USA Today investigates hazards related to increased prescriptions of neuroleptics -- also known as antipsychotics -- given to children in the USA.
New antipsychotic drugs carry risks for children
Date Published: 2007-05-02 02:00
Author: By Marilyn Elias
Source: USA Today
For original news article with links to side bars click here.
Nancy
Thomas remembers the bad old days when she had to wear long-sleeve
clothes to church to cover bite marks all over her arms from her
daughter Alexa's rages.
At age 8, Alexa was diagnosed with
bipolar disorder. She was a violent child with sharp mood swings and
meltdowns that drove her to tear up the house. Antidepressants and
drugs for attention-deficit disorder had only made Alexa more
aggressive, Thomas says.
A mix of medicines including so-called
atypical antipsychotics — drugs approved only for adults — finally
stabilized Alexa's moods. Now at 15, she is able to live a more normal
life — as long as she takes the medication.
Even so, the
Russellville, Mo., teen is paying a price: On one of the atypical
antipsychotics, Alexa gained about 100 pounds in a year, putting her at
risk for a host of health problems, including diabetes. It has taken
her three years to lose a third of that extra weight; she is still
struggling with the rest.
Atypicals are a new generation of
antipsychotic drugs approved by the Food and Drug Administration for
adult schizophrenia and bipolar disorder (manic depression). None of
the six drugs — Clozaril, Risperdal, Zyprexa, Seroquel, Abilify and
Geodon — is approved for kids, but doctors can prescribe them as
"off-label" medications.
Psychiatrists say the drugs can be
helpful for children with serious mental illnesses and have been known
to save young lives. But diagnosis often is difficult, making
appropriate prescribing tricky. And many experts, including behavioral
pediatrician Lawrence Diller, author of Should I Medicate My Child?,
say there is growing overuse of these powerful antipsychotics.
Schizophrenia
is rare in children under 18: It strikes about 1 in 40,000, as opposed
to 1 in 100 adults, according to the National Institute of Mental
Health. Nobody knows exactly how many kids have bipolar disorder;
psychiatrists don't even agree on criteria to diagnose the disease in
childhood.
Research on how the drugs affect children is sparse,
and experts increasingly are concerned that the drugs are being
prescribed too often for children with behavior problems, such as
attention-deficit disorder and aggression.
John March, chief of
child and adolescent psychiatry at Duke University School of Medicine,
prescribes the drugs to kids in some cases of serious illness when he
thinks the benefits outweigh the risks. But he says prescribing them
for behavior problems alone may be a mistake. "We have no evidence
about the safety of these agents or their effectiveness in controlling
aggression," he says. "Why are we doing this?"
At the same time,
reports of deaths and dangerous side effects linked to the drugs are
mounting. A USA TODAY study of FDA data collected from 2000 to 2004
shows at least 45 deaths of children in which an atypical antipsychotic
was listed in the FDA database as the "primary suspect." There also
were 1,328 reports of bad side effects, some of them life-threatening.
Drug
companies are required to file any reports they have to the FDA, but
consumers and doctors report such events on a voluntary basis. Studies
suggest the FDA's Adverse Events Reporting System database captures
only 1% to 10% of drug-induced side effects and deaths, "maybe even
less than 1%," says clinical pharmacologist Alastair J.J. Wood, an
associate dean at Vanderbilt Medical School in Nashville. So the real
number of cases is almost certainly much higher.
"We're conducting a very large experiment on our children," March says.
Side effects that linger
Some parents tell stories of serious effects that linger long after their kids stop taking the drugs.
Rex
Evans' parents are bitter about what happened to their son. They
believe the 13-year-old Colorado Springs boy was harmed permanently by
an atypical antipsychotic he took several years ago. Rex now has a
serious case of tardive dyskinesia (TD), suffering daily episodes of
involuntary jerking movements and facial grimacing, says Erin Evans,
his mother.
Antipsychotics are known to cause TD, but it's thought to be a rare effect for the newer atypicals.
Despite
such reports, outpatient prescriptions for kids ages 2 to 18 leaped
fivefold — from just under half a million to about 2.5 million — from
1995 to 2002, according to a new analysis of a federal survey by
Vanderbilt Medical School researchers. This doesn't include
prescriptions at psychiatric hospitals or residential treatment centers.
And
even though the drugs are approved only for adults, the rate of
children treated with atypicals "is growing dramatically faster than
the rate for adults," says Robert Epstein, chief medical officer for
Medco Health Solutions, pharmacy benefit managers.
