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Centrally-acting anticholinergic drugs– associations with mortality, hospitalisation and cognitive decline following dementia diagnosis in people receiving antidepressant and antipsychotic drugs

Delia Bishara, Gayan Perera, Daniel Harwood, David Taylor, Justin Sauer, Nicola Funnell, Siobhan Gee, Robert Stewart, Christoph Mueller

2021Aging & Mental Health15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Long-term use of anticholinergic medication in older people is associated with increased risk of cognitive decline and mortality, but this relationship could be confounded by the underlying illness the drugs are treating. To investigate associations between central anticholinergic antidepressants or antipsychotics and mortality, hospitalisation and cognitive decline in people with dementia. METHOD: = 2,335 respectively), assembled from a large healthcare database, central anticholinergic burden scores were estimated using the Anticholinergic Effect on Cognition (AEC) scale. Data were linked to national mortality and hospitalisation data sources, and Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) scores were used to investigate cognitive decline. RESULTS: = 0.105). Patients on antidepressants with no central anticholinergic burden had accelerated cognitive decline compared with other groups, whereas no differences were found in the antipsychotic cohort. No significant associations were detected between antidepressant or antipsychotic-related central anticholinergic burden and hospitalisation. CONCLUSION: These counter-intuitive findings may reflect factors underlying the choice of psychotropics rather than the agents themselves, although do not support a strong role for central anticholinergic drug actions on dementia outcomes. Further studies, including randomized switching of agents are needed to clarify this relationship.

Topics & Concepts

AnticholinergicDementiaAntipsychoticMedicineHazard ratioPsychiatryCognitive declineCohortAntidepressantAnticholinergic agentsCohort studyInternal medicineConfidence intervalSchizophrenia (object-oriented programming)DiseaseAnxietyPharmaceutical Practices and Patient OutcomesDementia and Cognitive Impairment ResearchIntensive Care Unit Cognitive Disorders