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Antidepressants linked to cardiac death

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People taking anti-psychotic drugs and anti-depressant drugs have a much higher risk of dying during an acute coronary event of a fatal arrhythmia than the rest of the population, according to research published in the European Heart Journal.

The study showed that the combined use of both antipsychotic and antidepressant drugs was associated with an even greater risk of sudden cardiac death (SCD) during a coronary event.

“We’ve known for some time that mental disorders increase the risk of cardiovascular mortality, but it hasn’t been clearly established if psychiatric disorders, such as depression or schizophrenia, predispose to the occurrence of cardiovascular events or if they increase the patient’s vulnerability to suffer fatal outcomes during the event,” said Heikki Huikuri, the study’s lead author from the Institute of Clinical Medicine, University of Oulu, Finland.

“For the first time, this study has shown us that it is the increased vulnerability during the event that is the determining factor.

“It points to an urgent need to improve screening for cardiovascular risk factors in psychiatric patients.”

The study was part of the larger Finnish Genetic Study of Arrhythmic Events (FinGesture), a prospective case-control study designed to compare genetic and other risk profiles of the victims of sudden cardiac death with the survivors of acute coronary events.

Between 1998 and 2009 FinGesture collected data on 2732 consecutive victims of out of hospital sudden death from an area in Northern Finland, with each case having autopsy confirmation of sudden cardiac death during an acute coronary event.

The control group was composed of 1256 patients treated at the University Hospital of Oulu who survived acute myocardial infarction.

Information about the victims’ latest medication was collected from medico legal autopsy reports and questionnaires answered by relatives.

The results showed that 9.7% of patients in the sudden death group had used antipsychotics in comparison to 2.4% in the control group (OR 4.4. 95% CI 2.9-6.6; P<0.001).

For antidepressants 8.6 % of patients in the sudden death group had used this class of drugs compared to 5.5% in the control group (OR 1.6, 95% CI 1.2-2.2; P=0.003).

Furthermore, results showed that combining phenothiazines and any antidepressant was associated with a very high risk of SCD (OR 18.3, 95% CI: 2.5 – 135.3<0.001).

The analysis showed that differences in the use of psychotropic medications between the two groups remained significant after adjusting for the use of cardiovascular drugs such as aspirin, beta blocking medication and angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors.

In the study, victims of SCD used both tricyclic anti-depressants (TCAs) and anti-psychotics more frequently, but excess use of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) and newer antidepressants was not found to be significant.

European Heart Journal






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