| Literature DB >> 35105363 |
Rebecca M Joseph1, Ruth H Jack2, Richard Morriss3,4,5, Roger David Knaggs6, Debbie Butler3, Chris Hollis3,4,5, Julia Hippisley-Cox7, Carol Coupland2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Studies have reported an increased risk of mortality among people prescribed mirtazapine compared to other antidepressants. The study aimed to compare all-cause and cause-specific mortality between adults prescribed mirtazapine or other second-line antidepressants.Entities:
Keywords: Antidepressants; Depression; Electronic health records; Mirtazapine; Mortality
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35105363 PMCID: PMC8809032 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-022-02247-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Fig. 1Flow diagram showing the definition of the study population. CPRD, Clinical Practice Research Datalink; SSRI, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor; HES, hospital episode statistics; ONS, Office for National Statistics
Demographic and lifestyle characteristics at index date, by study group
| All | Mirtazapine | SSRI | Amitriptyline | Venlafaxine | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Count | 25,598 | 5081 | 15,032 | 3905 | 1580 |
| Age, median (IQR), years | 41 (29–54) | 43 (30–58) | 38 (27–50) | 48 (37–60) | 40 (30–50) |
| Sex, no. (%) | |||||
| Male | 10,617 (41.5%) | 2609 (51.3%) | 5937 (39.5%) | 1346 (34.5%) | 725 (45.9%) |
| Female | 14,981 (58.5%) | 2472 (48.7%) | 9095 (60.5%) | 2559 (65.5%) | 855 (54.1%) |
| Ethnicity, no. (%)a | |||||
| Asian or Asian British | 457 (2.4%) | 110 (2.9%) | 241 (2.2%) | 83 (2.7%) | 23 (2.1%) |
| Black or Black British | 274 (1.5%) | 41 (1.1%) | 159 (1.5%) | 57 (1.9%) | 17 (1.5%) |
| Mixed | 167 (0.9%) | 38 (1.0%) | 99 (0.9%) | 19 (0.6%) | 11 (1.0%) |
| Chinese or other ethnic groups | 219 (1.2%) | 35 (0.9%) | 140 (1.3%) | 32 (1.0%) | 12 (1.1%) |
| White | 17,692 (94.1%) | 3622 (94.2%) | 10,151 (94.1%) | 2870 (93.8%) | 1049 (94.3%) |
| Missing ethnicity, no. (%) | 6789 (26.5%) | 1235 (24.3%) | 4242 (28.2%) | 844 (21.6%) | 468 (29.6%) |
| Deprivation score (Townsend quintile), no. (%)a | |||||
| 1 (least deprived) | 4977 (19.5%) | 893 (17.6%) | 2944 (19.6%) | 806 (20.6%) | 334 (21.2%) |
| 2 | 5126 (20.0%) | 982 (19.3%) | 2996 (20.0%) | 778 (19.9%) | 370 (23.4%) |
| 3 | 5514 (21.6%) | 1066 (21.0%) | 3241 (21.6%) | 861 (22.0%) | 346 (21.9%) |
| 4 | 5587 (21.8%) | 1129 (22.2%) | 3343 (22.3%) | 839 (21.5%) | 276 (17.5%) |
| 5 (most deprived) | 4372 (17.1%) | 1006 (19.8%) | 2492 (16.6%) | 621 (15.9%) | 253 (16.0%) |
