Antipsychotic
medication is effective for people who are psychotic—period. It’s been used for
other conditions, such as the behavioral symptoms of dementia, and it turned
out not to work. It’s been used for delirium, a type of confusion that often
arises in older people or people nearing the end of life, especially in the
hospital, and many doctors swear it’s the only medication that helps this
distressing and dangerous disorder. But a new study from Australia suggests
that antipsychotic medication doesn’t work for delirium either.
The
specific situation the Australian doctors looked at was delirium in the setting
of patients with advanced illness, either patients on an inpatient palliative
care service or patients enrolled in a hospice facility. Out of well over 1000
patients with delirium, they were able to identify 247 who were both eligible
and willing to enter the study. This group, with a mean age of 75, were
randomized to risperidone (a commonly used antipsychotic), haloperidol (another
commonly used antipsychotic), or placebo. Patients were also given unspecified
non-medicinal treatment, presumably things like a sitter (someone to stay with
them) or relaxation techniques such as massage. They were also given
subcutaneous midazolam, a very short acting anti-anxiety medication under the
skin, for extreme agitation. The results? Patients receiving either risperidone
or haloperidol had more severe symptoms of delirium than those treated with
placebo. They also, not surprisingly, had more Parkinsonian symptoms, the main
side effect of these antipsychotic medications, and were more likely to die.
This is
a disturbing result. Not only did antipsychotics fail to help, but they also
seemed to make matters worse. Now maybe there’s something different about
Australians, or maybe the specific environment they were in—a palliative care
service or hospice, though neither is clearly described—makes generalization to
the American general hospital impossible. Or maybe people with delirium and
advanced illness are somehow different from people with delirium who don’t have
an advanced illness. And conceivably, other antipsychotics such as quetiapine
or olanzapine are different. More likely, antipsychotics are simply a bad
choice in the treatment of delirium.
Antipsychotic
medications are remarkable medications—for the treatment of psychosis in psychiatric
conditions such as schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. But maybe we should stop
using them for anything other than these indications.
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