QTc-interval abnormalities and psychotropic drug therapy in psychiatric patients.
BACKGROUND: Sudden unexplained death in psychiatric patients may be due to drug-induced arrhythmia, of which lengthening of the rate-corrected QT interval (QTc) on the electrocardiogram is a predictive marker. We estimated the point prevalence of QTc lengthening in psychiatric patients and the effects of various psychotropic drugs. METHODS: Electrocardiograms were obtained from 101 healthy reference individuals and 495 psychiatric patients in various inpatient and community settings and were analysed with a previously validated digitiser technique. Patients with and without QTc lengthening, QTc dispersion, and T-wave abnormality were compared by logistic regression to calculate odds ratios for predictive variables. FINDINGS: Abnormal QTc was defined from the healthy reference group as more than 456 ms and was present in 8% (40 of 495) of patients. Age over 65 years (odds ratio 3.0 [95% CI 1.1-8.3]), use of tricyclic antidepressants (4.4 [1.6-12.1]), thioridazine (5.4 [2.0-13.7]), and droperidol (6.7 [1.8-24.8]) were robust predictors of QTc lengthening, as was antipsychotic dose (high dose 5.3 [1.2-24.4]; very high dose 8.2 [1.5-43.6]). Abnormal QT dispersion or T-wave abnormalities were not significantly associated with antipsychotic treatment, but were associated with lithium therapy. INTERPRETATION: Antipsychotic drugs cause QTc lengthening in a dose-related manner. Risks are substantially higher for thioridazine and droperidol. These drugs may therefore confer an increased risk of drug-induced arrhythmia.[1]References
- QTc-interval abnormalities and psychotropic drug therapy in psychiatric patients. Reilly, J.G., Ayis, S.A., Ferrier, I.N., Jones, S.J., Thomas, S.H. Lancet (2000) [Pubmed]
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