies and heart functions are observed with Duloxetine use. | |||||
| Fann et al. [ | VenlafaxineXR (SNRI) | To evaluate the benefits and tolerability of Venlafaxine XR use in patients suffering from MDD or dysthymic disorder due to chronic SCI. | - | Improvement on the Maier subscale group ( | RCT | Level 1 |
| - | No meaningful improvement on HAM-D17-item version ( | |||||
| - | Less SCI-related disability than placebo on Sheehan Disability Scale ( | |||||
| - | Venlafaxine XR was well tolerated and effective antidepressant in SCI related disabilities and depression. | |||||
| Richards et al, [ | Venlafaxine XR (SNHi) | To evaluate the efficacy of Venlafaxine XR in SCI pain and in MDD to show its viability on both neuropathic and nociceptive pain. | Similar HAM-D and GAD-7 scores as placebo on neuropathic pain ( | HCT | Level 1 | |
| Thomson et al. [ | Antidepressants | To compare the demographics of patients with FBSS to ones with other painful conditions in the PROCESS trial. | 38% of patients with FBSS were found on antidepressants. | RCT | Level 1 | |
| Kumar et al. [ | ||||||
| Cardenas et al. [ | Amitriptyline (TCA) | To investigate the efficacy of Amitriptyline on chronic pain alleviation and pain-related dysfunction improvement in patients with SCI. | - | No significant change on pain intensity or pain-related disability is observed. (API, SF-MPQ, BPI Pain Interference, CES-Dr, FIM, SWLS, and CHART scales). | HCT | Level 1 |
| - | Findings do not support Amitriptyline use for chronic pain treatment. | |||||
MB, methylene blue; QOL, quality of life; VAS, Visual Analog Scale pain score; ODI, Oswestry Disability Index; RCT, randomized controlled trial; LBP, lower back pain; SNRI, serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors; CLBP, chronic low back pain; BPI, Brief Pain Inventory; XR, extended release; MDD, major depressive disorder; SCI, spinal cord injury; HAM-D, the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale; GAD-7, General Anxiety Disorder Scale-7; PROCESS, Prospective Randomized Controlled Multicenter Trial of the Effectiveness of Spinal Cord Stimulation; FBSS, failed back surgery syndrome; TCA, tricyclic antidepressant; API, average pain intensity; SF-MPQ, Short Form McGill Pain Questionnaire; CES-Dr, Center for Epidemiologic Studies-Depression Scale; FIM, Functional Independence Measure; SWLS, Satisfaction With Life Scale; CHART, Craig Handicap Assessment and Reporting Techniques.
Observational studies
| Author (year) | Drug(s) examined | Objective | Relevant result/conclusion | Type of study | Level of evidence | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Saraykar et al. [ | SSRI | To measure the association of SSRI with decreased BMD in elderly women >65 years old. | - | No significant difference between SSRI users and nonusers in the BMDs at the lumbar spine ( | CSS | Level 4 |
| - | Similar T-scores in two groups at the spine level ( | |||||
| Elsamadicy et al. [ | SSRI, SNRIs, others | To determine whether depression or receiving antidepressants can be independent risk factors for postoperative delirium in spine deformity patients after spinal surgery | - | Depression is an independent predictor of postoperative delirium after spine surgery in spinal deformity patients ( | RCS | Level 3 |
| - | No difference between antidepressants users and nonusers in postoperative delirium ( | |||||
| Schadler et al. [ | SSRI | To detect the association of blood loss and transfusion with one-level spine surgery | SSRI intake is a predictor for: blood loss (34% increase, | CCS | Level 3 | |
| Sayadipour et al. [ | Antidepressants | To detect the economic effects of antidepressants usage on elective spinal surgery. | 36% increase in total charges; 22% increase in cost; 19% increase in fixed cost; but none of the above was statistically significant. | CCS | Level 3 | |
| Robertson et al. [ | Amitriptyline (GBP+TCA) | Evaluating benefits and adverse effects of GBP inclusion to AMP treatment for chronic sciatica | GBP inclusion to AMP mono-treatment has showed increased efficacy in terms of VAS reduction ( | PCS | Level 2 | |
| Reduced efficacy measured in patients having adverse effects (VAS, p=0.08; ODI, | ||||||
| Sajan et al. [ | SSRI | To examine the relationship between SSRI intake and perioperative blood product transfusion in surgical patients with high risk of perioperative bleeding including spinal fusion surgery. | - | Increased risk of exposure to allogeneic hemostatic blood products (OR, 2.2; CI, 1.2–3.98). | PCS | Level 2 |
| - | No effect modification was found between SSRI use and surgery type, age, sex, or concurrent antiplatelet therapy. | |||||
| Elsamadicy et al. [ | Antidepressants (not specified) | To detect the association between treating depression before cervical spine surgery and patient satisfaction. | No difference at postoperative years (1 and 2) between antidepressants users and nonusers in terms of neck pain VAS, NDI, SF-12 PCS, and SF-12 mental component score. | RCS | Level 3 | |
| Rauma et al. [ | SSRI, SNRI, TCA | To detect the association of major depressive disorder and antidepressants use with bone mineral density in men. | Recurrent MDD was associated with lower spinal BMD (-4%) | CSS | Level 4 | |
| Sayadipour et al. [ | SSRI, SNRI, TCA | To determine if antidepressants usage can be associated with increased bleeding at elective spinal surgery, | - | Patients on antidepressants: 23% more blood loss ( | CCS | Level 3 |
| - | PLF group: higher blood loss ( | |||||
| Walid etal. [ | Antidepressants (not specified) | To measure the prevalence and impact of mood altering medications and opioids in patients undergoing spine surgery on hospital cost. | 25.4% of spine surgery patients were on antidepressants showing ( | CSS | Level 4 | |
SSRI, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors; BMD, bone mineral density; CSS, cross sectional study; SNRI, serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors; RCS, retrospective cohort study; OR, odds ratio; CCS, case control study; GBP, gabapentin; TCA, tricyclic antidepressant; AMP, amitriptyline; VAS, Visual Analog Scale pain score; ODI, Oswestry Disability Index; PCS, prospective cohort study; CI, confidence interval; NDI, Neck Disability Index; SF-12, Short Form-12; PCS, Physical Component Score; MDD, major depressive disorder; PLF, posterior lumbar fusion.
Fig. 1.Schematic diagram showing the PRISMA flow chart of our systematic review of the literature.