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This article originally appeared in
the December 2003 Harvard Mental Health Letter and is provided courtesy
of Harvard
Health Publications.
Should children take antidepressants?
Concerns about the increasing use of antidepressant drugs
by children came into focus in 2003 when health officials in the United
States, Britain, France, and Canada issued warnings that the popular selective
serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) paroxetine (Paxil) might increase the
risk of hostility, mood swings, aggression, and suicide in children and
adolescents. The European and FDA warnings were based on three clinical
trials involving patients under 18 with major depression, in which 1%–2%
of those taking a placebo and 2%–3.5% of those taking paroxetine showed
potentially suicidal behavior. There were no suicides in either group.
Soon afterward, the manufacturer of another popular antidepressant, venlafaxine
(Effexor), issued a similar warning based on a study in which 2% of children
and adolescents taking the drug reported thoughts of suicide, compared with
none receiving a placebo.
How serious is the risk, and are antidepressants worth it? These drugs
probably can be useful for children, although the evidence is mixed and
conflicting. Several controlled trials favor antidepressants, including
paroxetine and fluoxetine (Prozac), over a placebo. A 2003 study published
in the Journal of the American Medical Association compared sertraline (Zoloft)
with a placebo in children ages 6–17 with major depression. In two
trials, the combined response rate was 69% for sertraline and 59% for the
placebo — a modest but statistically significant effect. But other
studies have found no benefit from paroxetine or sertraline. Fluoxetine
is the only drug now specifically approved for major depression in children
and adolescents, but any antidepressant approved for adult patients can
legally be prescribed for children.
Small but significant numbers of children are actually taking the drugs.
For example, a study based on data from 1998–99 found that 5% of 200,000
children served by Medicaid in Connecticut received at least one psychotropic
medication. Stimulants for attention deficit disorder were the most commonly
prescribed drugs, but one quarter of children who received any psychoactive
drug received an antidepressant.
Rarely, antidepressants are given even to children under five. Two-year
records of prescriptions for preschool children in Oregon indicated that
about 2% had diagnosed emotional or behavior problems. Of those, 10% were
taking psychotropic medications and 1/8 of that 10% were taking antidepressants — about
one child in 5,000. Most of these children were not simply depressed but
had severe attention deficit disorder, post-traumatic symptoms, or developmental
disorders including autism.
The number of American children taking antidepressants may seem low,
but it is much higher than in Europe, and it is growing. A 2003 study of
nearly one million patients under 18 enrolled in two Medicaid systems and
a health maintenance organization found that the number of prescriptions
for antidepressants increased between 1987 and 1996 — nearly 4 times
in one organization, 6 times in the second, and 10 times in the third. Patients
under 18 now account for about 5% of antidepressant prescriptions.
The public is becoming concerned about possible overmedication. Critics
fear that physicians are adopting chemical solutions to the emotional problems
of children because of pressure from insurers and health maintenance organizations.
Under a federal law passed in 1997, pharmaceutical companies owning the
patent for a medicine can win an extra six months of exclusive marketing
rights by testing its efficacy in children. The law is beginning to have
its intended effects; that’s how the findings on venlafaxine came
to light. But there is little incentive to do such research on drugs that
are not patented. And the FDA cannot require manufacturers of a new drug
to study its effects in children before approval.
Most psychiatric drugs have not been adequately tested in children, and
some drug combinations occasionally prescribed for children — particularly
stimulants and antidepressants — have not been fully tested even in
adults. We don’t know enough about either the risks or the benefits
of these medications to say whether they are being overused or underused.
Children’s bodies do not absorb and eliminate drugs in the same way
adult bodies do, and their brains may be affected differently as well. A
child’s development could be detoured by a misapplication of drugs.
But depression and other conditions for which the drugs are prescribed may
also have long-lasting deleterious effects on psychological and social development
and even on brain structure and function. Both the risks of medicating and
the risks of not medicating are likely to be greatest in the earliest years
of life.
Children’s adverse reactions are inadequately monitored in everyday
practice. Researchers who study side effects in children sometimes ask the
wrong questions, or not enough questions. The FDA has a voluntary program
in which physicians report severe and novel side effects. But the more predictable
and apparently milder side effects may also be important, especially in
the long run — which is not illuminated by clinical trials that rarely
last more than a few months.
The American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry has established
a Pediatric Psychopharmacology Initiative. A group of educators, child psychiatrists,
developmental psychologists, and pharmaceutical company representatives
will monitor controlled trials, set consistent standards, and promulgate
guidelines for researchers and prescribing physicians. They will work with
the National Institute of Mental Health to publish a review of these issues
and an ethical guide for investigators.
Meanwhile, the rule is caution in prescribing antidepressants for children.
They should be neither a first choice nor a last resort. Experts recommend
close monitoring during the first few weeks, when SSRIs in particular may
cause akathisia, a kind of irresistible agitation that may raise the risk
of violence and self-injury (see Harvard Mental Health Letter, October and
November 2000). For children with both attention deficit disorder and depression,
experts recommend trying a stimulant first, because its effects can be observed
immediately. If depression persists after that, either psychotherapy or
an antidepressant may be effective.
As for paroxetine, the FDA stresses that children and adolescents who
are taking it now should not stop abruptly, because they may suffer a discontinuation
syndrome that includes dizziness, nausea, tremors, and anxiety. Children
can continue to take the drug if it seems to be helping, but they should
be watched closely for side effects.
References
Kutcher S, ed. Practical Child and Adolescent Psychopharmacology.
Cambridge University Press, 2002.
Wagner KD, et al. “Efficacy of Sertraline in
the Treatment of Children and Adolescents with Major Depressive Disorder:
Two Randomized
Clinical Trials,” JAMA (August 27, 2003): Vol. 290, No. 8, pp.
1033–41.
Varley CK. “Psychopharmacological Treatment of Major Depressive
Disorder in Children and Adolescents,” JAMA (August 27, 2003):
Vol. 290, No. 8, pp. 1091–93.
Greenhill LL, et al. “Review of Safety Assessment Methods Used
in Pediatric Psychopharmacology,” Journal of the American
Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry (June 2003): Vol. 42, No. 6, pp.
627–33.
Vitiello B, et al. “How Can We Improve the Assessment of Safety
in Child and Adolescent Psychopharmacology?” Journal of the
American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry (June 2003): Vol. 42, No.
6, pp. 634–41.
Zito JM, et al. “Psychotropic Practice Patterns for Youth: A 10-Year
Perspective,” Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine (January
2003): Vol. 157, No. 1, pp. 17–25.
Martin A, et al. “Multiple Psychotropic Pharmacotherapy among
Child and Adolescent Enrollees in Connecticut Medicaid Managed Care,” Psychiatric
Services (January 2003): Vol. 54, No.1, pp. 72–77.
DeBar LL, et al. “Use of Psychotropic Agents in Preschool Children:
Associated Symptoms, Diagnoses, and Health Care Services in a Health
Maintenance Organization,” Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent
Medicine (February 2003): Vol. 157, No. 2, pp. 150 –57. |
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