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Effects of somatic treatments on suicidal ideation and completed suicides
Objective This work was undertaken to define and characterize the role of currently available somatic treatments in psychiatry in either increasing or reducing the risk for suicide. Methods Members of the Suicide Prevention Task Group of the National Network of Depression Centers performed a literat...
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Published in: | Brain and behavior 2021-11, Vol.11 (11), p.e2381-n/a |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Objective
This work was undertaken to define and characterize the role of currently available somatic treatments in psychiatry in either increasing or reducing the risk for suicide.
Methods
Members of the Suicide Prevention Task Group of the National Network of Depression Centers performed a literature review of somatic treatments known to increase or reduce the risk for suicide. The reviews ventured to include all relevant information about the risk for both suicide ideation and completed suicides.
Results
Lithium and clozapine are the only two somatic treatments that have high‐quality data documenting their antisuicide effects in mood disorders and schizophrenia, respectively. Lithium discontinuation is also associated with increased suicide risk. Ketamine and esketamine may have a small, but immediate, antisuicide effect. Despite the recent Food and Drug Administration approval of esketamine use in depressed suicidal patients, the small disproportional overrepresentation of suicide in subjects who had received esketamine versus placebo (3 vs. 0 among > 3500 subjects) requires ongoing evaluation. The purported antisuicide effect of electroconvulsive therapy is based on low‐quality data. The effect of antidepressants is not at all clear. There appears to be direct evidence for antidepressants increasing suicidal ideation and the risk for suicide over the short‐term in young people, but indirect (low quality) evidence that antidepressants reduce suicide risk over the long term.
Conclusions
Clinicians have an expanding pharmacopeia to address suicide potential in their patients. Some of the agents with documented antisuicide effects may also increase suicidality under specific circumstances.
Systemic review of controlled trials of effect of medications on suicide revealed that lithium and clozapine have a documented antisuicide effect in bipolar illness and schizophrenia, respectively. Antidepressants appear to be associated with an increase of suicide ideation for young people acutely, but there is weak evidence that they may reduce suicide ideation or completed suicide over the long term. Ketamine, and possibly esketamine, appear to have a transient antisuicide effect. |
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ISSN: | 2162-3279 2162-3279 |
DOI: | 10.1002/brb3.2381 |