-
Rheumatology (Oxford, England) May 2021There are signs that antidepressants and anticonvulsants are being prescribed more often for OA patients, despite limited evidence. Our objectives were to examine...
OBJECTIVES
There are signs that antidepressants and anticonvulsants are being prescribed more often for OA patients, despite limited evidence. Our objectives were to examine prescription rates and time trends for antidepressants and anticonvulsants in OA patients, to assess the percentage of long-term prescriptions, and to determine patient characteristics associated with antidepressant or anticonvulsant prescription.
METHODS
A population-based cohort study was conducted using the Integrated Primary Care Information database. First, episodic and prevalent prescription rates for antidepressants (amitriptyline, nortriptyline and duloxetine) and anticonvulsants (gabapentinoids) in OA patients were calculated for the period 2008-17. Logistic regression was used to assess which patient characteristics were associated with prescriptions.
RESULTS
In total, 164 292 OA patients were included. The prescription rates of amitriptyline, gabapentin and pregabalin increased over time. The increase in prescription rates for pregabalin was most pronounced. Episodic prescription rate increased from 7.1 to 13.9 per 1000 person-years between 2008 and 2017. Amitriptyline was prescribed most (15.1 episodic prescriptions per 1000 person-years in 2017). Prescription rates of nortriptyline and duloxetine remained stable at 3.0 and 2.0 episodic prescriptions per 1000 person-years, respectively. For ≤3% of patients with incident OA, medication was prescribed long-term (≥3 months). In general, all medication was prescribed more frequently for older patients (except duloxetine), women, patients with OA in ≥2 joints, patients with spinal OA and patients with musculoskeletal disorders.
CONCLUSION
Prescription rates of amitriptyline, gabapentin and pregabalin increased over time. Since there is little evidence to support prescription in OA, caution is necessary when prescribing.
Topics: Aged; Analgesics; Anticonvulsants; Antidepressive Agents; Depressive Disorder; Drug Prescriptions; Female; Gabapentin; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Osteoarthritis; Practice Patterns, Physicians'; Pregabalin
PubMed: 33175150
DOI: 10.1093/rheumatology/keaa544 -
Journal of Feline Medicine and Surgery May 2024Chronic pain is a significant welfare concern in cats, and neuropathic pain, which arises from aberrant processing of sensory signals within the nervous system, is a... (Review)
Review
Chronic pain is a significant welfare concern in cats, and neuropathic pain, which arises from aberrant processing of sensory signals within the nervous system, is a subcategory of this type of pain. To comprehend this condition and how multimodal pharmacotherapy plays a central role in alleviating discomfort, it is crucial to delve into the anatomy of nociception and pain perception. In addition, there is an intricate interplay between emotional health and chronic pain in cats, and understanding and addressing the emotional factors that contribute to pain perception, and vice versa, is essential for comprehensive care.Clinical approach:Neuropathic pain is suspected if there is abnormal sensation in the area of the distribution of pain, together with a positive response to trial treatment with drugs effective for neuropathic pain. Ideally, this clinical suspicion would be supported by confirmation of a lesion at this neurolocalisation using diagnostic modalities such as MRI and neuroelectrophysiology. Alternatively, there may be a history of known trauma at that site. A variety of therapies, including analgesic, anti-inflammatory and adjuvant drugs, and neuromodulation (eg, TENS or acupuncture), can be employed to address different facets of pain pathways.Aim:This review article, aimed at primary care/ general practitioners, focuses on the identification and management of neuropathic pain in cats. Three case vignettes are included and a structured treatment algorithm is presented to guide veterinarians in tailoring interventions.Evidence base:The review draws on current literature, where available, along with the author's extensive experience and research.
Topics: Cats; Animals; Neuralgia; Cat Diseases; Pain Management; Analgesics; Combined Modality Therapy
PubMed: 38710218
DOI: 10.1177/1098612X241246518 -
Indian Journal of Pharmacology 2023Escitalopram, fluoxetine, and amitriptyline are the drugs commonly used in the treatment of depression. The pharmacoeconomic evaluation of these drugs becomes relevant...
INTRODUCTION
Escitalopram, fluoxetine, and amitriptyline are the drugs commonly used in the treatment of depression. The pharmacoeconomic evaluation of these drugs becomes relevant as they are prescribed for a long period of time, and depression causes a significant economic burden. The cost-minimization study would contribute to bringing down the annual treatment costs, leading to better medication adherence and ultimately better patient outcomes.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
All drug prices are mentioned in Indian National Rupee (INR). All expenses are based on 2022 pricing. No cost discounting was used because all expenditures were calculated over a year. We considered hypothetical scenarios where the patient was prescribed the lowest possible dose for depression, an equivalent antidepressant dose, a defined daily dose, and the maximum acceptable therapeutic dose for depression.
