Antipsychotic Use During Posttraumatic Amnesia in Traumatic Brain Injury
Abstract
Methods
Results
Study | Study type | N | Intervention and outcomes | Key findings |
---|---|---|---|---|
Rao et al. (17) | Retrospective observational | 26 | Received or did not receive scheduled haloperidol (dose range: 2–15 mg/day; frequency: not recorded); assessed agitation control during PTA and PTA duration. | 25 of 26 patients had agitated behavior; 11 of 26 required haloperidol. Haloperidol group had resolved agitation but significantly longer PTA duration than nonrecipients (duration: 8 vs. 4 weeks). |
Maryniak et al. (18) | Retrospective observational | 120 | Received or did not receive scheduled methotrimeprazine (dose range: 2–50 mg; frequency: up to four times daily); assessed agitation control during PTA. | 69 of 120 patients had agitated behavior; 56 of these 69 patients required methotrimeprazine. Agitation was controlled for 54 of 56 methotrimeprazine recipients. |
Harmsen et al. (11) | Retrospective observational | 60 | Received or did not receive scheduled antipsychotics, including levomepromazine (dose: 25 mg; frequency: daily), haloperidol (dose range 4–8 g; frequency: not recorded), pipamperone (dose: 40 mg; frequency: not recorded), zuclopenthixol and promethazine (dose: 40 and 200 mg; frequency: not recorded), and chlorpromazine (dose: 75 mg; frequency: not recorded); assessed agitation control during PTA. | 28 of 60 patients had PTA at admission; 16 out these 28 patients had positive behavioral disturbances. Odds ratio of developing these disturbances among patients with PTA compared with those without PTA was 41.3; improvements were observed for 7 of 17 patients with positive behavioral disturbances who were prescribed an antipsychotic, which was discontinued within 3 weeks of admission; two patients remained in a state of PTA at the time of discharge. |
Mysiw et al. (12) | Retrospective observational | 182 | Received narcotics, benzodiazepines, or antipsychotics (type, dose, and frequency: not recorded); patients stratified by those who cleared PTA and those who did not clear PTA; subsequent analyses stratified patients into groups of unknown recipients, recipients, and nonrecipients of benzodiazepines; assessed PTA duration. | 92%, 67%, and 43% of patients were administered narcotics, benzodiazepines, and antipsychotics, respectively. Among unknown and nonrecipients of benzodiazepines, when excluding patients who did not clear PTA, patients receiving narcotics with antipsychotics had a longer period (almost 1 week) of PTA compared with patients receiving narcotics alone. Among benzodiazepine recipients, there was no significant difference in PTA duration between those who received narcotics with antipsychotics and those who received narcotics alone. 11% of patients did not clear PTA during rehabilitation. |
Noé et al. (13) | Retrospective observational | 37 | TBI patients with PTA at admission who cleared PTA by discharge and received scheduled ziprasidone (dose range 20–80 mg/day; frequency: daily); assessed agitation control during PTA, PTA duration, and ABS scores at baseline and 2 weeks after ziprasidone. | 5 of 37 patients with PTA at admission received ziprasidone. Total ABS mean±SD scores decreased from 27.2±3.0 to 18.0±1.2. Ziprasidone was efficacious in controlling agitation during PTA. Average PTA duration among ziprasidone recipients was 62.4 days, with 100% of ziprasidone recipients clearing PTA. |
Kooda et al. (19) | Retrospective observational | 195 | Received or did not receive antipsychotics (type, dose, and frequency: not recorded); assessed PTA duration. | 52 of 195 (27%) of patients received antipsychotics within 7 days of TBI (most often quetiapine). 71.7% of antipsychotic recipients also received benzodiazepines (compared with 61% of antipsychotic nonrecipients). PTA duration was significantly longer in the antipsychotic group (mean=19.6 days) than in the no-antipsychotic group (12.3 days). |
Hammond et al. (14) | Prospective observational | 2,130 | Multicenter study of TBI patients who received antipsychotics (type, dose, and frequency: not recorded); assessed PTA duration. | First-generation antipsychotics used by 11% (N=55), more often as needed than scheduled. Second-generation antipsychotics used by 24% (N=637; 48% quetiapine, 19% risperidone, 15% olanzapine, 14% ziprasidone, 4% aripiprazole, and <1% paliperidone), more often scheduled than as needed. The percentage of patients receiving antipsychotics ranged from 14% to 62% across the 10 study sites. Antipsychotic recipients were more frequently White non-Hispanic males, were 30–45 years old, and had a preinjury psychiatric history and more severe postresuscitation GCS score. Mean PTA duration was 20 days for patients receiving antipsychotics compared with 17, 23, 23, 25, 18, 16, 19, and 23 days for patients receiving anxiolytics, anticonvulsants, antidepressants, antiparkinsonians, hypnotics, narcotic-analgesics, miscellaneous psychotropics, and stimulants, respectively. |
McKay et al. (15) | Prospective observational | 125 | Received antipsychotic medications (dose and frequency: not recorded); assessed agitation control during PTA and PTA scores before and after dose changes (initiation and discontinuing an antipsychotic; increasing and decreasing the dosage). | Second-generation antipsychotics (olanzapine, quetiapine, and risperidone) were used among one-third (34%, N=42) of patients. No significant difference in ABS scores during initiation or dosage increases. ABS scores improved upon antipsychotic cessation or dosage decrease. PTA (assessed with WPTAS scores) improved in the 3 days after initiation, discontinuation, or increases and decreases in dosage. |
Phyland et al. (16) | N-of-1 trial | 11 | TBI patients with PTA and agitation received scheduled oral olanzapine (initial dosage of 5 mg/day, titrated every 3 to 4 days to a maximum dosage of 20 mg/day) or placebo; assessed agitation control during PTA, PTA duration, and PTA score. | Patients received oral olanzapine (N=5) or placebo (N=6). No statistically significant between-group differences in ABS score; moderate to large improvements in agitation among 3 of 5 olanzapine recipients (Tau-U effect size=0.37–0.86); longer PTA duration (not statistically significant) among participants receiving olanzapine, with a large effect size (Cohen’s d=1.26); 2 of 6 participants in the placebo group were excluded from the analysis (had not emerged from PTA at the time of publication or PTA duration was >6 months); olanzapine recipients had worse PTA scores compared with placebo recipients, with a large effect size (Cohen’s d=–2.16). |
Agitation Control During PTA
PTA Duration
PTA Score
Discussion
Conclusion
Key Points/Clinical Pearls
References
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