About 11% of Americans over age 12 take an
antidepressant, making the drugs the most widely used medication in the United
States. And with more than 51 million in-patient surgeries performed annually
in the United States, a substantial overlap between the two patient populations
-- those on antidepressants and those facing surgery -- is a certainty.
What's not so certain is how
antidepressants -- and specifically the most widely used class of depression medication, known as selective
serotonin reuptake inhibitors, or SSRIs -- may affect the outcomes of surgical
patients. Two new studies out this week explored this question, with findings
that are, well, a little depressing.
Despite one study's evidence of some
benefits for heart patients undergoing artery-clearing procedures, a second
study found that among patients undergoing all types of surgery, taking SSRIs
at the time of surgery was linked to slightly higher rates of death and
complications, particularly bleeding, than not taking an SSRI.
The two studies focused on different kinds
of patients and on two different issues raised by antidepressants.
The first study, published Tuesday in JAMA Internal Medicine, investigated
whether a recognized side effect of SSRIs -- that they suppress aggregation of
red blood cells, or platelets -- might make it unhelpful for patients to be
taking them about the time that they are undergoing surgery.
Looking backward at more than 500,000
patients across the country who got major surgery between the beginning of 2006
and the end of 2008, the authors of the study picked up a tentative signal that
patients who take SSRIs about the time of major surgery are at slightly higher
risk of dying in the hospital, of bleeding that requires transfusions, and of
hospital readmission within a month of their discharge.
But the authors acknowledge that it may not
be the antidepressants that affected outcomes, but the kinds of patients who
are most likely to be taking them: People on antidepressants were more likely
to be obese and more likely to have chronic pulmonary obstructive disorder or
hypothyroidism than those who do not take the medication. And they were more
likely than those not taking the medication to be depressed, which can make a
patient less likely to take care of herself or follow doctors' orders following
surgery.
Gleaning whether it's the antidepressants
or the patients who take them that matter more will take additional -- and more
expensive -- research to determine, said the authors, who came from UC San
Francisco, University of Massachusetts, Tufts University and Baystate Medical
Center in Massachusetts.
The second study, published Wednesday in
the Annals of Thoracic Surgery, acknowledged the long-observed links between
depression and heart disease -- first, that patients
with a history of depression are far more likely than those without to develop
heart disease; and second, that patients who develop depression, say, after a heart attack or an artery-clearing
procedure are more likely to die than those who are not depressed.
Those links prompted the American College
of Cardiology and the American Heart Assn.
several years ago to recommend that all heart disease patients be screened for
depression. But cardiologists have remained skeptical of that advice, since
they do not know whether such patients, when treated with, say, SSRIs, will do
better or worse.
The latest research appears to fly in the
face of the JAMA Internal Medicine study: Compared with subjects who got a placebo, study participants who started taking
the SSRI escitalopram (better known by its
commercial name Lexapro) from two to three weeks before surgery until six
months after were not more likely to experience excessive bleeding or death in
the year following their artery-clearing surgery.
But neither were those taking an
antidepressant less likely to die or have a dangerous bleeding episode than
those on a placebo.
The French authors of the study did find
that CABG patients who went on an SSRI before their procedure and stayed on it
for six months had less pain and were less likely to be depressed in the six
months following their surgery. That was particularly true for subjects who went
into the procedure with signs of clinical depression.
Dr. Marc Penn, who was not associated with
either study, said the findings of SSRIs' benefit for CABG patients was some of
the first evidence to offer such rigorous assurances. Penn suggested that by
improving moods in patients with a propensity to depression, SSRI benefits
might be even more evident after a year, when the effects of such patients'
sustained changes in diet and exercise would become more evident.
"I take away from this that patients
who are prone to depression or melancholy going into bypass surgery are going
to feel better in the post-op state if they're pretreated for their
depression," said Penn, chief of cardiovascular research at Summa Health
Systems in Akron, Ohio. "We know people with coronary disease who take
care of themselves will do better than people who don't."
And those who are at risk of becoming
depressed when a major life event -- a heart disease diagnosis -- happens stand
a better chance of taking care of themselves if that prospect is nipped in the
bud, he said.
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