Medco did an
analysis of outpatient prescriptions for USA TODAY and found that, in a
sampling of about 2.5 million of Medco's 55 million members, the rate
of children 19 and under with at least one atypical prescription jumped
80% from 2001 to 2005 — from 3.6 per 1,000 to 6.5 per 1,000. And that
only represents kids who are privately insured, not those in foster
care or others on Medicaid.
"We know these are very strong medicines," Epstein says. "You'd want to be absolutely sure the child needs it."
The more serious risks
Because
of the nature of the FDA data, they don't prove that these drugs caused
the deaths or the side effects. Many side effects for which an atypical
is listed as the "primary suspect" occurred in the normal course of
using the drug, but the database also includes cases involving drug
abuse, overdoses, suicides and homicides. Entries are sometimes
cryptic, and the FDA enters verbatim — misspellings and all — what's
reported on the form.
Still, the data "can be a useful signaling
device" suggesting problems with a drug that warrant conclusive
studies, says Jerome Avorn, a pharmacology specialist at Harvard
Medical School and author of the book Powerful Medicines.
One-fourth
of the cases in the database studied by USA TODAY did not list the
patient's age. But in cases that listed an age under 18:
• A
condition called dystonia was most often cited as an "adverse event"
suffered by someone taking one of the drugs, with 103 reports. Dystonia
produces involuntary, often painful muscle contractions.
•
Tremors, weight gain and sedation often were cited, along with
neurological effects such as TD. Symptoms of TD can vary from slight
twitching to full-blown jerking of the body.
• A condition
called neuroleptic malignant syndrome, with 41 pediatric cases over the
five years, was the most troubling effect listed, says child
psychiatrist Joseph Penn of Bradley Hospital and Brown University
School of Medicine. It is life-threatening and can kill within 24 hours
of diagnosis. It's been linked to drugs that act on the brain's
dopamine receptors, which would include the atypicals, Penn says.
The
FDA office of drug safety checks the database, "and we haven't been
alerted to any particular or unusual concern," says Thomas Laughren,
director of the agency's division of psychiatry products. "The effects
(in kids) are similar to what we're seeing in adults. We have not
systematically looked at the data for children" because the drugs
aren't approved for them, he says.
The 45 deaths
Among
the 45 pediatric deaths in which atypicals were the primary suspect, at
least six were related to diabetes — atypicals carry warnings that the
drugs may increase the risk of high blood sugar and diabetes. Other
causes of death ranged from heart and pulmonary problems to suicide,
choking and liver failure.
An 8-year-old boy had cardiac arrest.
A 15-year-old boy died of an overdose. A 13-year-old girl experienced
diabetic ketoacidosis, a deficiency of insulin.
More than half
of the kids who died were on at least one other psychiatric drug
besides the atypical antipsychotic, and many were taking drugs for
other ailments.
The youngest, a 4-year-old boy whose symptoms suggested diabetes complications, was taking 10 other drugs.
The
reports don't tell the child's general state of health or other factors
that could predispose him to trouble. Also, neither Clozaril, which is
rarely used, nor Abilify, the newest atypical, was listed as a primary
suspect in any deaths.
All the drugmakers emphasize that their
products are not approved for children, and they say the drugs are safe
and effective for adults with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder who are
monitored for side effects. Still, "there are worrisome questions
here," says Avorn. Large, longer-term database studies could provide
answers, he says.
There's some evidence that the drugs can help
young schizophrenics and may be helpful in treating bipolar disorder in
children, says Robert Findling, a child psychiatrist at University
Hospitals of Cleveland.
But the data from controlled studies
"are too few to guide treatment decisions" on bipolar disorder,
concluded Findling's research team in a summary of pediatric studies
published in the Journal of Clinical Psychiatry.
These
antipsychotics are the most widely used class of drugs to treat
disruptive kids who attack others and defy adults, Findling says.
Again, there's a paucity of proof that the drugs help.
There are
only a handful of carefully controlled, sizable studies testing the
drugs for any pediatric disorder, and they're mostly short-term, says
Benedetto Vitiello, chief of child and adolescent psychiatry at the
national mental health institute. The most serious, widespread problem
found to be caused by the medicines is weight gain, he says. The effect
varies by drug, but kids typically put on twice the pounds they should
in their first six months on atypicals.
In the first three
months on the drugs, children add about 2 to 3 inches to their
waistlines, says research psychiatrist Christoph Correll of Zucker
Hillside Hospital in Glen Oaks, N.Y. A lot of this is abdominal fat,
which increases the risk of diabetes and heart disease. Obese children
are twice as likely as normal-weight children to have diabetes,
according to a new University of Michigan study.
"Some patients
gain weight on Zyprexa and others do not," says Calvin Sumner, a
medical adviser to Eli Lilly Research Laboratories. Lilly makes the
drug, which has been associated with weight gains in adult studies.
Sumner stresses that Zyprexa isn't approved for kids.
There's no
proof atypicals cause diabetes, says Ramy Mahmoud of Janssen LP, maker
of Risperdal. He says the FDA added a label warning of increased
diabetes risk "to make people aware of the possibility."
One key question about atypicals is whether they will have long-term, unknown effects on the brains of children.
The
brain system that the drugs work on develops through childhood and
adolescence, says Cynthia Kuhn, a Duke University pharmacologist. "We
really don't know the impact of chronically perturbing that system in
childhood."
Why atypicals get prescribed
Given all the potential problems, why would doctors prescribe these drugs to children to begin with?
Nobody
disputes that the lives of schizophrenic or severely manic children may
be saved by antipsychotics. "I use them myself for patients," says
March, the Duke psychiatrist. "I have a 9-year-old who threatened to
jump out of a second-story window if her mom didn't give her the car
keys to drive down to the 7-Eleven to get a Coke. If I took her off
antipsychotics, she'd disintegrate."
But several factors can lead to misprescribing of antipsychotics.
It
can be difficult to tell one behavioral disorder or illness from
another in kids. For example, the aggression and irritability of
bipolar disorder can mimic attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder or
depression, the mental health institute says. Also, the environment can
be a key cause of symptoms that may be mistakenly diagnosed as mental
disorders, says Diller, the behavioral pediatrician. Some events in a
child's life can trigger acting-out or other symptoms. Adults can
explain what happened to them; children, especially the youngest, may
be more reticent.
Doctors often face time pressures that prevent
them from finding out what's going on in kids' lives, knowledge that
might suggest alternative treatments, Penn says. For example, abuse of
drugs such as methamphetamine, OxyContin and cocaine is fairly common
among teens, he says. Kids begin acting strangely, hearing voices,
becoming paranoid. The symptoms can mimic psychosis or behavioral
disorders, and doctors can end up giving these children unneeded
antipsychotic drugs, he says.
Insurance coverage rules may
encourage the soaring use of antipsychotics for children, as well.
"With some companies, the only thing they reimburse for is prescribing.
There's little or no therapy," says Ronald Brown, editor of the Journal
of Pediatric Psychology and a dean at Temple University.
Also, kids with serious mental health problems often have at least one hospitalization, but policies cover only a week or two.
It
can take a couple of weeks just to get medical records and family
histories, Penn says, but insurers often extend time if there's a new
medicine started, which encourages drug dabbling for children who are
not ready to go home.
In the end, some parents say their
children have such severe behavior disorders or mental illness that the
benefits outweigh risks.
Parents of children such as Alexa
Thomas, who have bipolar disorder, say the atypicals often help. "We
were very fortunate," says Alexa's mother, special-education director
for the Russellville, Mo., school district. "The medication worked for
my daughter. It doesn't work for everybody."
Misdiagnosis common
The
Vanderbilt study of antipsychotic prescribing finds at least 13% of
pediatric prescriptions are for bipolar disorder. But there is some
concern about over-diagnosis and "jumping to this (bipolar) label too
quickly," says psychiatrist Peter Jensen, head of the Center for the
Advancement of Children's Mental Health at Columbia University.
Sandra
Spencer's son, Stephen, was diagnosed as bipolar at age 6 and put on
atypicals. He developed liver abnormalities and obesity, his mother
says. "He's been on a smorgasbord of meds," she says. None worked well
for very long.
By the time he was in sixth grade, doctors said
they weren't sure Stephen was bipolar after all. Now 15, he is on low
doses of an antidepressant and mood stabilizer. He's being weaned off
both, says Spencer, executive director of the Federation of Families
for Children's Mental Health, a support group.
She worries about
how the drugs have affected Stephen, who is black: As little
psychiatric drug research as there is on children, there's least of all
on minority kids. Some drugs are known to affect black adults
differently from whites. "He probably had ADHD all along," Spencer
says. "Psychiatry is so not an exact science."
Child
psychiatrist Barbara Geller, a bipolar expert at Washington University
in St. Louis, agrees: "The science is nowhere near where it is in other
branches of medicine."
So parents struggle to make the right
decisions for very troubled kids. "There's a lot of fear among
parents," Spencer says. "You don't know what the effects of these drugs
are going to be. You're at the mercy of your doctor.
"I have had
to make a lot of decisions, and they were fear-driven. You don't have
enough information to make an intelligent decision."
Contributing: Susan O'Brian
