Suicide remains a global public health problem.Reference Zheng, Molassiotis, Tyrovolas and Yip1 Clinicians and patients are in critical need of effective interventions to prevent suicide but researchers have found few interventions with proven efficacy.Reference Riblet, Shiner, Young-Xu and Watts2,Reference Platt and Niederkrotenthaler3 In addition, it is difficult to study suicide in a clinical trial.Reference Perlis4 Generally, studies require well over 1000 patients to detect an effect.Reference Riblet, Shiner, Young-Xu and Watts2 To bolster statistical power and ability to detect a true effect, researchers increasingly use approaches such as meta-analysis.Reference Riblet, Shiner, Young-Xu and Watts2
Although lithium has been viewed as a promising strategy to prevent suicidal behaviour since the 1970s,Reference Lewitzka, Severus, Bauer, Ritter, Müller-Oerlinghausen and Bauer5 there remains controversy about whether it can prevent suicide.Reference Riblet, Shiner, Young-Xu and Watts2,Reference Lewitzka, Severus, Bauer, Ritter, Müller-Oerlinghausen and Bauer5,Reference Cipriani, Hawton, Stockton and Geddes6 In a meta-analysis of four randomised controlled trials (RCTs) of lithium versus placebo, Cipriani et al (2013) found that lithium was more protective against suicide than placebo (n = 485; odds ratio OR = 0.13, 95% CI 0.03–0.66).Reference Cipriani, Hawton, Stockton and Geddes6 In a subsequent meta-analysis of six RCTs of lithium versus control (placebo, usual care or waiting list), Riblet et al (2017) found that the odds of suicide were lower with lithium, but the results were not significant (n = 619; OR = 0.23, 95% CI 0.05–1.02; incidence rate ratio IRR = 0.14, 95% CI 0.00–9.41).Reference Riblet, Shiner, Young-Xu and Watts2
A key limitation of existing meta-analyses of lithium for suicide prevention is the reliance on relatively small population samples.Reference Riblet, Shiner, Young-Xu and Watts2,Reference Cipriani, Hawton, Stockton and Geddes6 This has yielded wide confidence intervalsReference Riblet, Shiner, Young-Xu and Watts2 and limited the interpretation of positiveReference Cipriani, Hawton, Stockton and Geddes6 and negativeReference Riblet, Shiner, Young-Xu and Watts2 findings. Because few clinical interventions have proven efficacy in preventing suicideReference Riblet, Shiner, Young-Xu and Watts2,Reference Platt and Niederkrotenthaler3 and the anti-suicidal effect of lithium is debatable,Reference Riblet, Shiner, Young-Xu and Watts2,Reference Lewitzka, Severus, Bauer, Ritter, Müller-Oerlinghausen and Bauer5,Reference Cipriani, Hawton, Stockton and Geddes6 it is crucial that researchers report on evidence as it emerges in the field. This knowledge can inform clinical practice and future research.
Given the recent publication of the largest ever RCT of lithium for suicide prevention,Reference Katz, Rogers, Lew, Thwin, Doros and Ahearn7 we performed a new meta-analysis of lithium use in the prevention of suicide in adults. A review of current evidence will provide healthcare providers, policymakers and researchers with an improved understanding of the clinical use (and future direction of research) of lithium for suicide prevention.
Method
As described in the supplementary Methods (available at https://doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2022.605) we developed a study protocol to identify studies, abstract study data, assess study quality and determine the effect of lithium on suicide. The protocol was posted on PROSPERO (CRD42022295822).
We included studies that randomly assigned adult patients to lithium or a control condition (usual care, placebo or waiting list). We searched MEDLINE (via Ovid), Embase, CINAHL, the Cochrane Library's CENTRAL, and PsycINFO from 1 January 2015 to 30 November 2021 to identify published (including ‘Epub ahead of print’) articles that met our inclusion criteria.
We evaluated the relationship between lithium and suicide using the Peto method. We calculated summary OR with 95% CI and P-values. We used a Poisson regression model with random effects to calculate an IRR for suicides over person-years. We applied GRADE methodology to determine the effect of the quality of the evidence on our findings. All analyses were conducted using STATA version 17 for Windows (StataCorp). Because this was a study of published literature, ethics approval and informed consent were not required.
Results
As shown in supplementary Fig. 1, we identified seven RCTs that randomly assigned adult patients to lithium or a control condition (placebo or usual care) and reported on suicide. The seven studies were all conducted in Europe and North America and enrolled patients with major depressive disorder or bipolar disorder (supplementary Table 1).
Within the identified studies, the odds of suicide were lower for the 568 patients allocated to lithium than for the 570 allocated to a control condition (OR = 0.30, 95% CI 0.09–1.02, P = 0.05) (Fig. 1). The IRR favoured lithium (IRR = 0.22, 95% CI 0.05–1.05, P = 0.06). The findings, however, were not significant.
We did not observe substantial or significant heterogeneity among the included studies (Cochran's Q = 3.60, I 2 = 0%, P = 0.61). On visual inspection, we identified one study with an extremely wide confidence interval. This was the only study that included treatment as usual as a comparator and the results favoured the control condition.
