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Pharmaceutical Care of People with Depression

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Title: Pharmaceutical Care of People with Depression


1
  • Pharmaceutical Care of People with Depression

2
Objectives
  • Provide an overview of the diagnosis and
    therapeutic management of depression
  • Identify key pharmaceutical care needs of this
    group of patients
  • Explore ways of positively impacting on the care
    of this patient population

3
National Programme for Improving Mental Health
and Well-being in Scotland September 2003-2006
  • Key aims
  • Raise awareness and promoting mental health and
    well-being
  • Eliminate stigma and discrimination
  • Prevent suicide
  • Promote and support recovery

4
Key Facts Figures
  • Life-time Prevalence 1 in 2 women 1 in 4 men
  • 30 of above with Major Depressive Illness
  • gt80 treated in primary care
  • 50-60 of patients respond to 1st line Treatment
  • 25-30 placebo response in controlled trials
  • 20-60 of patients respond to switching between
    class of antidepressant or SSRIs
  • 37 of patients relapse within 1 yr. of remission
    in primary care

5
Depression - Diagnosis by DSM-IV criteria
  • At least five of the following symptoms
    (including either 1 or 2) for two weeks and
  • causing clinically significant distress or
    impairment in functioning
  • Depressed mood
  • Loss of interest or pleasure in almost all
    activities
  • Significant weight loss or gain, or change in
    appetite nearly every day
  • Insomnia or hypersomnia
  • Psychomotor agitation or retardation (observable
    by others)
  • Fatigue or loss of energy
  • Feelings of worthlessness or excessive or
    inappropriate guilt
  • Diminished ability to think or concentrate, or
    indecisiveness
  • Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide

6
Depression - At Risk Patients
  • Adverse social circumstances
  • Drug and alcohol misuse
  • Physical illness
  • Hospitalised patients
  • Patients Rx musculoskeletal/CNS drugs
  • Postnatal women
  • Action
  • refer cases of suspected undiagnosed depression

7
Management
  • Options (alone or in combination)
  • Psychotherapy
  • Drug therapy
  • Electro-Convulsive Therapy
  • Aims of treatment
  • Remission of symptoms to the pre-morbid state
  • Restoration of social and working capacity
  • Reduced risk of relapse and recurrence
  • Prevent suicide

8
Choice of Antidepressant
  • There are no clinically significant differences
    in efficacy between TCAs and SSRIs.
  • Geddes JR, Freemantle N et al
  • SSRIs versus other antidepressants for depressive
    disorder
  • The Cochrane Library , Issue No4, 2000
  • Oxford update Software (Cochrane review)

9
Factors Influencing Choice
  • Prominent features of depression
  • Co-existing disease states
  • Interacting drugs
  • Previous response to therapy
  • Individual tolerability to side effects
  • Ability to comply one daily dosing may be
    simpler
  • Age of patient
  • Risk of overdose
  • Pregnancy breast feeding
  • - Generally SSRI 1st line but not indicated in
    mild depression

10
Mechanisms
Pre-synaptic Receptors Control the release of
neurotransmitter
Drug
Post-synaptic Receptors
Transmission
11
Tricyclic Antidepressants (TCAs)
  • All act on Serotonin and NA but in different
    proportions
  • Also hit muscarinic, ?1 receptors and histamine
    receptors responsible for side effects
  • Some more toxic in overdose than others
  • Reserved for 3rd 4th line these days

12
Selective Serotonin Re-uptake Inhibitors (SSRIs)
  • Serotonergic side effects
  • GI Nausea, vomiting, dyspepsia
  • Central dizziness, agitation, insomnia,
    headache
  • Others Dry mouth, sexual dysfunction, bleeding
    disorders, anorexia or weight loss.
  • Usually 1st line agents
  • Useful for patients with physical problems as
    have good side effect profile

13
Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitors (MAOIs)
  • Boost available monoamines by inhibiting
    breakdown by monoamine oxidase enzyme (centrally
    peripherally)
  • Irriversible inhibitors -Phenelzine,
    tranylcypromine, Isocarboxazid
  • Consumption of tyramine rich foods or
    sympathomimetic agents results in hypertensive
    crisis dietary restrictions apply
  • Must not be prescribed with other antidepressants
    washout must be observed
  • Risks in elective surgery
  • Reserved as 4th-5th line but useful in phobic
    patients or those with atypical hypochondriacal
    or hysterical features
  • Reversible inhibitors Moclobemide
  • - Dietary restrictions less necessary

