Comparing episodes of antidepressants use with intermittent episodes of no use: A higher relative risk of suicide attempts but not of suicide at young age

Publication date

2016-10

Authors

Termorshuizen, Fabian
Smeets, Hugo MISNI 0000000396371684
Boks, Marco PORCID 0000-0001-6163-7484ISNI 0000000392872246
Heerdink, Eibert R.

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

The Food and Drug Administration has issued a number of advisories regarding a possible causal link between antidepressants and suicide behaviour among young persons. We investigated the age dependency of (fatal) suicide attempts associated with antidepressants (N=232,561). By linking insurance claims with the death register of Statistics Netherlands (2002-2011), rates of (fatal) suicide attempts were estimated during antidepressant use and intermittent episodes without use. The age dependency of the relative risk of attempts and of suicide during episodes with compared with episodes without antidepressants was investigated by testing the {age × episode} interaction. The attempt rate during antidepressant use decreased with increasing age, concurrently with a decrease of the relative risk from 3.62 to 1.86 (p for interaction 5 years). No suicides were found among those aged 0.46). The association between antidepressants and suicide attempts at a young age does not necessarily point to a causal relationship, and, most importantly, did not translate to a similar age dependency for suicide.

Keywords

age, Antidepressants, pharmaco-epidemiology, suicide, suicide attempts, Taverne, Pharmacology, Psychiatry and Mental health, Pharmacology (medical), Journal Article

Citation

Termorshuizen, F, Smeets, H M, Boks, M P M & Heerdink, E R 2016, 'Comparing episodes of antidepressants use with intermittent episodes of no use : A higher relative risk of suicide attempts but not of suicide at young age', Journal of Psychopharmacology, vol. 30, no. 10, pp. 1000-1007. https://doi.org/10.1177/0269881116639752