RESULTS
Annual average treatment costs of amitriptyline, escitalopram, and fluoxetine in patients with depression at baseline with equivalent dosing as mono-drug therapy were 2765.53, 2914.78, and 1422.72 rupees (INR), respectively. Savings were high when the patient was shifted to fluoxetine from either escitalopram or amitriptyline. The savings from switching to fluoxetine were 50.66% and 56.42% from escitalopram and amitriptyline, respectively.
CONCLUSION
The choice of an antidepressant depends on multiple aspects, among which the cost of treatment plays a crucial role. Among the drugs compared, fluoxetine seems to offer greater value for money. The study emphasizes that selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors are the most commonly prescribed antidepressants not only because of their favorable pharmacological profile but also because of their affordability.
Topics: Humans; Fluoxetine; Amitriptyline; Escitalopram; Depression; Antidepressive Agents; Health Care Costs
PubMed: 37929407
DOI: 10.4103/ijp.ijp_854_22 -
JCI Insight Feb 2021TrkB agonist drugs are shown here to have a significant effect on the regeneration of afferent cochlear synapses after noise-induced synaptopathy. The effects were...
TrkB agonist drugs are shown here to have a significant effect on the regeneration of afferent cochlear synapses after noise-induced synaptopathy. The effects were consistent with regeneration of cochlear synapses that we observed in vitro after synaptic loss due to kainic acid-induced glutamate toxicity and were elicited by administration of TrkB agonists, amitriptyline, and 7,8-dihydroxyflavone, directly into the cochlea via the posterior semicircular canal 48 hours after exposure to noise. Synaptic counts at the inner hair cell and wave 1 amplitudes in the auditory brainstem response (ABR) were partially restored 2 weeks after drug treatment. Effects of amitriptyline on wave 1 amplitude and afferent auditory synapse numbers in noise-exposed ears after systemic (as opposed to local) delivery were profound and long-lasting; synapses in the treated animals remained intact 1 year after the treatment. However, the effect of systemically delivered amitriptyline on synaptic rescue was dependent on dose and the time window of administration: it was only effective when given before noise exposure at the highest injected dose. The long-lasting effect and the efficacy of postexposure treatment indicate a potential broad application for the treatment of synaptopathy, which often goes undetected until well after the original damaging exposures.
Topics: Amitriptyline; Animals; Auditory Threshold; Cochlea; Cochlear Nerve; Coculture Techniques; Disease Models, Animal; Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Brain Stem; Flavones; Hair Cells, Auditory, Inner; Hearing Loss, Noise-Induced; Membrane Glycoproteins; Mice; Mice, Inbred CBA; Protein-Tyrosine Kinases; Regeneration; Synapses
PubMed: 33373328
DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.142572 -
Drug Safety Aug 2023Time- and resource-demanding activities related to processing individual case safety reports (ICSRs) include manual procedures to evaluate individual causality with the...
Developing an Artificial Intelligence-Guided Signal Detection in the Food and Drug Administration Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS): A Proof-of-Concept Study Using Galcanezumab and Simulated Data.
INTRODUCTION
Time- and resource-demanding activities related to processing individual case safety reports (ICSRs) include manual procedures to evaluate individual causality with the final goal of dismissing false-positive safety signals. Eminent experts and a representative from pharmaceutical industries and regulatory agencies have highlighted the need to automatize time- and resource-demanding procedures in signal detection and validation. However, to date there is a sparse availability of automatized tools for such purposes.
OBJECTIVES
ICSRs recorded in spontaneous reporting databases have been and continue to be the cornerstone and the most important data source in signal detection. Despite the richness of this data source, the incessantly increased amount of ICSRs recorded in spontaneous reporting databases has generated problems in signal detection and validation due to the increase in resources and time needed to process cases. This study aimed to develop a new artificial intelligence (AI)-based framework to automate resource- and time-consuming steps of signal detection and signal validation, such as (1) the selection of control groups in disproportionality analyses and (2) the identification of co-reported drugs serving as alternative causes, to look to dismiss false-positive disproportionality signals and therefore reduce the burden of case-by-case validation.
METHODS
The Summary of Product Characteristics (SmPC) and the Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical (ATC) classification system were used to automatically identify control groups within and outside the chemical subgroup of the proof-of-concept drug under investigation, galcanezumab. Machine learning, specifically conditional inference trees, has been used to identify alternative causes in disproportionality signals.
RESULTS
By using conditional inference trees, the framework was able to dismiss 20.00% of erenumab, 14.29% of topiramate, and 13.33% of amitriptyline disproportionality signals on the basis of purely alternative causes identified in cases. Furthermore, of the disproportionality signals that could not be dismissed purely on the basis of the alternative causes identified, we estimated a 15.32%, 25.39%, and 26.41% reduction in the number of galcanezumab cases to undergo manual validation in comparison with erenumab, topiramate, and amitriptyline, respectively.
