| Literature DB >> 32738553 |
Cristina Espadas1, Pura Ballester2, Ana Carolina Londoño3, Susana Almenara4, Víctor Aguilar5, César Belda6, Enrique Pérez7, Ana María Peiró8.
Abstract
Nowadays, adults with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) experience several comorbidities whose treatment implies a wide range of psychotropic prescriptions. This study aimed to evaluate medication-related safety, drug-drug interactions, and psychotropics prescription trends. We conducted an observational and multicentric pharmacovigilance study in subjects with ASD and Intellectual disability (ID, n = 83). Clinical information (diagnoses, ongoing medications, comorbidities [multimorbidity ≥ 4 chronic health conditions]) and psychotropic prescriptions (polypharmacy ≥ 4 chronic drugs, daily drug doses, co-prescription) were registered. Ethical approval for this study was obtained. Participants (30±10 years old, 86% men, BMI 27±6 kg/m2) displayed 37% multimorbidity (mean of 3, IQR 2-4), and 57% polypharmacy (13% out of dose recommended range). Most drugs prescribed were psychotropic risperidone which is related to nervous system comorbidities (18% epilepsy, 16% insomnia, and 14% psychotic agitations). Risperidone and quetiapine were co-prescribed in 60% of the cases without any monitoring adverse event routine. The rates of multimorbidity and polypharmacy, among our young adults with ASD and ID, are concerning. Data suggest the need to develop a pharmacovigilance monitoring system to evaluate prescription accuracy, long-term safety of ongoing medications, and the fixed doses in this autistic population with associated ID.Entities:
Keywords: Adverse events; Autism spectrum disorder; Intellectual disability; Multimorbidity; Pharmacovigilance; Polypharmacy
Year: 2020 PMID: 32738553 DOI: 10.1016/j.psychres.2020.113321
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychiatry Res ISSN: 0165-1781 Impact factor: 3.222