| Missing deprivation score, no. (%) | 30 (0.1%)b | 5 (0.1%) | 16 (0.1%) | < 5 | < 5 |
| Practice region, no. (%) | |||||
| North East | 530 (2.1%) | 120 (2.4%) | 289 (1.9%) | 93 (2.4%) | 28 (1.8%) |
| North West | 4524 (17.7%) | 1277 (25.1%) | 2419 (16.1%) | 592 (15.2%) | 236 (14.9%) |
| Yorkshire and the Humber | 780 (3.0%) | 127 (2.5%) | 493 (3.3%) | 131 (3.4%) | 29 (1.8%) |
| East Midlands | 656 (2.6%) | 94 (1.9%) | 439 (2.9%) | 105 (2.7%) | 18 (1.1%) |
| West Midlands | 3188 (12.5%) | 525 (10.3%) | 1963 (13.1%) | 443 (11.3%) | 257 (16.3%) |
| East of England | 2286 (8.9%) | 359 (7.1%) | 1327 (8.8%) | 384 (9.8%) | 216 (13.7%) |
| South West | 3572 (14.0%) | 782 (15.4%) | 1939 (12.9%) | 608 (15.6%) | 243 (15.4%) |
| South Central | 3288 (12.8%) | 562 (11.1%) | 1957 (13.0%) | 624 (16.0%) | 145 (9.2%) |
| London | 2628 (10.3%) | 479 (9.4%) | 1622 (10.8%) | 381 (9.8%) | 146 (9.2%) |
| South East Coast | 4146 (16.2%) | 756 (14.9%) | 2584 (17.2%) | 544 (13.9%) | 262 (16.6%) |
| BMI, median (IQR)a | 26.2 (22.8–30.7) | 25.6 (22.4–29.7) | 26.1 (22.7–30.5) | 27.2 (23.5–32.1) | 26.6 (23.1–31.1) |
| Missing BMI, no. (%) | 7338 (28.7%) | 1529 (30.1%) | 4541 (30.2%) | 818 (20.9%) | 450 (28.5%) |
| Smoking status, no. (%)a | |||||
| Never | 9941 (40.0%) | 1854 (37.6%) | 5903 (40.6%) | 1525 (39.7%) | 659 (43.2%) |
| Former | 6762 (27.2%) | 1300 (26.4%) | 3853 (26.5%) | 1197 (31.1%) | 412 (27.0%) |
| Current | 8146 (32.8%) | 1771 (36.0%) | 4797 (33.0%) | 1124 (29.2%) | 454 (29.8%) |
| Missing smoking status, no. (%) | 749 (2.9%) | 156 (3.1%) | 479 (3.2%) | 59 (1.5%) | 55 (3.5%) |
| Alcohol intake, no. (%)a | |||||
| Non-drinker | 3320 (33.3%) | 647 (31.6%) | 1945 (34.2%) | 543 (32.0%) | 185 (34.1%) |
| Former drinker | 1438 (14.4%) | 334 (16.3%) | 764 (13.4%) | 272 (16.0%) | 68 (12.5%) |
| Occasional drinker | 4226 (42.4%) | 825 (40.3%) | 2416 (42.5%) | 753 (44.3%) | 232 (42.8%) |
| Moderate drinker | 467 (4.7%) | 104 (5.1%) | 264 (4.6%) | 72 (4.2%) | 27 (5.0%) |
| Heavy drinker | 520 (5.2%) | 138 (6.7%) | 293 (5.2%) | 59 (3.5%) | 30 (5.5%) |
| Missing alcohol intake, no. (%) | 15,627 (61.0%) | 3033 (59.7%) | 9350 (62.2%) | 2206 (56.5%) | 1038 (65.7%) |
SSRI selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor, IQR interquartile range, BMI body mass index
aNot counting people with missing values
bValues rounded to mask small numbers
Crude and age-sex standardised mortality rates for all-cause and cause-specific mortality
| Group | Number of deaths | Person-years | Crude mortality rate/1000 pereson-years (95% CI) | Standardised mortality rate/1000 person-years (95% CI) | Excess risk/1000 person-years (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All | 599 | 37,209 | 16.1 (14.9–17.4) | 16.1 (14.8–17.4) | |
| Mirtazapine | 213 | 6361 | 33.5 (29.3–38.3) | 21.6 (18.5–25.0) | Reference |
| SSRI | 251 | 23,224 | 10.8 (9.6–12.2) | 13.8 (12.1–15.6) | − 7.8 (− 9.7 to − 5.9) |
| Amitriptyline | 107 | 4744 | 22.6 (18.7–27.3) | 17.6 (14.3–21.5) | − 4.0 (− 6.0 to − 2.0) |
| Venlafaxine | 28 | 2880 | 9.7 (6.7–14.1) | 18.9 (11.3–29.2) | − 2.6 (− 4.7 to − 0.6) |
| All | 159 | 37,209 | 4.3 (3.7–5.0) | 4.3 (3.6–5.0) | |
| Mirtazapine | 51 | 6361 | 8.0 (6.1–10.5) | 4.8 (3.5–6.5) | Reference |
| SSRI | 73 | 23,224 | 3.1 (2.5–4.0) | 4.0 (3.2–5.1) | − 0.7 (− 1.7 to 0.2) |
| Amitriptyline | 28 | 4744 | 5.9 (4.1–8.5) | 4.3 (2.8–6.4) | − 0.5 (− 1.4 to 0.5) |
| Venlafaxine | 7 | 2880 | 2.4 (1.2–5.1) | 7.0 (2.4–14.9) | 2.2 (1.1 to 3.3) |
| All | 106 | 37,209 | 2.8 (2.4–3.4) | 2.8 (2.3–3.4) | |
| Mirtazapine | 37 | 6361 | 5.8 (4.2–8.0) | 3.6 (2.5–5.1) | Reference |
| SSRI | 45 | 23,224 | 1.9 (1.4–2.6) | 2.6 (1.9–3.4) | − 1.0 (− 1.8 to − 0.3) |
| Amitriptyline | 17 | 4744 | 3.6 (2.2–5.8) | 2.6 (1.5–4.4) | − 1.0 (− 1.8 to − 0.2) |
| Venlafaxine | 7 | 2880 | 2.4 (1.2–5.1) | 4.0 (1.2–9.5) | 0.4 (− 0.5 to 1.3) |
| All | 156 | 37,209 | 4.2 (3.6–4.9) | 4.2 (3.6–4.9) | |
| Mirtazapine | 55 | 6361 | 8.6 (6.6–11.3) | 6.0 (4.4–8.0) | Reference |
| SSRI | 55 | 23,224 | 2.4 (1.8–3.1) | 3.0 (2.2–3.9) | − 3.0 (− 3.9 to − 2.0) |
| Amitriptyline | 38 | 4744 | 8.0 (5.8–11.0) | 6.4 (4.4–8.9) | 0.4 (− 0.7 to 1.6) |
| Venlafaxine | 8 | 2880 | 2.8 (1.4–5.6) | 3.4 (1.4–7.3) | − 2.6 (− 3.5 to − 1.6) |
Standardised mortality rates are age-sex standardised using the structure of the overall study population
Survival analyses comparing the risk of all-cause and cause-specific mortality between the study groups
| Unadjusted | Age-sex adjusted | Propensity score-weighted | |
|---|---|---|---|
| | |||
| Mirtazapine/SSRI | 3.19 (2.56–3.97) | 1.58 (1.27–1.97) | 1.62 (1.28–2.06) |
| Mirtazapine/amitriptyline | 1.35 (1.04–1.75) | 1.12 (0.86–1.45) | 1.18 (0.85–1.63) |
| Mirtazapine/venlafaxine | 3.10 (1.92–4.99) | 1.26 (0.78–2.03) | 1.11 (0.60–2.05) |
| | |||
| Mirtazapine/SSRI | 2.68 (1.92–3.75) | 1.26 (0.90–1.76) | 1.51 (1.04–2.19) |
| Mirtazapine/amitriptyline | 2.28 (1.34–3.87) | 2.01 (1.18–3.41) | 2.59 (1.38–4.86) |
| Mirtazapine/venlafaxine | 3.64 (1.80–7.35) | 1.33 (0.66–2.70) | 2.35 (1.02–5.44) |
| Mirtazapine/SSRI | 2.42 (1.70–3.46) | 1.10 (0.76–1.58) | 1.41 (0.96–2.08) |
| Mirtazapine/amitriptyline | 1.35 (0.85–2.16) | 1.04 (0.64–1.67) | 1.11 (0.65–1.88) |
