| Literature DB >> 35768120 |
Natalia Jaworska1,2, Stephana Julia Moss3, Karla D Krewulak3,2, Zara Stelfox3, Daniel Niven3,2,4,5, Zahinoor Ismail2,4,5,6,7, Lisa Burry8, Kirsten Fiest3,2,4,5,6,7.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Antipsychotic medications are commonly prescribed off-label in acutely ill patients for non-psychiatric clinical indications such as delirium or insomnia. New prescription initiation of antipsychotics in acute care settings increases the proportion of patients discharged home on antipsychotics without approved clinical indication. Long-term use of antipsychotics is associated with increased risk of sudden cardiac death, falls and cognitive impairment. An understanding of acute care off-label antipsychotic prescribing practices and healthcare professional, patient and family perceptions related to antipsychotic prescribing and deprescribing is necessary to facilitate in-hospital deprescribing initiatives. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: We present the protocol for a scoping review following the methodology proposed by Arksey and O'Malley and the Scoping Review Methods Manual by the Joanna Briggs Institute. We will search five databases including MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, PsycINFO and Web of Science from inception to 3 July 2021 (ie, planned search date). We will include both peer-reviewed and non-peer-reviewed qualitative and quantitative studies to identify antipsychotic prescribing practices, and to describe healthcare professional, patient and family perceptions towards antipsychotic prescribing and deprescribing in the acute care setting. Protocols, systematic and scoping reviews will be excluded. Two reviewers will calibrate and perform study screening and data abstraction for quantitative and qualitative outcomes of eligible studies. Quantitative outcomes will include study identifiers, demographics and descriptive statistics of antipsychotic prescribing practices. Qualitative synthesis describing perceptions on antipsychotic prescribing practices will include deductive thematic analysis with mapping of themes to the domains of the Theoretical Domains Framework, a 14-domain behaviour and behaviour change framework. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: No ethical approval will be required for this study as only data from published studies in which informed consent was obtained by primary investigators will be retrieved and analysed. The results of this scoping review will inform integrated knowledge translation initiatives aimed at in-hospital antipsychotic medication deprescribing. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: adult intensive & critical care; general medicine (see internal medicine); health & safety
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35768120 PMCID: PMC9244676 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-057585
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 3.006
Inclusion and exclusion criteria for a scoping review of antipsychotic medication prescribing practices in the acute care setting for clinical indications other than primary psychiatric disorders
| Inclusion | Exclusion |
| Any observational, experimental or quasi-experimental original peer-reviewed studies or non-peer-reviewed records (eg, conference abstracts) that report novel results from research studies | The study is a study protocol, editorial, opinion piece, or systematic or scoping review |
| The study population includes patients, their family members and/or healthcare professionals of hospitalised or critical care adult patients (as defined in the primary paper) | The study population includes patients, family members, and/or healthcare professionals of hospitalised children, or neonates |
| The study population includes patients, family members, and/or healthcare professionals of those being treated for a primary psychiatric disorder (includes: psychosis, schizophrenia, generalised anxiety disorder, bipolar disorder) or dementia | |
| The study includes/addresses at least one of the following antipsychotic medications: haloperidol/Haldol, quetiapine/Seroquel, risperidone/Risperidal, ziprasidone/Zeldox/Geodon, aripiprazole/Abilify, olanzapine/Zyprexa, methotrimeprazine/Nozinan. | The study includes/addresses an antipsychotic medication other than listed in the inclusion criteria |
| The study describes antipsychotic medication prescribing or deprescribing practices/patterns, or facilitators, or barriers (eg, deprescribing algorithms, lack of follow-up) to deprescribing antipsychotic medications prescribed off-label in an acute care setting | The study describes antipsychotic medication prescribing or deprescribing practices/patterns, or facilitators, or barriers to deprescribing antipsychotic medications in either an outpatient setting, long-term care facility or nursing home |
| The study’s outcome(s) includes one of the following: Any description of antipsychotic prescribing practices (prescribing or deprescribing) Any perceptions from patients, family members and/or healthcare professionals of hospitalised or critically ill patients with antipsychotic medication prescribing or deprescribing | The study’s outcome(s) are either: Not a description of antipsychotic prescribing practices (prescribing or deprescribing) Not a description of any perceptions from patients, family members or healthcare professionals of hospitalised patients |
Screening questions for study eligibility for scoping review of antipsychotic medication prescribing practices in the acute care setting for clinical indications other than primary psychiatric disorders
| Screening questions | Characteristics for assessment | ||
| Yes—include | No—exclude | Unclear—include | |
| Study design: Does the title or abstract describe an original peer-reviewed or non-peer-reviewed observational or interventional research study? | Yes—The study design is original peer-reviewed or non-peer-reviewed observational or interventional. | No—The study is not original peer-reviewed or non-peer-reviewed observational or interventional research. | Unclear—The study design is unclear as to whether it is original peer-reviewed or non-peer-reviewed research and/or observational or interventional. |
| Population: Does the population of interest include critically ill or hospitalised patientsfamily members and/or healthcare professionals? | Yes—The study population describes critically ill or hospitalised patients, family members and/or healthcare professionals. | No—The study population includes outpatients or long-term care patients. | Unclear—It is unclear if the study population is critically ill or hospitalised patients, family members and/or healthcare professionals. |
| Exposure: Does the study include the administration of an antipsychotic medication? | Yes—The study intervention includes the administration of an antipsychotic medication. | No—The intervention of interest does not include the administration of an antipsychotic medication. | Unclear—It is unclear if the intervention addresses the administration of an antipsychotic medication. |
| Outcome: Does the title and/or abstract include the description of antipsychotic prescribing practices (prescribing or deprescribing) and/or the perceptions, experiences, facilitators and/or barriers to deprescribing of antipsychotic medications? | Yes—One or more of the study outcomes are related to the description of antipsychotic prescribing practices, and/or perceptions, experiences, facilitators and/or barriers to medication deprescribing of antipsychotic medications. | No—There is no study outcome reported related to the description of antipsychotic prescribing practices and/or perceptions, experiences, facilitators, and/or barriers to medication deprescribing of antipsychotic medications. | Unclear—It is unclear if the study outcome is related to the description of antipsychotic prescribing practices, and/or perceptions, experiences, facilitators, and/or barriers to medication deprescribing of antipsychotic medications. |
Proposed data abstraction table for eligible studies included in the scoping review of antipsychotic medication prescribing practices in the acute care setting for clinical indications other than primary psychiatric disorders
| Data domain | Data categories |
| Study identifiers: From a peer-reviewed published study | Authors’ names; study title; publication type; publication date; journal, volume, issue and page numbers of publication; and digital object identifier |
| Study design: Primary original peer-reviewed or non-peer-reviewed observational or interventional research | Study type or design; time frame of study; location of study (ie, country) |
| Population: Adult acute care patients, family members and healthcare professionals (including physicians, nurses and pharmacists) | Definition and size (ie, N) of the source population(s); relevant demographic information (eg, age, sex, gender); admitting diagnosis, patient hospital length of stay (if applicable) |
| Exposure: Administration of an antipsychotic medication | Method of recruitment; type of antipsychotic medication administered; inclusion and exclusion criteria; baseline imbalances; duration of study |
| Outcomes: Antipsychotic prescribing or deprescribing strategies; patient, family and/or healthcare professional centred outcomes | Approaches or strategies used to facilitate antipsychotic prescribing or deprescribing including facilitators and/or barriers; author’s recommendations and conclusions |
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram. PRISMA, Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses.