A study has
found that young adults under the age of 25 have an increased risk of suicide
or suicidal thoughts when they take antidepressants, The Independent
reported. The newspaper continued, “the risk is greatest after they take the
drugs for anxiety and other mental problems not connected with depression”.
One of the
scientists behind the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) study said,
"It doesn't mean that these drugs shouldn't be given to young adults but
you have to think about the risks and the benefits. The findings tell you to
watch people carefully. If someone on antidepressants talks of being suicidal,
it may actually be due to the drugs."
This extensive
research by the FDA examined reports of suicidal thoughts or behaviour in 372
placebo-controlled trials of antidepressants in all ages for various reasons.
It found that under-25s on the drugs tended to have an increased risk of
suicidal thoughts or behaviour (preparatory actions for suicide or attempted or
completed suicide).
There are
several important limitations to these findings, but they are likely to lead to
further research and may lead to changes in drug regulatory information. The
results highlight the need for warnings on medications and prescribing guides
to alert practitioners to the potential for increased suicide risk in this age
group.
Where did the story come from?
The research
was carried out by Dr Marc Stone and colleagues from the Center for Drug
Evaluation and Research at the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The study
received no specific grants from any external agencies other than the FDA. The
study was published in the (peer-reviewed) British Medical Journal.
What kind of scientific study was this?
This review
examined the risk of suicidal behaviour in adults taking part in clinical
trials of antidepressants. It involved a systematic review of
placebo-controlled trials with meta-analysis. The researchers aimed to test the
theory that suicidal ideation (suicidal thoughts) or preparatory actions for
suicide or worse (attempted or completed suicide), would be increased among
adults using antidepressants compared to placebo.
The FDA
commissioned the review in 2005-06, when it asked the industry sponsors (such
as pharmaceutical companies) of 12 marketed antidepressant drugs to submit data
on trials of antidepressants in adults for any indication. Information was
requested for all completed double blind, randomised placebo controlled trials.
If the sponsors had excluded any trials, they were asked to provide reasons for
this.
The sponsors
were asked to search their databases for adverse events reported during
clinical trials. The various search terms that were used related to suicidality,
and may have included examples such as ‘attempt’, ‘burn’, ‘cut’ and ‘jump’.
False positives, where these terms had been used but did not relate to
suicidality, were also identified.
Sponsors
prepared a narrative report of all adverse events, which were classified by a
board of expert reviewers into one of several categories:
- completed
suicide,
- suicide
attempt,
- preparatory
acts towards imminent suicidal behaviour,
- suicidal
ideation,
- self-harm,
intent unknown,
- not enough
information (fatal), and
- not enough
information (non-fatal).
For
participants who had multiple events, only the most severe event was coded.
The researchers
did not include trials that had fewer than 20 participants in each treatment
arm, those without sufficient patient data and those that had used active
comparison drugs rather than placebo.
The primary
outcome was defined as definite suicidal ideation or behaviour, while the
secondary outcome was preparatory actions or worse (also called suicidal
behaviour).
What were the results of the study?
Following
exclusions, 372 trials were included in the review, with a total of 99,231
participants. Of these, 295 trials had used antidepressants for psychiatric
indications, while the other 77 trials had looked at their use for
non-psychiatric reasons. Most of the studies were unpublished and had not been
included in previous reviews of antidepressant trials.
The average
(mean) age of participants was 43.1 years, 63.1% were female and 86.9% were
white. The trials investigated selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs,
eight different drugs), tricyclics (five different drugs) and other
antidepressants (five different drugs).
Across the
trials there were reportedly eight completed suicides, 134 suicide attempts, 10
reports of preparations without attempted suicide and 378 reported suicidal
ideation alone, without action.
The researchers
first carried out an analysis by medical indication. This showed that
suicidality rates were higher in those treated for major depression (341
reports of suicidality) compared to other depressive disorders (22 reports),
psychiatric disorders (148 reports) and non-psychiatric behavioural disorders
(nine reports).
When the
researchers carried out an analysis of suicidality by age group they found a
non-significant increased risk of suicidality (either ideation or actual
behaviour) in those under the age of 25 (OR 1.62, 95% CI 0.97 to 2.71).
However, when they looked at the subcategory of suicidal behaviour alone, the
increase in risk for those under 25 became significant (OR 2.30, 95% CI 1.04 to
5.09).
There was a
trend for a decreased risk of suicidality in all age groups above the age of
25, but the association was non-significant for the majority of age brackets.
When age brackets were combined (25 to 64 year olds), antidepressants had a
decreased risk of ideation (OR 0.79, 95% CI 0.64 to 0.98) but had no effect on
actual suicidal behaviour. For those aged 65 years and over, antidepressants
reduced both ideation (OR 0.37, 95% CI 0.18 to 0.76) and behaviour (0.06, 95%
CI 0.01 to 0.58).
