>From C. Stonecipher
National Park Community College
Hot Springs, AR.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
   
For those of you interested in the antidepressant / suicide concern;
I forward the following:


Medscape Psychopharmacology Today
Talking Points About Antidepressants and Suicide


Thomas A. M. Kramer, MD
Medscape General Medicine 6(2), 2004. � 2004 Medscape

Posted 04/14/2004 
Introduction
Many people have asked me for advice about how to respond to questions
from patients and the lay public about the recent press, and ultimately US
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) warnings, about suicidality and
antidepressants. I thought it might be helpful to the readership to
present some talking points about this issue which may be used in
responding to these questions.

A Matter of Scale
The first issue that I would suggest addressing is the one of scale.
Fluoxetine became available in 1987, and other selective serotonin
reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) became available shortly thereafter. In the 17
or so years that we are talking about here, there have been millions -- if
not tens of millions -- of prescriptions resulting in numerous satisfied
patients and practitioners. If SSRI-associated suicidality truly is a
major problem, it is difficult to understand why it is coming to light
now. This idea was discussed in a few studies in the early 1990s, but
these were dismissed as exceptional cases. It is not at all clear why this
is becoming an issue all of a sudden in 2004.

It must be emphasized how important the newer generation of
antidepressants has been in improving the lives of many individuals. These
medications, despite their current negative press, have been enormously
effective in reducing the burden of depression. Their side-effect profile
is relatively low (although certainly not zero) and they are considerably
safer in overdose than their predecessors, making them considerably less
risky for suicide.


The Risks
It is important to directly acknowledge the suicide risk caused by these
medications. It is real and well understood, at least by experienced
psychopharmacologists. There are 2 mechanisms that we know about that
cause these medications to potentially precipitate suicidality. One is
extremely rare, and the other is milder but more common. The rare one is
the potential for SSRIs to precipitate an akathisia. This movement
disorder, usually associated with antipsychotic medications, has been
reported as a rare side effect of SSRIs. This intense restlessness can be
so dysphoric for patients that they might consider suicide rather than
endure the restlessness. This is something that practitioners should warn
patients about, and look for closely, as it is quite treatable with
adjunctive medication.

The second mechanism involves the natural history of recovery from
depression. Depression is a disorder with numerous symptoms, and when the
disorder is treated effectively, the symptoms do not resolve all at the
same time. Classically, the physical symptoms of depression (including
lack of energy, difficulty concentrating, and sleeping and eating
disturbances) resolve first and the subjective depressed mood resolves
last. As a result, patients who are being treated for depression can have
increased energy and increased functionality as they recover, while still
struggling with subjectively depressed mood. This increases their suicide
risk; they may have lacked the energy or the ability to attempt suicide
prior to starting treatment, but as they begin to recover they regain
ability and motivation before they have a subjective sense of improvement.
As a result, patients are usually at greatest risk a week to 10 days after
starting medication, and by 2-3 weeks later, that risk is resolved.
Experienced clinicians understand this as a function of the disease, not
the specific treatment, and are careful to watch for it and to instruct
family and friends to also be aware of it. The problem may be exacerbated
by the trend of primary care physicians treating depression. They usually
see patients for 10- or 15-minute periods of time and very rarely more
frequently than once a month.


Why Is This an Issue Now?
Why did this happen? What started this whole process of questioning
whether these drugs are safe, and as such what should be the thresholds
for prescribing them? It appears that this all started in Great Britain,
when the UK equivalent of the FDA began to look at data from clinical
trials in children. The concern that the researchers expressed has been
greatly misunderstood. They did not say that these drugs routinely caused
suicide; what they said was that there seemed to be very little evidence
that these drugs were particularly effective in children. When compared
with placebo, the children taking medication did not seem to be doing all
that much better. Thus, there appeared to be little benefit to the
medication, and since there were a few more episodes of suicidal behavior
(there were virtually no completed suicides on these clinical trials), the
risks vs benefits may not justify prescribing these medications for
children.

There are a number of reasons why placebo-controlled trials of
antidepressants for children often have trouble separating the responses
of the drug group from the placebo group. Subjects participating in
clinical drug trials get a lot of attention. They come in for frequent
visits and talk about depression often. This talking about depression can
get them thinking about depression and can be, in effect, de facto
cognitive therapy. When you consider the fact that children are
considerably more impressionable than adults, it may explain why
medications that are in common clinical use in the treatment of depression
in children may not look so great in a clinical study. If you have
concerns about the efficacy of newer-generation antidepressants in the
treatment of depression in children, talk to child psychiatrists who use
them. The enthusiasm for these medications among the practitioners who
pharmacologically treat depression in children is quite strong. If they
didn't work that well, these are the people who would know.


Public Opinion
Recently, the press has been full of heart-wrenching stories of young
people who have been started on antidepressants and shortly thereafter
have committed suicide. No one doubts the veracity of these stories. All
of us who are parents can begin to imagine the horror that the parents of
these victims endure. In many -- if not most -- of these cases, we will
probably never fully understand what happened. Perhaps some of them
developed an akathisia, perhaps some of them did recover somewhat enough
so that their negative thinking motivated them to act on the feeling that
life was no longer worth living. What is happening now, however, is that
the sensationalism of these reports is providing the public -- who had
previously enthusiastically embraced these medications -- with a very
short memory. If the outcome of this negative press is that it prevents
people from seeking treatment for depression or, more specifically,
encourages them to refuse medication for severe depression, this
controversy itself may cause more suicides than the medications ever did.
The risk of suicide goes down most dramatically when people get treatment
and comply with it. It is a responsibility of all practicing
psychopharmacologists to do whatever they can to reinforce this message.
We are the ones with the experience with these medications. We have seen
the successes, and we have seen the failures. We need to make absolutely
clear that the former grossly outnumber the latter.





Thomas A. M. Kramer, MD, Associate Professor of Psychiatry, University of
Chicago, Chicago, Illinois




Disclosure: Thomas A. M. Kramer, MD, has no significant financial
interests or relationships to disclose.
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