14
Venlafaxine Duloxetine(SNRIs)
  • Boost serotonin NA levels by reuptake mechanism
  • New monitoring guidelines for venlafaxine
    baseline ECG and blood pressure. Not to be used
    if cardiac risk factors present. ECG BP
    monitoring on therapy.
  • Some evidence to support high doses (225mg) in
    treatment resistant depression. Still used in
    secondary care. Associated with raised BP.
  • Side effects include nausea, insomnia, agitation,
    restlessness, ECG changes, hypertension,
    withdrawal effects (even with missed doses)
  • Duloxetine does not have the same monitoring
    requirements but not much experience with it yet

15
Mirtazapine (NaSSA)
  • Noradrenergic and specific serotonergic
    antidepressant
  • presynaptic ?2 antagonist increases NA and
    serotonin levels centrally but post synaptically
    blocks 5HT2 and 5HT3 subtypes so there is a
    specific action on 5HT1. Less sleep disturbance
    and less sexual dysfunction
  • Also histaminergic responsible for sedation and
    weight gain
  • Practically no anticholinergic effects and no
    cardiovascular effects
  • Rarely blood dyscrasias

16
Reboxetine (NARI)
  • Noradrenaline reuptake inhibitor (weak effect on
    5HT)
  • Side effects insomnia, sweating, dizziness,
    urinary hesitancy
  • Can be considered 2nd or 3rd line therapy as
    favourable side effect profile

17
General Risks of Antidepressant
  • All antidepressants can cause hyponatraemia (CSM
    warning)
  • All lower seizure threshold to some extent.
  • All can cause sweating
  • All can cause switching in bipolar patients
  • Discontinuation reactions can occur with all
    antidepressants, but are more common in short
    half life agents regardless of class.
  • Combinations of antidepressants are potentially
    risky and should be used only under specialist
    supervision.
  • Switching drugs should be carried out with care.

18
The Role of the Pharmacist
  • Reduce stigma by using a responsive pro-active
    approach
  • Be responsive to possibility of undiagnosed
    depression
  • Provide information about antidepressants
  • Promote concordance
  • Monitor and provide support to patient carers
  • Identify adverse effects and interactions
    (including non-prescribed medication)
  • Discourage self diagnosis and treatment
  • Support people at risk of suicide

19
Initial Prescription for Antidepressant
  • Reduce stigma - reassure patient depression is a
    common illness and most patients recover
  • Emphasise lag period side effects often present
    before benefit, encourage to persevere.
  • Discuss discontinuation reactions but reassure
    that medication is not addictive. Do not stop
    abruptly.
  • For SSRIs ensure GP has discussed side effects
    patient should report any increase in suicidal
    thoughts or increase in agitation or anxiety (may
    be indicative of akathisia). Discuss common side
    effects of any antidepressant.
  • Ensure patient aware of expected duration of
    treatment.
  • Result Improved concordance, reduced potential
    for relapse.

20
Lack of Response/Switching
  • Ensure adequate trial. Where some response a
    dose increase may be considered.
  • Usually switch to a different class is indicated,
    but can switch within a class in certain
    circumstances
  • Switching guidelines
  • In theory it is better to stop and washout one
    drug before starting another (must do this with
    MAOIs)
  • In practical terms this is rarely possible if
    patient is ill.
  • Potential problems with cross tapering include
    antidepressant discontinuation effects,
    interactions between the 2 drugs e.g. some SSRIs
    increase TCA levels, serotonin syndrome
    (potentially life threatening), cholinergic
    effects.
  • If in doubt seek specialist advice!

21
Stopping antidepressants
  • If stopped abruptly discontinuation symptoms may
    include
  • Headaches, restlessness GI symptoms, flu like
    symptoms, abdominal cramps, sleep disturbance,
    anxiety, agitation electric shock sensations
    (particularly with SSRIs)
  • Common with short half life drugs, rare with
    fluoxetine
  • To avoid problems
  • After lt 8 weeks treatment withdraw over 1-2 weeks
  • After 6-8 months treatment taper over 6-8 weeks
  • After long term maintenance, reduce dose by 25
    every 4-6 weeks.

22
How to Identify and Meet the Pharmaceutical Care
Needs
  • Education checklist for first presentation or
    changes in dose or medication
  • Pharmaceutical care needs assessment for
    depression to identify gaps in patient knowledge,
    effectiveness, safety and compliance
  • Implement as part of your own CPD or local
    project.
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