Gibbons Robert D, Hur Kwan, Bhaumik Dulal K, Mann J John
Center for Health Statistics, University of Illinois at Chicago, 1601 W. Taylor, Chicago 60612, USA.
Am J Psychiatry. 2006 Nov;163(11):1898-904. doi: 10.1176/ajp.2006.163.11.1898.
In 2002, 264 children and adolescents ages 5-14 died by suicide in the United States, the fifth leading cause of death. Of these suicides, 260 were in the 10-14 year age group, making suicide the third largest cause of death behind accidents and malignancy. Although 60% of suicides in the general population occur in the midst of a mood disorder, usually untreated, little is known about the relationship between treatment of mood disorders and youth suicide. The FDA recently linked adverse event reports of suicidal ideation among children and adolescents in randomized controlled trials to selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) and consequently required a change in labeling that included a black box warning regarding SSRI use for all age groups. Given that the age-adjusted suicide rate is about six times higher in 15-19 year olds compared with 10-14 year olds, the risk-benefit ratio may be different in younger children. Therefore, this study examined the association between antidepressant medication prescription rate and suicide rate in children ages 5-14 prior to the FDA findings by analyzing associations at the county level across the United States.
National county-level suicide rate data among children ages 5-14 were broken down by sex, income, and race during the period 1996-1998. National county-level antidepressant prescription rate data were expressed as number of pills prescribed per person. The primary outcome measure was the suicide rate in each county expressed as number of suicides for a given population size.
After adjustment for sex, race, income, access to mental health care, and county-to-county variability in suicide rates, higher SSRI prescription rates were associated with lower suicide rates in children and adolescents.
The aggregate nature of these observational data precludes a direct causal interpretation of the results. More SSRI prescriptions are associated with lower suicide rates in children and may reflect antidepressant efficacy, treatment compliance, better quality mental health care, and low toxicity in the event of a suicide attempt by overdose.
2002年,美国有264名5至14岁的儿童和青少年自杀身亡,自杀是第五大死因。在这些自杀案例中,260例发生在10至14岁年龄组,这使得自杀成为仅次于事故和恶性肿瘤的第三大死因。尽管一般人群中60%的自杀发生在情绪障碍期间,且通常未得到治疗,但关于情绪障碍治疗与青少年自杀之间的关系却知之甚少。美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)最近将随机对照试验中儿童和青少年自杀意念的不良事件报告与选择性5-羟色胺再摄取抑制剂(SSRI)联系起来,并因此要求更改标签,其中包括针对所有年龄组使用SSRI的黑框警告。鉴于15至19岁青少年的年龄调整自杀率比10至14岁青少年高出约六倍,年幼儿童的风险效益比可能有所不同。因此,本研究通过分析美国各县之间的关联,在FDA得出结论之前,考察了5至14岁儿童抗抑郁药物处方率与自杀率之间的关联。
1996 - 1998年期间,按性别、收入和种族对美国5至14岁儿童的全国县级自杀率数据进行分类。全国县级抗抑郁药物处方率数据以每人处方的药丸数量表示。主要结局指标是每个县的自杀率,以给定人口规模的自杀人数表示。
在对性别、种族、收入、获得心理健康护理的机会以及各县之间自杀率的差异进行调整后,较高的SSRI处方率与儿童和青少年较低的自杀率相关。
这些观察性数据的总体性质排除了对结果进行直接因果解释的可能性。更多的SSRI处方与儿童较低的自杀率相关,这可能反映了抗抑郁药的疗效、治疗依从性、更好的心理健康护理质量以及过量服用自杀未遂情况下的低毒性。