Medicines for anxiety and antidepressants trigger post-surgery delirium

Publicly released:
Australia; SA

Older people taking a drug used to treat anxiety and insomnia – nitrazepam – as well as those on antidepressants, are twice as likely to suffer postoperative delirium after hip and knee surgery, a new Australian study has found.

Media release

From: University of South Australia

Older people taking a drug used to treat anxiety and insomnia – nitrazepam – as well as those on antidepressants, are twice as likely to suffer postoperative delirium after hip and knee surgery, a new Australian study has found.

The finding has prompted calls by University of South Australia (UniSA) researchers for older patients to temporarily cease these medications or change to safer alternatives prior to surgery.

In a study published in the international journal Drug Safety, UniSA scientists scanned data from 10,456 patients aged 65 years and older who had undergone knee or hip surgery in the past 20 years. A quarter of them (2614 people) had experienced delirium after surgery.

Apart from nitrazepam and antidepressants, five medications – commonly prescribed for depression and various anxiety disorders – were associated with delirium, although not to the same extent. They included sertraline, mirtazapine, venlafaxine, citalopram and fluvoxamine.

Lead researcher Dr Gizat Kassie says there was no link between pain-relieving opioids and delirium.

“Our findings show that some medicines are riskier than others when it comes to causing delirium after surgery, and the older the patients are, the greater the risk,” he says.

Smoking, alcohol use, multiple health conditions, polypharmacy (taking five or more medications), psychoactive drugs and impaired cognition also put people at risk.

“Many of these factors can’t be altered but we can do something about medications.

"Delirium affects up to 55 per cent of older patients undergoing hip surgery and is associated with an increased risk of death, prolonged hospital stays and cognitive decline. Delirium is costly to manage and puts enormous stress on the healthcare system, health professionals and families," Dr Kassie says.

An earlier study found that older people who developed delirium following hip surgery had a 10 per cent higher death rate within one year compared to patients who were not affected.

The UniSA study is the first to investigate the link between specific medications and delirium after surgery. Previous studies have been broader in scope, considering a range of factors predisposing older patients to delirium.

The researchers hope that evidence-based recommendations can be implemented into clinical practice so that delirium risk by medicine type can be reduced.

“In people undergoing elective procedures it should be practical to taper specific medications well in advance. It’s important that people are weaned off these riskier drugs well before surgery because abrupt withdrawal can have even worse consequences,” Dr Kassie says.

Journal/
conference:
Drug Safety
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: University of South Australia
Funder: N/A
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