Justice Health Unit, Centre for Health Equity, Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Department of Psychological Medicine, University of Otago, Christchurch, New Zealand.
BMJ Open. 2021 Jan 13;11(1):e043306. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-043306.
There are conflicting perspectives as to whether antidepressant medication increases, decreases or has no effect on violence perpetration, impulsivity and aggressive behaviour. This is an important question given the widespread use of antidepressant medication and the significant medical, social, legal and health consequences of violence. We aim to: (1) systematically identify observational studies and randomised controlled trials that quantify the relationship between antidepressant use and interpersonal violence; (2) assess the quality of studies that quantify the relationship between antidepressant use and interpersonal violence and (3) estimate the pooled prevalence and measure of effect for the relationship between antidepressant use and interpersonal violence.
We will search MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, PsycINFO, PubMed and the Cochrane Library for relevant peer-reviewed literature. Our primary outcome is the perpetration of violent acts directed at others. Our secondary outcome is physical, interpersonal aggression measured through validated surveys. We will include randomised controlled trials, cohort studies and case-control studies that examine the association between the use of antidepressants and violence perpetration and/or physical aggression. No restrictions will be placed on the population. We will use the Methodological Standard for Epidemiological Research scale to assess the quality of included studies. We will provide an overview of the included studies and assess heterogeneity and publication bias. If there are sufficient studies, we will conduct meta-analyses to examine the possible association between antidepressants and violence, and undertake meta-regression to examine the effect of antidepressant class, length of follow-up, age of participants and population subgroups on the association between antidepressants and violence.
No ethics approval is required. Our findings will be disseminated through a peer-reviewed journal article and conference presentations.
CRD42020175474.
关于抗抑郁药物是否会增加、减少或对抗抑郁药物对暴力行为、冲动和攻击行为的影响,存在相互矛盾的观点。鉴于抗抑郁药物的广泛使用以及暴力行为对医疗、社会、法律和健康造成的重大影响,这是一个重要的问题。我们的目标是:(1)系统地确定观察性研究和随机对照试验,以量化抗抑郁药物使用与人际暴力之间的关系;(2)评估量化抗抑郁药物使用与人际暴力之间关系的研究的质量;(3)估计抗抑郁药物使用与人际暴力之间关系的汇总患病率和效应测量值。
我们将在 MEDLINE、EMBASE、CINAHL、PsycINFO、PubMed 和 Cochrane Library 中搜索相关的同行评议文献。我们的主要结果是针对他人的暴力行为的实施。我们的次要结果是通过经过验证的调查测量的身体、人际攻击。我们将包括随机对照试验、队列研究和病例对照研究,以检查抗抑郁药的使用与暴力行为的实施和/或身体攻击之间的关联。不对人群设置限制。我们将使用流行病学研究方法标准量表来评估纳入研究的质量。我们将提供纳入研究的概述,并评估异质性和发表偏倚。如果有足够的研究,我们将进行荟萃分析以检查抗抑郁药与暴力之间的可能关联,并进行荟萃回归分析以检查抗抑郁药类别、随访时间、参与者年龄和人群亚组对抗抑郁药与暴力之间关联的影响。
不需要伦理批准。我们的研究结果将通过同行评议的期刊文章和会议演讲进行传播。
PROSPERO 注册详情:CRD42020175474。