CONCLUSION
AI could significantly ease some of the most time-consuming and labor-intensive steps of signal detection and validation. The AI-based approach showed promising results, however, future work is needed to validate the framework.
Topics: United States; Humans; Artificial Intelligence; Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions; Adverse Drug Reaction Reporting Systems; United States Food and Drug Administration; Amitriptyline; Topiramate; Databases, Factual
PubMed: 37300636
DOI: 10.1007/s40264-023-01317-0 -
The Science of the Total Environment Dec 2023This study utilizes wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE) to evaluate spatiotemporal changes in the consumption of antidepressants before and during the COVID-19 pandemic...
This study utilizes wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE) to evaluate spatiotemporal changes in the consumption of antidepressants before and during the COVID-19 pandemic in Slovenia. Composite 24-h influent wastewater samples (n = 210) were collected from six wastewater treatment plants between summer 2019 and spring 2021. The samples were extracted using 96-well solid-phase extraction and analysed by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. The measured concentrations of target antidepressant biomarkers were then converted to population-normalised mass loads (PNMLs), taking into account flow rate and catchment population. Ten biomarkers, including amitriptyline, bupropion, bupropion-OH, citalopram, norcitalopram, normirtazapine, venlafaxine, O-desmethylvenlafaxine, trazodone, and moclobemide, were above the lower limit of quantification and were included in the spatiotemporal temporal assessment. The highest PNMLs were detected for O-desmethylvenlafaxine (mean ± SD: 82.1 ± 21.2 mg/day/1000 inhabitants) and venlafaxine (38.0 ± 10.6 mg/day/1000 inhabitants), followed by citalopram (27.0 ± 10.7 mg/day/1000 inhabitants). In addition, the mean metabolite/parent compound ratios were comparable with other WBE studies indicating consumption rather than direct disposal. Overall, the results indicated significant spatiotemporal variations depending on the location, and the PNMLs of most biomarkers increased during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic (spring of 2020). However, no clear spatial patterns were revealed related to the pandemic.
PubMed: 37640073
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.166586 -
Annals of General Psychiatry Nov 2023Factors influencing antidepressant treatment discontinuation are poorly understood. In the present study, we aimed to estimate the prevalence of antidepressant treatment...
BACKGROUND
Factors influencing antidepressant treatment discontinuation are poorly understood. In the present study, we aimed to estimate the prevalence of antidepressant treatment discontinuation and identify demographic characteristics, psychiatric comorbidities, and specific side effects associated with treatment discontinuation.
METHODS
We leveraged data from the Australian Genetics of Depression Study (AGDS; N = 20,941) to perform a retrospective cohort study on antidepressant treatment discontinuation. Participants were eligible if they were over 18 years of age, had taken antidepressants in the past 4 years, and provided informed consent.
RESULTS
Among the ten antidepressants studied, the highest discontinuation rates were observed for Mirtazapine (57.3%) and Amitriptyline (51.6%). Discontinuation rates were comparable across sexes except for Mirtazapine, for which women were more likely to discontinue. The two most common side effects, reduced sexual function and weight gain, were not associated with increased odds of treatment discontinuation. Anxiety, agitation, suicidal thoughts, vomiting, and rashes were associated with higher odds for treatment discontinuation, as were lifetime diagnoses of PTSD, ADHD, and a higher neuroticism score. Educational attainment showed a negative (protective) association with discontinuation across medications.
CONCLUSIONS
Our study suggests that not all side effects contribute equally to discontinuation. Common side effects such as reduced sexual function and weight gain may not necessarily increase the risk of treatment discontinuation. Side effects linked to discontinuation can be divided into two groups, psychopathology related and allergy/intolerance.
PubMed: 38001492
DOI: 10.1186/s12991-023-00480-z -
Cureus Apr 2023Spinal cord reperfusion injury following decompressive surgery is extremely rare. This complication is known as white cord syndrome (WCS). A 61-year-old male presented...
Spinal cord reperfusion injury following decompressive surgery is extremely rare. This complication is known as white cord syndrome (WCS). A 61-year-old male presented with chronic neck stiffness associated with left C6/C7 radiculopathy and numbness. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the cervical spine reported a severely narrowed left C6/C7 neural exit canal. C6/C7 anterior cervical decompression and fusion (ACDF) was performed. There was no significant intraoperative injury. On postoperative day 6, the patient developed bilateral C8 numbness, which started post-operation. He was treated for surgical site inflammation and was prescribed prednisolone and amitriptyline. However, his condition progressively worsened. At postoperative six weeks, there was right hemisensory loss, right triceps atrophy, and positive right Lhermitte's and Hoffman's tests. This subsequently progressed to right C7 weakness and bilateral lower limb radiculopathy at postoperative eight weeks. Postoperative MRI of the cervical spine revealed a new focal gliosis/edema within the spinal cord at C6/C7. The patient was treated conservatively with pregabalin and was referred for rehabilitation. Early diagnosis and treatment initiation are crucial in the management of WCS. Surgeons should be aware of this potential complication and counsel patients on the risk prior to surgery. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) remains the gold standard in the diagnosis of WCS. The current mainstay of treatment is high-dose steroids, intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring, and early recognition of postoperative WCS.
