
Psychiatric News May 20, 2005
Volume 40 Number 10
© 2005 American Psychiatric Association
p. 41
Antipsychotic Use Patterns Surprise Researchers
Mark Moran
Risperidone was the most commonly used antipsychotic drug among both
boys and girls. But why these drugs are being prescribed for youngsters and
who is doing the prescribing are not known.
Nearly one-fourth of patients in a commercially insured population for whom
claims for atypical antipsychotic drugs were submitted were aged 9 or younger,
and most of these were boys.
Those were among the findings from a period prevalence study of atypical
antipsychotic drug use among commercially insured youths in the United States.
The report appears in the April Archives of Pediatric Adolescent
Medicine.
"We knew from previous studies that use of these drugs was increasing
in children in general, but we hadn't been aware of the spike in use among
boys, especially boys aged 9 and younger," lead author Lesley H. Curtis,
Ph.D., told Psychiatric News. "That really surprised
us."
She is an assistant research professor at Duke Clinical Research Institute
in Durham, N.C.
Curtis and colleagues examined outpatient prescription claims for atypical
antipsychotic drugs for 2001 from the database of a large pharmaceutical
benefit manager servicing more than 6 million outpatients.
They found that the prevalence of atypical antipsychotic use was 267.1 per
100,000 subjects aged 19 years and younger. Moreover, the rate for male
patients was more than double that for female patients even though male and
female patients were equally represented in the overall population.
Prevalence was highest at 594.3 per 100,000 subjects among boys aged 10 to
14. Among girls the prevalence peaked at 291 per 100,000 subjects aged 15 to
19.
Most startling was the finding that nearly one-fourth of patients with a
claim for atypical antipsychotic drugs were aged 9 or younger, and that 80
percent of these were boys, according to the report.
Curtis told Psychiatric News that risperidone was the most
commonly used drug among both boys and girls, with olanzapine ranking
second.
The conditions for which the children are being prescribed these drugs and
who is doing the prescribing have yet to be determined.
"Schizophrenia is seldom diagnosed before the teenage years, so our
hunch is that these drugs are being prescribed for behavioral disorders, which
are known to be more common in boys," Curtis told Psychiatric
News.
"We also don't know from these data who are the physicians
prescribing these drugs," she said.
"Our concern is that these drugs are really not well studied in
children, particularly for their effects over the long term."
Psychiatrist Ranga Krishnan, M.B., a co-author on the study, agreed.
"We really don't know what these drugs do to physical and mental
development over the long term," he said.
He said the study was prompted in part by a local, anecdotal impression
that antipsychotic drug use was increasing in the pediatric population.
"Our own assessment internally was showing that use of these drugs
was increasing," Krishnan said. "Especially in the emergency room,
we saw a lot of kids coming in who were on these drugs. The question was
whether this was a local or a national phenomenon."
He added that he believes that use of atypical antipsychotics may have
actually increased since the study period. Because of controversy surrounding
potential suicide risk associated with SSRIs in children, he said, some
physicians may be switching to the atypical antipsychotics.
Like Curtis, he believes that in many cases these drugs are likely being
prescribed by nonpsychiatrists. "If you asked most psychiatrists, I
think they would be surprised by the findings," he said.
An abstract of "Prevalence of Atypical Antipsychotic Drug Use
Among Commercially Insured Youths in the United States" is posted online
at
<http://archpedi.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/abstract/159/4/362>.
Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 2005 159 362[Abstract/Free Full Text]
Get information about faster international access.
a>
Privacy Policy
Copyright © 2005
American Psychiatric Association.
All rights reserved.
Home
| Search
| Current Issue
| Past Issues
| Subscribe
| All APPI Journals
| Help
| Contact Us
|