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Elderly Dementia Patients can Successfully be Taken Off Harmful Antipsychotic Drugs

by Bidita Debnath on Apr 1 2013 9:30 PM

 Elderly Dementia Patients can Successfully be Taken Off Harmful Antipsychotic Drugs
Antipsychotic medication, used on older people to control behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia is known to increases the risk of stroke and death along with other negative side effects.
Now, a new evidence review from The Cochrane Library has found that most older people on antipsychotic medication can be successfully weaned off, although some people experience a reoccurrence of their dementia-related symptoms.

The reviewers searched for evidence about the benefit of stopping these medications versus the risk that discontinuing use would result in a reoccurrence of distressing dementia symptoms.

"We have enough evidence to prevent people with dementia and [the behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia from experiencing side effects associated with antipsychotic medication. Consequently, withdrawal of chronic antipsychotic medication should be incorporated in daily practice," said the review's lead author Tom Declercq, M.D., assistant professor in the department of family practice at Ghent University in Belgium.

Dementia is a condition that causes people to gradually lose cognitive function. People with dementia often develop behavioral symptoms such as agitation, anxiety, screaming, wandering and resisting the care of people working with them. Up to 78 percent of people in nursing homes have dementia and 76 percent experience some behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia. Antipsychotic medication is often used to treat patients when behavioral treatment to control or lessen these troubling symptoms hasn't proven effective.

Researchers compared the results of placebo-controlled trials where antipsychotic medications were withdrawn to trials that continued using antipsychotics in people with dementia. Participants included 606 adults who were 65 or older.

In seven of the nine studies included in the review, people with dementia who had been treated with antipsychotic medications over a long period of time did not experience a deterioration of their behavior when the medications were withdrawn. However, in two studies, patients experienced a relapse after their antipsychotic medications were discontinued.

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Declercq noted, "Unfortunately, it is not clear which patients are eligible for discontinuation of antipsychotic medications without relapse."

"Based on FDA black box warnings about increased mortality in this patient population, the Center for Medicare Services (CMS) and regulatory agencies dealing with nursing homes are already pushing to reduce antipsychotic use with dementia patients," added Iqbal "Ike" Ahmed, M.D., clinical professor of psychiatry and geriatric medicine at the University of Hawaii.

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Ahmed, who agreed with the review's findings, said, "It should be emphasized that while behavioral problems in dementia patients should be carefully assessed and treated with non-pharmacologic approaches, some patients may need antipsychotics at least in the short term.

Stopping treatment, as two review studies pointed out, may result in some patients worsening with these efforts." Iqbal added, "That's why it is important for patients, guardians and families to be involved in discussing the risk and benefits of the use of these agents."

Source-ANI


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