| Mirtazapine/venlafaxine | 3.07 (1.39–6.77) | 1.09 (0.49–2.43) | 0.74 (0.27–2.01) |
| Mirtazapine/SSRI | 2.86 (1.86–4.42) | 1.24 (0.80–1.94) | 1.72 (1.07–2.77) |
| Mirtazapine/amitriptyline | 1.60 (0.90–2.84) | 1.21 (0.68–2.14) | 1.40 (0.73–2.68) |
| Mirtazapine/venlafaxine | 2.24 (1.00–5.03) | 0.73 (0.34–1.55) | 1.53 (0.62–3.75) |
| | |||
| Mirtazapine/SSRI | 3.82 (2.44–5.98) | 2.08 (1.32–3.29) | 1.74 (1.06–2.85) |
| Mirtazapine/amitriptyline | 0.86 (0.55–1.34) | 0.74 (0.47–1.16) | 1.08 (0.64–1.81) |
| Mirtazapine/venlafaxine | 2.46 (1.04–5.78) | 1.19 (0.50–2.84) | 1.14 (0.42–3.09) |
| | |||
| Mirtazapine/SSRI | 2.82 (1.42–5.60) | 1.44 (0.72–2.88) | 1.86 (0.89–3.89) |
| Mirtazapine/amitriptyline | 9.90 (1.29–75.84) | 8.21 (1.06–63.35) | 9.37 (1.20–73.29) |
| Mirtazapine/venlafaxine | 3.94 (0.90–17.36) | 1.74 (0.39–7.78) | 4.79 (1.00–22.99) |
Cox regression was performed for all-cause mortality and Fine-Gray (competing risk) regression for cause-specific mortality
CI confidence interval, SSRI selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor
aModel includes interaction between the study group and follow-up time, split at time = 2 years
Most common causes of death during follow-up
| ICD-10 codes | Chapter/subheading | Number of deaths | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mirtazapine | SSRI | Amitriptyline | Venlafaxine | Total | ||
| I20–I25 | Ischaemic heart diseases | 15 | 35 | 15 | < 5 | 69 |
| I60–I69 | Cerebrovascular diseases | 15 | 15 | 5 | 5 | 42 |
| I26–I51 | Other heart diseases | 15 | 10 | < 5 | < 5 | 29 |
| I21–I22 | Acute myocardial infarction | < 5 | 10 | < 5 | < 5 | 21 |
| I64 | Stroke, not specified as haemorrhage or infarction | 5 | 5 | < 5 | < 5 | 20 |
| C33–C34 | Malignant neoplasm of the trachea, bronchus, and lung | 5 | 10 | 10 | < 5 | 34 |
| C61 | Malignant neoplasm of prostate | 5 | < 5 | 5 | < 5 | 15 |
| C15 | Malignant neoplasm of oesophagus | 5 | 5 | < 5 | < 5 | 12 |
| J40–J44 | Bronchitis, emphysema, and other chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases | 10 | 20 | 5 | < 5 | 42 |
| J12–J18 | Pneumonia | 10 | 10 | 5 | < 5 | 38 |
| X60–X84; Y10–Y341 | Intentional self-harm and event of undetermined intent | 10 | 10 | < 5 | < 5 | 22 |
| K70–K77 | Diseases of the liver | < 5 | 5 | < 5 | < 5 | 15 |
Causes of death as classified in the ONS Short List Cause of Death [18]. Except for the first row and last column, numbers have been rounded to mask small cell counts
ICD-10 International Classification of Diseases 10th Revision, SSRI selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor