From the Center for Chronic Disease Outcomes Research, the Division of Cardiology, and the Department of Psychiatry, Minneapolis VA Health Care System, and the Department of Medicine, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis; and the VA Center for Medication Safety, Hines, Ill.
Am J Psychiatry. 2016 Sep 1;173(9):896-902. doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.2016.15111444. Epub 2016 May 10.
A public safety communication issued by the Food and Drug Administration declared that citalopram dosages exceeding 40 mg/day were no longer considered safe because of a newly recognized risk of dosage-dependent QT interval prolongation. The authors compared the incidence of hospitalizations and mortality when higher dosages of citalopram were or were not reduced to ≤40 mg/day.
National electronic medical records compiled by the Veterans Health Administration were used to conduct a retrospective study of a population filling citalopram prescriptions for more than 40 mg/day when the safety communication was first issued in August 2011. Hospitalizations and mortality after dosages of citalopram were or were not reduced to ≤40 mg/day were compared using multivariable Cox regression.
The at-risk cohort of 35,848 veterans (mean age, 58 years [SD=11]; 92% male) had citalopram prescriptions for 64 mg/day (SD=8.3), on average. Within 180 days after the safety communication was issued, 60% had filled prescriptions for ≤40 mg/day. All-cause hospitalizations or deaths were found to significantly increase after dosage reductions (adjusted hazard ratio=4.5, 95% CI=4.1-5.0), as were hospitalizations for depression or all-cause death (adjusted hazard ratio=2.2, 95% CI=1.8-2.6). Mortality did not decline (adjusted hazard ratio=1.0, 95% CI=0.8-1.3), and neither did hospitalizations for arrhythmias or all-cause deaths (adjusted hazard ratio=1.3, 95% CI=1.0-1.7).
Reduction of prescribed citalopram dosages to a new safety limit was associated with a higher rate of hospitalization in a large patient population who had been treated with substantially higher dosages. Stipulating a safety limit for citalopram dosages before the benefits and risks of doing so were firmly established appears to have had unintended clinical consequences.
美国食品药品监督管理局发布的一则公共安全通讯称,由于新发现的剂量依赖性 QT 间期延长风险,超过 40 毫克/天的西酞普兰剂量不再被认为是安全的。作者比较了当剂量高于 40 毫克/天时,减少至≤40 毫克/天和不减少的情况下住院和死亡率的发生率。
利用退伍军人事务部编制的国家电子病历,对 2011 年 8 月首次发布安全通讯时,服用西酞普兰超过 40 毫克/天的人群进行回顾性研究。使用多变量 Cox 回归比较减少至≤40 毫克/天后和不减少的情况下的住院和死亡率。
风险队列中有 35848 名退伍军人(平均年龄 58 岁[标准差=11];92%为男性),平均每天服用西酞普兰 64 毫克[标准差=8.3]。在安全通讯发布后的 180 天内,60%的患者已开具≤40 毫克/天的处方。剂量减少后发现全因住院或死亡显著增加(调整后的危险比=4.5,95%置信区间[CI]=4.1-5.0),抑郁或全因死亡住院的情况也是如此(调整后的危险比=2.2,95%CI=1.8-2.6)。死亡率并未下降(调整后的危险比=1.0,95%CI=0.8-1.3),心律失常或全因死亡的住院率也未下降(调整后的危险比=1.3,95%CI=1.0-1.7)。
在接受了更高剂量治疗的大量患者人群中,将西酞普兰的处方剂量减少到新的安全限制与更高的住院率相关。在充分确定其益处和风险之前,为西酞普兰剂量设定安全限制似乎产生了意料之外的临床后果。