
Psychiatr News September 2, 2005
Volume 40, Number 17, page 30
© 2005 American Psychiatric Association
Physicians Underprescribe Best Insomnia Treatments
Lynne Lamberg
Physicians often choose to prescribe antidepressants for patients with
chronic insomnia, sometimes overlooking more appropriate treatment choices,
according to an NIH panel.
Physicians underprescribe cognitive-behavioral therapies (CBT) and
hypnotics and overprescribe antidepressants for chronic insomnia, according to
a state-of-the-science review.
Behavioral therapy, CBT, and hypnotic medications are first-line
interventions for chronic insomnia in adults, according to the review, which
was commissioned by the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
"Very little evidence supports the efficacy of other treatments,
despite their widespread use," the NIH review panel concluded at its
meeting in Bethesda, Md., in June. Physicians and the general public need to
know what works and what does not, the panel said, because insomnia may
persist for years, even decades, and compromises health, cognition, work
productivity, and quality of life.
Primary care physicians, as well as psychiatrists, prescribe
antidepressants more often than CBT and hypnotics for patients with persistent
trouble sleeping, the panel noted. This use of antidepressants is off-label,
that is, not an indication approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
(FDA). There's a paucity of studies showing antidepressants relieve insomnia,
the panel said.
The majority of poor sleepers never seek a physician's help. Some induce
sleep with alcohol, which disrupts sleep later in the night. Others take
over-the-counter antihistamines, melatonin, or herbal remedies that have not
undergone rigorous testing. Many try a variety of nonpharmacological
techniques, such as warm baths and yoga, which aid relaxation but are not
remedies for chronic insomnia.
The FDA has approved eight medications for insomnia. Benzodiazepine
receptor agonists (BzRAs), introduced in the 1990s, include zaleplon (Sonata),
zolpidem (Ambien), and eszopiclone (Lunesta). They largely have supplanted the
older benzodiazepines, estazolam, flurazepam, quazepam, temazepam, and
triazolam. With shorter half-lives than benzodiazepines, BzRAs are less likely
to produce next-day sedation and trouble thinking or performing motor
functions, the panel said. They also are less apt to cause dependence and
rebound insomnia.
All the approved hypnotics have demonstrated efficacy. Eszopiclone, the
only one studied in randomized, controlled, clinical trials, has shown
sustained efficacy for six months. Introduced earlier this year, eszopiclone
is the only hypnotic approved for the treatment of insomnia without a
specified time limit. None of the other seven have been approved for use
longer than 35 days.
Evidence from long-term studies of zaleplon and zolpidem suggest, however,
that these medications may be as safe and effective as eszopiclone, said Carl
Hunt, M.D., director of the National Center on Sleep Disorders Research.
Over the past two decades, the number of prescriptions for FDA-approved
hypnotics for insomnia in the United States declined, while those for
antidepressants to aid sleep surged. One study assessed U.S. office-based
physicians' prescriptions in 2002 for drugs with a physician-specified desired
action of "hypnotic," "promote/aid sleep," or
"sedate night."
Physicians were 1.53 times more likely to order an antidepressant for
insomnia than an FDA-approved insomnia drug, James Walsh, Ph.D., of St. Luke's
Hospital and St. John's Mercy Medical Center, St. Louis, Mo., reported in the
December 15, 2004, issue of Sleep. Antidepressants accounted for
three of the top four drugs prescribed for insomnia. Trazodone, amitriptyline,
and mirtazapine ranked 1, 3, and 4, respectively. The hypnotic zolpidem ranked
second. Most antidepressant prescriptions called for dosages that would be
subtherapeutic for depression, Walsh said, an indication that prescribers did
not intend to target depression.
While trazodone fosters sedation and improves some sleep parameters, these
benefits may not continue for more than two weeks, the panel said; there are
no long-term studies of trazodone for insomnia. Studies of amitriptyline and
mirtazepine in people with insomnia are lacking. Indeed, most published
studies of antidepressants for sleep involve small numbers of subjects,
usually people with depression. These studies typically followed subjects for
one to four weeks and often lacked objective efficacy measures.
All antidepressants have potentially significant adverse effects, the panel
noted.
Nonetheless, of 439 clinicians attending a psychopharmacology review course
who responded to a questionnaire, 78 percent said they would add trazodone to
treat insomnia associated with use of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors,
Vaughn McCall, M.D., professor and chair of psychiatry and behavioral medicine
at Wake Forest University School of Medicine, told the panel. "Only a
small amount of data supports this use," McCall said.
While 78 percent of 439 respondents said they would add trazodone to treat
insomnia associated with SSRI use, "only a small amount of data supports
this use."
Physicians hesitate to prescribe medications approved for only short-term
use, McCall said. They may fear coming under scrutiny of medical boards if
they prescribe hypnotics for longer than their approved scheduled use.
Physicians may erroneously believe that off-label medications have
demonstrated sustained efficacy and are safer, he said. Physicians as well as
patients also may choose antidepressants over hypnotics because of cost and
formulary considerations.
McCall used a golfing analogy. "If you hit the ball well even once in
a round, that's enough reinforcement to keep you going," he said.
"If even one out of five patients reports sleeping better with
trazodone, that may be enough to make a physician continue to prescribe
it."
The panel's statement on insomnia and a Webcast of its proceedings
are posted at
<http://consensus.nih.gov>.
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