Division of Geriatric Psychiatry, Zucker Hillside Hospital, Glen Oaks, NY, United States of America.
Donald and Barbara Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell, Hempstead, NY, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2021 Oct 21;16(10):e0258916. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0258916. eCollection 2021.
Older adults are particularly vulnerable to the negative consequences of antipsychotic exposure and are disproportionally affected by higher mortality from coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Our goal was to determine whether concurrent antipsychotic medication use was associated with increased COVID-19 mortality in older patients with preexisting behavioral health problems. We also report on findings from post-COVID follow-ups.
Retrospective observational study.
Outpatients at a geriatric psychiatric clinic in New York City.
Demographic and clinical data including medication, diagnosis and Clinical Global Impression Severity (CGI-S) scales on outpatients who had COVID-19 between February 28th and October 1st 2020 were extracted from the electronic health records (EHR) from the hospital.
A total of 56 patients were diagnosed with COVID-19 (mean age 76 years; median age 75 years) and 13 (23.2%) died. We found an increased mortality risk for patients who were prescribed at least one antipsychotic medication at the time of COVID-19 infection (Fisher's exact test P = 0.009, OR = 11.1, 95% confidence interval: 1.4-96.0). This result remains significant after adjusting for age, gender, housing context and dementia (Logistic regression P = 0.035, Beta = 2.4). Furthermore, we found that most patients who survived COVID-19 (88.4%) recovered to pre-COVID baseline in terms of psychiatric symptoms. Comparison of pre- and post-COVID assessments of CGI-S for 33 patients who recovered from COVID-19 were not significantly different.
We observed a higher COVID-19 mortality associated with concurrent antipsychotics use in older patients receiving behavioral health services. The majority of patients in our geriatric clinic who recovered from COVID-19 appeared to return to their pre-COVID psychiatric function. More precise estimates of the risk associated with antipsychotic treatment in older patients with COVID-19 and other underlying factors will come from larger datasets and meta-analyses.
老年人尤其容易受到抗精神病药物暴露的负面影响,并且因 2019 年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)而导致的死亡率过高而受到不成比例的影响。我们的目标是确定患有先前存在的行为健康问题的老年患者同时使用抗精神病药物是否与 COVID-19 死亡率增加有关。我们还报告了 COVID-19 后的随访结果。
回顾性观察性研究。
纽约市一家老年精神病诊所的门诊患者。
从医院电子健康记录(EHR)中提取 2020 年 2 月 28 日至 10 月 1 日期间患有 COVID-19 的门诊患者的人口统计学和临床数据,包括药物、诊断和临床总体印象严重程度(CGI-S)量表。
共有 56 名患者被诊断出患有 COVID-19(平均年龄 76 岁;中位数年龄 75 岁),其中 13 人(23.2%)死亡。我们发现,在 COVID-19 感染时至少开一种抗精神病药物的患者死亡风险增加(Fisher 精确检验 P = 0.009,OR = 11.1,95%置信区间:1.4-96.0)。在调整年龄、性别、住房环境和痴呆症后,这一结果仍然具有统计学意义(Logistic 回归 P = 0.035,Beta = 2.4)。此外,我们发现,大多数从 COVID-19 中康复的患者(88.4%)在精神症状方面恢复到 COVID-19 前的基线水平。对 33 名从 COVID-19 中康复的患者进行 COVID-19 前后的 CGI-S 评估比较,差异无统计学意义。
我们观察到在接受行为健康服务的老年患者中,同时使用抗精神病药物与 COVID-19 死亡率增加相关。从 COVID-19 中康复的我们老年诊所的大多数患者似乎恢复到了 COVID-19 前的精神功能。来自更大数据集和荟萃分析的更准确估计 COVID-19 老年患者和其他潜在因素与抗精神病治疗相关的风险。