Drug-induced long QT in adult psychiatric inpatients: the 5-year cross-sectional ECG Screening Outcome in Psychiatry study

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Serval ID
serval:BIB_C9EE47E75D88
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Title
Drug-induced long QT in adult psychiatric inpatients: the 5-year cross-sectional ECG Screening Outcome in Psychiatry study
Journal
Am J Psychiatry
Author(s)
Girardin F. R., Gex-Fabry M., Berney P., Shah D., Gaspoz J. M., Dayer P.
ISSN
1535-7228 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0002-953X
Publication state
Published
Issued date
12/2013
Volume
170
Number
12
Pages
1468-76
Language
english
Notes
Girardin, Francois R
Gex-Fabry, Marianne
Berney, Patricia
Shah, Dipen
Gaspoz, Jean-Michel
Dayer, Pierre
eng
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Am J Psychiatry. 2013 Dec;170(12):1468-76. doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.2013.12060860.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The authors aimed to determine the prevalence of drug-induced long QT at admission to a public psychiatric hospital and to document the associated factors using a cross-sectional approach. METHOD: All ECG recordings over a 5-year period were reviewed for drug-induced long QT (heart-rate corrected QT >/=500 ms and certain or probable drug imputability) and associated conditions. Patients with drug-induced long QT (N=62) were compared with a sample of patients with normal ECG (N=143). RESULTS: Among 6,790 inpatients, 27.3% had abnormal ECG, 1.6% had long QT, and 0.9% qualified as drug-induced long QT case subjects. Sudden cardiac death was recorded in five patients, and torsade de pointes was recorded in seven other patients. Relative to comparison subjects, patients with drug-induced long QT had significantly higher frequencies of hypokalemia, hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection, HIV infection, and abnormal T wave morphology. Haloperidol, sertindole, clotiapine, phenothiazines, fluoxetine, citalopram (including escitalopram), and methadone were significantly more frequent in patients with drug-induced long QT. After adjustment for hypokalemia, HCV infection, HIV infection, and abnormal T wave morphology, the effects of haloperidol, clotiapine, phenothiazines, and citalopram (including escitalopram) remained statistically significant. Receiver operating characteristic curve analysis based on the number of endorsed factors per patient indicated that 85.5% of drug-induced long QT patients had two or more factors, whereas 81.1% of patients with normal ECG had fewer than two factors. CONCLUSIONS: Drug-induced long QT and arrhythmia propensity substantially increase when specific psychotropic drugs are administered to patients with hypokalemia, abnormal T wave morphology, HCV infection, and HIV infection.
Keywords
Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Antipsychotic Agents/*adverse effects, Case-Control Studies, Citalopram/*adverse effects, Cross-Sectional Studies, Death, Sudden, Cardiac/epidemiology, Electrocardiography/*drug effects, Female, Humans, Inpatients/psychology, Long QT Syndrome/chemically induced/complications/*epidemiology, Male, Mental Disorders/complications/*drug therapy, Methadone/*adverse effects, Middle Aged, Prevalence, Risk Factors, Switzerland/epidemiology, Torsades de Pointes/chemically induced/epidemiology
Pubmed
Create date
10/02/2021 11:32
Last modification date
24/10/2022 12:31
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