PubMed: 37252488
DOI: 10.7759/cureus.38177 -
Revista de Neurologia Apr 2022Neuropathic pain (NP) is difficult to treat due to the heterogeneity of causes, symptoms and underlying mechanisms. It constitutes a great medical need that is not... (Review)
Review
INTRODUCTION
Neuropathic pain (NP) is difficult to treat due to the heterogeneity of causes, symptoms and underlying mechanisms. It constitutes a great medical need that is not covered, and has a high number of therapeutic failures in recent randomized clinical trials.
DEVELOPMENT
This narrative review presents an update on the pharmacological treatment of NP with emphasis on the new published clinical guidelines, new drugs in development, and the new challenges that arise in the therapeutic management of this entity.
CONCLUSIONS
First-line drugs proposed include tricyclic antidepressants (particularly amitriptyline), serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (particularly duloxetine), pregabalin, and gabapentin. However, the latest recommendations are still relevant and the most recent clinical studies even question the role of pregabalin as a first-line treatment. Therefore, we consider that periodic updates of the clinical guidelines in NP are necessary to better guide our daily clinical practice and rationalize the use of all available therapeutic options. Furthermore, the expansion of knowledge in NP has generated a series of challenges, such as the development of new drugs based on pathophysiological mechanisms investigated in animals, and the development of optimal therapeutic approaches in clinical trials, based more on personalized than etiological approaches.
Topics: Amitriptyline; Analgesics; Animals; Antidepressive Agents, Tricyclic; Gabapentin; Humans; Neuralgia; Pregabalin
PubMed: 35383875
DOI: 10.33588/rn.7408.2021381 -
Andrology Nov 2022Rat isolated vas deferens releases 6-nitrodopamine (6-ND), and the spasmogenic activity of this novel catecholamine is significantly reduced by tricyclic compounds such...
BACKGROUND
Rat isolated vas deferens releases 6-nitrodopamine (6-ND), and the spasmogenic activity of this novel catecholamine is significantly reduced by tricyclic compounds such as amitriptyline, desipramine, and carbamazepine and by antagonists of the α -adrenergic receptors such as doxazosin, tamsulosin, and prazosin.
OBJECTIVES
To investigate the liberation of 6-ND by human epididymal vas deferens (HEVDs) and its pharmacological actions.
METHODS
The in vitro liberation of 6-ND, dopamine, noradrenaline, and adrenaline from human vas deferens was evaluated by LC-MS/MS. The contractile effect of the catecholamines in HEVDs was investigated in vitro. The action of tricyclic antidepressants was evaluated on the spasmogenic activity ellicited by the catecholamines and by the electric-field stimulation (EFS). The tissue was also incubated with the inhibitor of nitric oxide (NO) synthase L-NAME and the release of catecholamines and the contractile response to EFS were assessed.
RESULTS
6-ND is the major catecholamine released from human vas deferens and its synthesis/release is inhibited by NO inhibition. The spasmogenic activity elicited by EFS in the human vas deferens was blocked by tricyclic antidepressants only at concentrations that selectively antagonize 6-ND induced contractions of the human vas deferens, without affecting the spasmogenic activity induced by dopamine, noradrenaline, and adrenaline in this tissue. Incubation of the vas deferens with L-NAME reduced both the 6-ND release and the contractions induced by EFS.
DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION
6-ND should be considered a major endogenous modulator of human vas deferens contractility and possibly plays a pivotal role in the emission process of ejaculation. It offers a novel and shared mechanism of action for tricyclic antidepressants and α -adrenergic receptor antagonists.
Topics: Adrenergic Antagonists; Amitriptyline; Animals; Antidepressive Agents, Tricyclic; Carbamazepine; Chromatography, Liquid; Desipramine; Dopamine; Doxazosin; Epinephrine; Humans; Male; Muscle Contraction; Muscle, Smooth; NG-Nitroarginine Methyl Ester; Nitric Oxide; Norepinephrine; Prazosin; Rats; Receptors, Adrenergic; Tamsulosin; Tandem Mass Spectrometry; Vas Deferens
PubMed: 35934935
DOI: 10.1111/andr.13263