Table 1.
Country | Study/Years | Patient No. | Event/duration | Drug Use | Hazard Ratio (HR); [95% CIs] | Reference |
United Kingdom | General Practice Research Database (GPRD) 1995–2011 | 183,392 patients (115,491 typical; 67,901 atypical) versus 544,726 general population controls or 193,920 psychiatric non-users | All-cause mortality | Atypical and typical antipsychotics | Users matched to psychiatric non-users HR = 2.15; [2.10–2.21] and HR = 2.98; [2.93–3.03] matched with general population non-users. | Jones et al., 2013 [37]; Murray-Thomas et al., 2013 [36] |
Sudden cardiac death was greatly increased in psychiatric users versus the psychiatric matched non-users with HR = 5.76; [2.90–11.45] | ||||||
UK Clinical Practice Research Datalink 1998–2013 | 60,121 dementia patients | First-time seizures in Dementia patients over 15-year period | Atypical antipsychotics Olanzapine, quetiapine | *HR = 2.335 [1.35–4.01] | Bloechliger et al., 2015 [38] | |
Low-to-medium potency typical antipsychotics | HR = 3.01 [1.34–6.64] | [38] | ||||
Medium-to-high potency typical antipsychotics | HR = 2.21 [1.05–4.62] | [38] | ||||
Welsh Secure Anonymised Information Linkage (SAIL) databank 2003–2011 | 9,674 newly diagnosed dementia patients aged≥65 years | All-cause Mortality and serious adverse events. 12 months prior compared to 12 months post starting antipychotic | Typical 1513 | Prior event rate ratio PERR used as HR = 2.07 [1.732–2.473]. Increased SAEs as Cardiac arrest, venous thromboembolism, stroke or hip fracture. Mainly in first 100 days of use. | Dennis et al., 2017 [40] | |
Atypical 1687 | ||||||
France | 16 French Memory Centres | 534 Alzheimer’s Dementia patients, 102 new users | All-cause Mortality in Alzheimer’s dementia 3.5-year follow-up | Antipsychotics (typical and atypical) new use versus non-user control | HR = 1.93; [1.15–3.25] | Gardette et al., 2012 [41] |
Norway | 2014 Norwegian Prescription Database | 26,940 dementia outpatients | All-cause mortality in Dementia patients short (30 day) or long term use (730–2400 days), Follow up over more than 6 years | Antipsychotic (ATC code N05A) use versus other psychotropics: antidepressants (N06A), benzodiazepine (N03AE01, N05B, N05C), benzodiazepine-like agents (N05C), lithium (N05AN01), and anticonvulsive drugs (N03A). | HR30days = 2.1 [1.6–2.9] | Langballe et al., 2014 [42] |
HR730 - 2,400days = 1.7 [1.6–1.9]. | ||||||
Haloperidol HR 30 days = 1.7 [1.0–3.0], HR 730–2,400 days = 1.4 [1.0–1.9] compared to risperidone. | ||||||
Denmark | Danish National Patient Registry 1997–2009 | 26,821 dementia patients versus 44,286 matched control non-users. | All-cause mortality in dementia patients or non-dementia patients | Psychotropics: | SSRIs HR = 1.355 (SD = 0.023), P = 0.001 in patients versus HR = 1.808 (0.033), p < 0.001 in non-dementia users), | Jennum et al., 2015 [43] |
Also compared use in dementia versus non-dementia users. | 4 up to 12-year follow-up | Antidepressants (SSRI) Benzodiazepines, and Typical or Atypical Antipsychotics | Tricyclic antidepressants (HR = 1.004 (0.046), p = 0.925 versus HR = 1.406 (0.061), p < 0.001) in non-dementia users. | |||
Versus non-user controls | Benzodiazepines HR = 1.131 (SD = 0.039), p = 0.060 patients versus HR = 1.362 (0.028), p < 0.001 in non-dementia users. | |||||
Typical antipsychotics (HR = 1.183 (SD = 0.074), p = 0.022 versus HR = 2.026 (SD = 0.114) in non-dementia users, p < 0.001. Atypical antipsychotics (HR = 1.380 (SD = 0.042) patients, p < 0.001 versus HR = 1.785 (SD = 0.088), p < 0.001) in non-dementia users. | ||||||
Danish National Patient Registries 2000–2011 | 45,894 Alzheimer’s Dementia patients | All-cause Mortality in Dementia patients: | Antipsychotics: Atypical and Typical | Current antipsychotic users (prior 12 months) HR = 2.31; [2.14–2.49], p < 0.001 | Nielsen et al., 2017 [44] | |
Cardiovascular, infection, cancer | ATC Code = N05A except Lithium. | |||||
12-month follow-up | Versus non-user control | |||||
Finland | Finnish National Prescription Register (FNPR) 2000–2008 | 332 community dwelling elderly (≥65 years, 0.5% dementia) | All-cause Mortality 9-year follow up | New users of antipsychotics | HR = 2.71; [2.3–3.2] | Gisev et al., 2012 [45] |
MEDALZ 2005–2011 | 15,806 Alzheimer’s dementia from 57,755 community-dwelling newly diagnosed Alzheimer’s patients 2005–2011 | All-cause Mortality. | Antipsychotics | Antipsychotic monotherapy (HR = 1.61; [1.53–1.70]) compared to non-users. | Koponen et al., 2017 [46] | |
Median follow-up 2.5 years | (HR1 - 30days = 1.74 to HR30 - 90days = 2.11). At 2 years, HR = 1.30; [1.16–1.46]. Haloperidol HR = 1.52; [1.14–2.02]) relative to risperidone. | |||||
>1mg Haloperidol HR = 2.55; [1.7–3.85] relative to risperidone. | ||||||
Japan | 2014 | 10,000 dementia patients | All-cause Mortality in Alzheimer patients. | Antipsychotics (typical and atypical) new use versus non-user control | New users | Arai et al., 2016 [47] |
11-24-week follow-up | *HR = 3.7; [1.57–8.3] | |||||
Taiwan | Longitudinal Health Insurance Database 2000 (LHID2000) | 183,410 patients on antipsychotic monotherapy 1996–2011 | All-cause Mortality follow up varied from 2–6 years | Typical Antipsychotics Chlorpromazine (2133) | New users <30 day, 30–90 day and >90 days | Wang et al., 2016 [72] |
Haloperidol (4454) | Haloperidol HR30 = 2.11; [1.87–2.39], risperidone HR30 = 1.79; [1.45–2.22] relative to chlorpromazine as reference. | |||||
Atypical antipsychotics | ||||||
Quetiapine (1513) | ||||||
Risperidone (1046) | ||||||
Italy | Milan health information database 2002–2008 | 4,369 dementia patients≥60 years | All-cause Mortality over 2-year follow up | typical (n = 156) versus atypical (n = 806) antipsychotic drugs | New users antipsychotics. | Musicco et al., [48] - 2011 |
Atypical (HR = 2.5; [2.05–3.1]) | ||||||
Typical (HR = 3.7; [2.6–5.1]) | ||||||
Teramo Hospital 2007–2009 | 696 Alzheimer’s dementia patients≥65 years | All-cause Mortality follow up over 3 years; n = 375 users compared to non-user control | Atypical Antipsychotics (quetiapine, risperidone and olanzapine) | HR = 2.354; [1.704–3.279] | Piersanti et al., 2014 [49] | |
REPOSI (Registro Politerapie Società Italiana Medicina Interna) database 2010–2012 | 135 dementia (≥65 years; mean age ∼80 years) | All-cause Mortality over 90 days | Antipsychotics promazine, chlorpromazine, olanzapine, levomepromazine, haloperidol, amisulpride, clotiapine, tiapride, zuclopenthixol, quetiapine, risperidone, periciazine, levosulpiride and clozapine. | New users | Chiesa et al., 2017 [50] | |
Hr = 1.57; [0.95–2.61] | ||||||
Spain | FEDRA Spanish system for Drug Surveillance 1995–2012 | N = 5,203 adverse event – exposed; N = 200 related deaths – all users | All-cause Mortality plus adverse events. All users versus users of other drugs | Antipsychotics versus any other drugs as control | Atypical antipsychotics | Martin Arias et al., 2017 [24] |
HR = 2.47; [2.10–2.92] | ||||||
Typical antispychotics | ||||||
HR = 1.79; [1.47–2.18] | ||||||
Particularly: zuclopenthixol (HR = 3.39; [1.75–6.59]) | ||||||
risperidone HR = 2.07; [1.56–2.75) | ||||||
Haloperidol HR = 2.71; 1.98–3.69]. No difference between elderly versus younger groups. | ||||||
7 European Union countries; including Israel | 59 Nursing homes 2009–2011 | Dementia patients n = 604≥65 years old | All-cause mortality in dementia patients | Antipsychotic users n = 278 versus other drugs as control. | HR = 1.71; [1.15–2.54] | Liperoti et al., 2017 [23] |
Australia | Nationwide memory clinics | Community based dementia patients 779. Mostly >65 years | follow-up 3 years with mortality determined at 8 years | Atypical antipsychotic drugs versus non-users | Atypical HR = 1.61; [1.29–2.02] (p < 0.01) | Connors et al., 2016 [51] |
U.S.A. | Tennessee Medicaid records 1990–2005 | Antipsychotic drug users 30–74 years old (mean age 46) | Sudden cardiac death from baseline. Median follow-up 2.5 years | Antipsychotic users (Typical 44218, atypical 44089) versus 186,600 non-users (sub-group to matched psychiatric non-users) | Typical HR = 1.99; [1.69–2.35] | Ray et al., 2009 [52] |
Atypical HR = 2.26; [1.88–2.72]. Dose-related with high dose HR = 2.7 | ||||||
1998–2005 National VHA database Texas | Antipsychotics dementia users versus non-user control N = 8,867–32,996 | All-cause mortality, 5-year follow-up | Antipsychotics | 30 day first use: | Rossom et al., 2010 [53] | |
≥65 years old | Haloperidol, 2,217 | HR = 3.2; [2.2–4.5], p < 0.001 | ||||
Quetiapine, 4,277 | HR = 1.2; [0.7–1.8], p = 0.5 | |||||
Olanzapine, 3,384 | HR = 1.5; [1.1–2.0], p = 0.01 | |||||
Risperidone, 8,249 | HR = 1.5; [1.1–2.2], p = 0.01 | |||||
1998–2000 Across 5 states. Nursing homes | 6,524 new users atypical and 3205 typical antipsychotics≥65 years old | All-cause mortality in dementia patients. | Typical Antipsychotics cf’d atypicals. | HR = 1.26; [1.13–1.42] | Liperoti et al., 2009 [6] | |
6-month follow-up | Except quetiapine or olanzapine cf’d risperdone. | HR = 1.06; [0.80–1.39] | ||||
Haloperidol compared to risperidone. | HR = 0.95; [0.8–1.12] | |||||
risperidone (n = 4,406); haloperidol (n = 1,413) | HR = 1.31; [1.13–1.53] | |||||
2001–2005 Nursing homes | 75,445≥65 years | All-cause mortality elderly in nursing homes. | Antipsychotic | HR = 2.07; [1.89–2.26] | Huybrechts et al., 2012 [7] | |
6-month follow-up | Haloperidol compared to risperidone | |||||
Dept. Veteran Affairs 1999–2008 | 33,604≥65 years | All-cause mortality in dementia patients. | Antipsychotic | Haloperidol HR = 1.54; [1.38–1.73] compared to valproate | Kales et al., [8]- 2012 | |
6-month follow-up | (risperidone, olanzapine, quetiapine, or haloperidol) | |||||
Dept. Veteran Affairs 1998–2009 | 90,786≥65 years | All-cause mortality in dementia patients. | New users of atypical antipsychotics (olanzapine, quetiapine, and risperidone, haloperidol). Dose-related increase in mortality compared to matched non-user controls or alternatively, antidepressants as reference group; | Haloperidol HR = 1.123; [1.086–1.16]; p < 0.01 cf’d antidepressant group. | Maust et al., 2015 [54, 55] | |
6-month follow-up | Atypical antipsychotics (olanzapine, quetiapine, and risperidone) dose-response increase in mortality risk, HR = 1.035; [1.005–1.065]; p = 0.02 in the high-dose subgroup relative to the low-dose group. |
*Relative risk (RR) calculated from adjusted Odds Ratio (OR) given incidence in controls using online convertor (http://clincalc.com/stats/convertor.aspx).