When the
researchers looked at individual antidepressant drugs, most associations with
suicidality were not significant (neither increased nor decreased risk). Across
all age groups, the only significant observations were a decreased risk of
suicidality with the SSRIs fluoxetine and sertraline.
Combining all
age groups, active treatment for psychiatric disorders with any antidepressant
drug decreased suicidality with only borderline significance (OR 0.83, 95% CI
0.69 to 1.00). This result was calculated from a total of 314 suicidal events
in 50,043 people treated with an active drug compared to 197 suicidal events in
27,164 treated with placebo (rate 0.63% versus 0.73%). However, in the under-25
group there were 64 events in 4,780 people treated with an active drug compared
to 21 events in 2,621 treated with placebo (1.3% versus 0.80%).
When the
researchers modelled age as a continuous variable, they observed that the risk
of suicidality associated with taking antidepressants decreased at a rate of
2.6% per year of age, and actual suicidal behaviour by 4.6% per year of age.
What interpretations did the researchers draw from these
results?
The researchers
conclude that risk of suicidality associated with antidepressants is strongly
age dependent. There is an increased risk for suicidality and suicidal
behaviour in adults under 25 treated with active treatment compared to placebo.
They say that
antidepressants seem to protect against suicidal ideation in adults aged
between 25 and 64, but have no effect on suicidal behaviour, and they reduce
the risk of both suicidality and suicidal behaviour in those aged 65 or over.
What does the NHS Knowledge Service make of this study?
This reliable
and extensive research found an overall trend for any antidepressant treatment
to reduce the risk of suicidality in people aged 25 years or above.
In the under
25s, however, there was a non-significant increased risk of suicidal thoughts
or behaviour (preparatory actions for suicide or attempted or completed
suicide) with antidepressant treatment. When limited to suicidal behaviour
alone this increased risk became significant.
These findings
are likely to lead to further research and may lead to changes in drug
regulatory information. The research highlights the need for warnings on
medications and prescribing guides to alert practitioners to the potential for
increased suicidality risk among this young age group.
As the authors
say, the possibility of separate therapeutic and adverse effects from
antidepressant drugs on suicidal thoughts or behaviour requires further
investigation, particularly in terms of possible mechanisms for age-related
differences.
A few points to
note:
- The review
included any suicidal events that were reported during the treatment phase
of trials. However, it is difficult to determine whether this behaviour
represented a change in condition or reflected the pre-treatment
condition. Suicidal thoughts may have been present before the person
commenced treatment and persisted unchanged with treatment, rather than
being new onset suicidal thoughts in a person who did not have any prior
to treatment.
- The data
were obtained from drug development programmes by drug sponsors. Most of
the trials were unpublished. These unpublished trials are valuable as they
are unlikely to have been included in previous reviews; however, their
methods are not available for critique and as such it is not possible to
comment on the quality of these trials.
- The trial
setting may also only provide information from a select population group.
As the researchers say, people with severe depression which clearly warranted
treatment are unlikely to have been entered into a randomised trial where
they could have been allocated to inactive placebo.
- In
general, the trials were relatively short and treatment was given for
weeks rather than months or years. Longer term trials may have given
different results.
- Individual
trials may have reported adverse events differently. In particular, the
reported rate of suicidality may be an underestimate of the true number of
suicidal thoughts, as the rate at which people reported these thoughts to
researchers may have varied between trials.
Links to the headlines
Antidepressants 'make young
more than twice as likely to feel suicidal'. The Daily Telegraph,
August 12 2009
Depression pills 'double
suicide risk in young adults'. Daily Mail, August 12 2009
'Antidepressants increase
suicidal thoughts in under-25s'. The Independent, August 12 2009
Links to the science
Stone M,
Laughren T, Jones ML, et al. Risk of suicidality in
clinical trials of antidepressants in adults: analysis of proprietary data
submitted to US Food and Drug Administration. BMJ 2009; 339: b2880
Further reading
Hetrick SE,
Merry SN, McKenzie J, Sindahl P, Proctor M. Selective serotonin reuptake
inhibitors (SSRIs) for depressive disorders in children and adolescents. Cochrane Database of Systematic
Reviews 2007, Issue 3
Hazell P,
O'Connell D, Heathcote D, Henry DA. Tricyclic drugs for
depression in children and adolescents. Cochrane Database of Systematic
Reviews 2002, Issue 2
Arroll B, Elley
CR, Fishman T, Goodyear-Smith FA, Kenealy T, Blashki G, Kerse N, MacGillivray
S. Antidepressants versus
placebo for depression in primary care. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
2009, Issue 3
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