In a risk of bias assessment, we identified some concerns about the potential effect of study assignment and adherence (supplementary Table 2). This was usually because the authors reported that some participants did not adhere to the study drug. Several studies reported high rates of attrition. A few studies encountered problems with recruitment.
A visual inspection of the funnel plot suggested no evidence of publication bias. The summary estimate included a smaller study that reported a negative result (Fig. 1; supplementary Fig. 2).
According to our GRADE analysis, the certainty of the evidence in favour of lithium was moderate. The finding was important as it pertains to mortality (supplementary Table 3).
Discussion
Our meta-analysis showed that lithium was associated with a 70% lower odds of suicide. Although the finding is promising, the results were not significant. Our results corroborate those of prior meta-analysesReference Riblet, Shiner, Young-Xu and Watts2 as well as that of an individual large trialReference Katz, Rogers, Lew, Thwin, Doros and Ahearn7 suggesting that there is insufficient evidence to support that lithium has an anti-suicidal effect. Yet the results of our review emphasise the need to study further the role of lithium for suicide prevention. First, unlike prior meta-analyses,Reference Riblet, Shiner, Young-Xu and Watts2 by including over 1000 patients in our analysis, we were able to generate a substantially narrowed confidence interval around the IRR estimate. Second, we made a conservative decision to exclude from the analysis a single death due to opioid overdose.Reference Katz, Rogers, Lew, Thwin, Doros and Ahearn7 There was no indication in the study that this death was classified as a suicide.Reference Katz, Rogers, Lew, Thwin, Doros and Ahearn7 Experts in the field have raised concerns that some overdose deaths may be misclassified suicides.Reference Rockett and Caine8 Related to these concerns, in the suicide prevention literature there is growing interest in addressing self-injury mortality (defined as suicide deaths by any method plus estimated deaths due to accidental or undetermined drug overdose) rather than suicide mortality alone.Reference Rockett and Caine8,Reference Rockett, Lilly, Jia, Larkin, Miller and Nelson9 The inclusion of that overdose deathReference Katz, Rogers, Lew, Thwin, Doros and Ahearn7 in our study would have generated a significant finding in favour of lithium for self-injury mortality prevention (OR = 0.28, 95% CI 0.08–0.90; IRR = 0.20, 95% CI 0.04–0.93). Lastly, it is worth recalling that a P-value of 0.05 or 0.06 indicates a 5–6% possibility that our results were due to chance rather than an anti-suicide effect of lithium.
There are several proposed theories to explain why lithium might be effective at preventing suicide.Reference Lewitzka, Severus, Bauer, Ritter, Müller-Oerlinghausen and Bauer5 One of the many possibilities includes lithium's role as a mood stabiliser.Reference Lewitzka, Severus, Bauer, Ritter, Müller-Oerlinghausen and Bauer5 There is some evidence in the literature that links impulsivity to suicidal behaviour.Reference Lewitzka, Severus, Bauer, Ritter, Müller-Oerlinghausen and Bauer5,Reference Maser, Akiskal, Schettler, Scheftner, Mueller and Endicott10 For example, in a 14-year naturalistic study of patients with affective illness, Maser et al (2002) found that impulsivity was one of the best predictors of suicide after 1-year follow-up (sensitivity 74%, specificity 82%).Reference Maser, Akiskal, Schettler, Scheftner, Mueller and Endicott10
It is a strength of our review that we have produced summary estimates for over 1100 patients and improved the precision of the estimate. The trials, however, varied in their target (and actual) lithium levels. Some studies reported poor recruitment, low treatment adherence or high study attrition. Most studies followed patients for less than 1 year. Finally, the generalisability of our results to populations outside of Europe and North America, or patients without depression or bipolar disorder, remains unclear.
Because the findings from our meta-analysis raise questions about the benefit of lithium for suicide prevention, we caution clinicians, researchers and policymakers against dismissing further examination of lithium for suicide prevention.
Supplementary material
Supplementary material is available online at https://doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2022.605.
Data availability
The data sources used in this study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.
Author contributions
N.B.R.: conceptualisation, methodology, formal analysis, investigation, software, data curation, validation, visualisation, article drafting, reviewing and editing; Y.Y.-X.: conceptualisation, methodology, formal analysis, investigation, software, validation, article drafting, reviewing and editing; B.S.: conceptualisation, data curation, funding acquisition, project administration, resources, visualisation, article drafting, reviewing and editing; B.V.W.: conceptualisation, data curation, article reviewing and editing, visualisation, supervision.
Funding
This study was funded by the Veterans Affairs (VA) National Center for Patient Safety Center of Inquiry Program, Ann Arbor, Michigan (B.S.: PSCI-WRJ-SHINER). The supporters had no role in the design, analysis, interpretation or publication of this study. B.S. and N.B.R. received funding from the US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Office of Rural Health. N.B.R. received funding through the VA Clinical Science Research and Development Career Development Award Program (MHBC-007-19F). The views expressed in this article do not necessarily represent the views of the Department of Veterans Affairs or of the United States government.
Declaration of interest
None.
eLetters
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