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Polypharmacy in psychiatric inpatients: Data from amsp (arzneimittelsicherheit in der psychiatrie), a european pharmacovigilance system
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 April 2020
Abstract
Psychotropic polypharmacy is widely used in routine clinical practice although there is still a substantial deficit in established knowledge about combination and augmentation treatments. Polypharmacy is related with a higher risk of adverse drug reactions and incompliance.
On two reference days per hospital and per year, the following data are recorded for all patients on the wards under AMSP surveillance: all drugs applied on that day with the daily dosage for psychotropic drugs, ICD diagnosis, age, and sex. Data is stored at the study center in Munich. We evaluated data from 2000 (N = 5669) and 2007 (N = 8346).
From 2000 to 2007 inpatient prescriptions including three or more drugs increased significantly from 59.4% to 69.3% (chi2: 144.913; df:1; p < 0.001). Furthermore the percentage of inpatients being prescribed three or more psychotropics increased significantly from 36.5% in 2000 to 47.97% in 2007 (chi2: 180.01; df:1; p < 0.001).
Investigating further, which inpatients, diagnosed according to ICD-10, tend to be treated with more than two psychotropics, we found that this was more common in inpatients, who had an F2., F3. or F9. ICD-10 diagnosis. Especially inpatients with a bipolar disorder (F31.) showed an extremely high rate for psychotropic polypharmacy with three or more psychotropic drugs, with rates of 63,8% in 2000 and 75,2% in 2007.
Polypharmacy is still gaining ground. Our results show that psychotropic agents are commonly used in combination; therefore further studies evaluating assumable positive results of psychotropic combinations are needed.
- Type
- P01-587
- Information
- European Psychiatry , Volume 26 , Issue S2: Abstracts of the 19th European Congress of Psychiatry , March 2011 , pp. 591
- Copyright
- Copyright © European Psychiatric Association2011
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