
Psychiatric News April 1, 2005
Volume 40 Number 7
© 2005 American Psychiatric Association
p. 1
SSRI Data Continue To Confound Researchers
Jim Rosack
If the latest round of studies on whether a link exists between SSRIs
and suicide is any indication, a definitive conclusion is still a long way
off.
It's been a turbulent year for antidepressantsespecially the
serotonin reuptake inhibitorswith intense interest in the quest for the
answer to one seemingly straightforward question: do the drugs' benefits
outweigh their risks?
As a recent series of studies clearly demonstrated, even after nearly two
years of analysis of clinical trials data by researchers and regulators across
the globe, the answer remains elusive.
Three of four new analyses appeared in the same issue of a top-tier
journal. On February 18, BMJ (formerly the British Medical
Journal) published the three reports, along with an editorial, and issued
a press release declaring, "Suicidal behaviour caused by antidepressants
cannot be ruled out."
The press release prompted stories in major daily newspapers the following
morning. However, the newspapers didn't quite agree on the studies' outcomes.
The Washington Post, for example, ran a front-page story with the
headline "Drugs Raise Risk of Suicide: Analysis of Data Adds to Concerns
on Antidepressants." By contrast, the New York Times ran with
"Antidepressant Safety Debate May Include Adult Patients." That
article succinctly captured the debate, noting, "The new findings are
mixed, and apparently contradictory." It also noted that the results
might be encouraging to both patient advocates, who believe the medicines are
dangerous, and to pharmaceutical companies, which have spent the last two
years defending the safety of their products.
At the end of the day, even after reading newspaper accounts and viewing
nightly newscasts discussing the studies, many physicians were still left
wondering whether the latest round of research meant they should be
moreor lessworried about prescribing antidepressant
medications.
What the Studies Found
The first of the three studies in BMJ was led by Dean Fergusson,
M.D., a scientist researcher at the Ottawa Health Research Institute's
Clinical Epidemiology Program in Ottawa, Canada. Fergusson teamed with fellow
Ottawa senior scientist Paul Hebert, M.D., and David Healy, M.D., a professor
of psychological medicine at the University of Wales College of Medicine in
Bangor, Wales, U.K., two previously outspoken critics of the safety profiles
of antidepressants. Healy has also been a expert witness for plaintiffs in
lawsuits alleging that antidepressants caused patients' suicides or violent
acts.
The Canadian Institute of Health Research funded the work.
Fergusson and his colleagues analyzed 702 clinical trials involving more
than 87,000 patients with depression and other disorders. They found that
patients taking SSRIs were twice as likely to attempt suicide as patients
taking placebo in the trials (odds ratio 2.28).
Second, the analysis found no increase in risk when only the number of
completed suicides of patients taking SSRIs was compared with those taking
placebo.
Finally, no significant differences were noted in the risk of suicide
attempt in patients taking tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs) compared with
those taking SSRIs.
The second study published in BMJ reviewed data from more than
40,000 adult patients in 477 clinical trials that drug companies had submitted
to the U.K.'s Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA). The
agency had undertaken a safety review of trials comparing SSRIs with placebo
in adults with depression and other mental disorders following its review of
clinical trials data involving depressed children and adolescents.
In this analysis, David Gunnell, M.D., a professor of epidemiology in the
department of social medicine at the University of Bristol, England, and
Deborah Ashby, a professor of medical statistics at the Wolfson Institute of
Preventive Medicine, Queen Mary, University of London, found "no
evidence that SSRIs increased the risk of suicide, but important protective or
hazardous effects cannot be excluded."
The third study was completed by a large team led by Carlos Martinez, M.D.,
an epidemiologist in the General Practice Research Database Division of the
MHRA. He was joined by Gunnell, Ashby, and others.
The team analyzed the course of all patients in the General Practice
Research Database who had a new diagnosis of depression and were first
prescribed an antidepressant between 1995 and 2001. The risk of nonfatal
self-harm was compared with the risk of suicide in association with the use of
either an SSRI or TCA in more than 146,000 patients aged 10 to 90.
Martinez and his team found that the risk of self-harm and suicide were not
significantly different between SSRIs and TCAs. Children and adolescents under
age 18 were at increased risk for self-harm (odds ratio 1.59). However, no
increased risk was seen in any older age cohort.
The week before the three BMJ articles were released, another
analysis appeared in Current Opinion in Psychiatry by Craig
Whittington, M.D., and Tim Kendall, M.D., director and deputy director,
respectively, of the Royal College of Psychiatry's Research Unit in
London.
They reviewed the evidence for the safety and efficacy of the SSRIs and
atypical antidepressants in the treatment of children and adolescents with
major depressive disorder. They concluded, "Current evidence supports
the U.K. drug regulator in warning against the use of all the newer
antidepressants except fluoxetine in this age group."
Interpretations Vary as Limitations Noted
With four studies and seemingly contradictory conclusions, many were left
wondering what the research really meant.
"In the two studies by Fergusson et al. and Gunnell et al., there was
no increase in risk of fatal suicide attempts, and in the Martinez study there
was no increased risk of suicide or nonfatal self-harm for SSRIs over
tricyclic antidepressants," summarized Darrel Regier, M.D., M.P.H.,
director of research for APA and executive director of the American
Psychiatric Institute for Research and Education.
"The major finding of Fergusson of a twofold risk of nonfatal
self-harm in self-report adverse events remains difficult to interpret and
deserves additional study," he continued. "The Gunnell findings
that there were only weak evidence of increased risk of self-harm and that
there was inconclusive evidence of increased risk of suicidal thoughts
illustrates the contradictory nature of findings coming from these
studies."
However, Harold Eist, M.D., a Washington, D.C., child psychiatrist and
former APA president, noted, "I think these studies absolutely document
that there is no connection between SSRIs and suicide. What they do show is
that there is some increase in spontaneous reporting of suicidal ideation when
people are taking SSRIs. That's a good thing. The medications help people talk
about their issues and increases the likelihood of a positive
intervention."
Regier cautioned that these studies have significant inherent
limitations.
"This continued interest in examining multiple databases of existing
clinical-trial information leads to a clear conclusion," he said.
"Better measures are needed than spontaneous reports of adverse events
in these types of trials. Systematic assessments of suicidal ideation and
behavior are needed prior to, during, and at the end of longer follow-up
periods to understand the relative risk versus the clear benefits of these
medications for the treatment of depression in children, adolescents, and
adultsthree population groups that deserve individual
attention."
Web citations for the BMJ studies and the Whittington and
Kendall study appear in the box on
page 4 under "SSRIs
and Suicide."
Related Articles:
-
Suicide Rates Began to Drop With Advent of SSRIs
- Jim Rosack
Psychiatr News 2005 40: 29.
[Full Text]
-
Information, Please: We've Got Your Needs in Mind
- James H. Scully, Jr.
Psychiatr News 2005 40: 4.
[Full Text]
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